But the "Real YIFY" has been extinct for nearly a decade. Here is the story of how a single developer from New Zealand changed the movie industry forever and then vanished overnight. The Rise of the Compression King
It wasn't for the "audiophiles" (who often criticized the low-bitrate audio), but for the casual viewer with limited bandwidth, it was a revolution. By 2015, the official YTS website was pulling in over , reaching the Alexa Top 600 worldwide. The Sudden Silence (October 2015) Extinct YIFY
Launched in 2010 by Yiftach Swery, YIFY (later rebranded as ) became a phenomenon by mastering one specific thing: high-efficiency compression. At a time when high-definition movies were massive 10GB+ files, YIFY was pumping out 1080p rips that were under 2GB. But the "Real YIFY" has been extinct for nearly a decade
The Ghost of the Pirate King: The End of the Real YIFY For a certain generation of the internet, the name wasn't just a username—it was a guarantee. If you saw those four letters attached to a 720p or 1080p movie, you knew you were getting a file that wouldn't eat your entire hard drive, would look decent on a laptop screen, and would actually finish downloading before you fell asleep. By 2015, the official YTS website was pulling
The truth was much more final. The had tracked Swery to Auckland, New Zealand, and hit him with a multi-million-dollar lawsuit. Unlike other pirate icons who fought legal battles for years, Swery didn't put up a fight. He later noted in an AMA, "When someone asks you to stop properly, you stop". The Era of the "Zombie" Clones
If you go looking for YIFY today, you’ll find plenty of sites using the name—but they are all imposters.
In late October 2015, the releases stopped. The website went dark with zero warning. For weeks, the "pirate" community was in a frenzy of speculation: Was it a DDoS attack? Had they just retired?