In mid-2023, Reddit’s admin team, under pressure from entertainment industry lobbyists (mainly the MPA and BSA), issued a quiet but firm directive: Remove direct linking to copyrighted content or face a subreddit ban. r/Piracy had already been quarantined once years ago. The mods knew the stakes.
But in 2026, what is the state of this legendary document? Is it still safe? Is it still updated? And what the hell happened to the original?
Then, in early 2024, GitHub received a DMCA takedown notice targeting the repo. Not for hosting files, but for "providing instructions and links to circumvention tools." GitHub complied. The main repo died. redddit piracy megathread
Let’s break it down. First, a correction: Reddit itself never hosted an official piracy megathread. Instead, the term refers to a community-curated wiki page linked in the sidebar of r/Piracy. After Reddit’s infamous 2023 API protests and admin crackdowns, the mods there created a decentralized approach. Today, the "Megathread" is largely maintained on GitHub and GitLab , with mirrors across several subs.
But this is piracy — we don't stay dead. Within 48 hours, a new repo appeared on GitLab, then on a self-hosted Gitea instance. The community learned to decentralize. As of April 2026, the "Reddit Piracy Megathread" is alive, but you need to know where to look. The official r/Piracy sidebar now points to a link aggregator site (let’s call it fmhy.net — which is real, by the way) and a Telegram channel that posts weekly updates. In mid-2023, Reddit’s admin team, under pressure from
So they did something clever: they . All links were stripped. In its place, a pinned post said: "The Megathread has moved. Search for 'r/Piracy Megathread' on GitHub."
🏴☠️
If you’ve been sailing the digital seas for more than a week, you’ve heard the whispers. "Check the Megathread." "It's in the Megathread." "Read the Megathread before you ask." For years, the unofficial "Reddit Piracy Megathread" — most famously housed on r/Piracy (and later mirrored on r/FREEMEDIAHECKYEAH) — was the single most important living document for anyone looking to access books, movies, software, games, or music without paying a dime.
