On Monday, the ominous hacking group TheDarkOverlord returned with a bang when it announced the release of eight episodes of the still-unaired TV show Steve Harvey’s Funderdome on The Pirate Bay.

“Time to play another round,” the group wrote in a menacing note accompanying the release. “We’re following through with our threats, we always do.”

TorrentFreak reports the Overlord approached ABC, the Disney-owned studio behind Funderdome, on Friday “with a handsome business proposal” not to leak the episodes, but it fell on deaf ears.

“We prefer your meat bloody, we’re serving it bloody as can be,” the group’s note continues. “We’re bringing another piece from the world of unaired mainstream media content.”

This latest release follows a few short weeks after the group leaked almost the entire fifth season of Netflix’s hit series Orange is the New Black, due to premiere on Friday, June 9. Back in April TheDarkOverlord gained access to the unreleased episodes from Larson Studios, an LA-based post-production company, demanding 50 bitcoin from then in ransom. When the studio ignored the threat, the hackers turned directly to Netflix, who also refused to pay.

In the aftermath, various outlets claimed that Netflix’s refusal to pay is an indication that the streaming service is winning the so-called war on piracy, because “torrents are irrelevant or no longer a real threat and piracy is pointless.”

But the way people are pirating has changed so much over the last few years, that you can’t declare a victory over the practice just because traffic to torrent sites have been declining over the last few years. Ironically the increase in popularity of platforms like Netflix led directly to the perpetuation of the main form of piracy today: illegal streaming.

“Whether it’s through pirate streaming sites, mobile apps or dedicated media players hooked to TVs; it’s not hard to argue that piracy is easier and more convenient than it has ever been in the past. And arguably more popular too,” writes TorrentFreaks’ editor, Ernesto Van der Sar.

And the figures are staggering. We recently cited the Global Piracy Insights Report for 2017 by the London-based piracy tracking company Muso that reported over 179 billion visits to pirating sites globally over the last year alone. That includes more than half a billion visits to video pirating sites every day.

Two popular Netflix shows, Orange is the New Black and 13 Reasons Why, appear on many of these sites under their “most viewed” sections (image below via TorrentFreak).

Meanwhile, it is still unclear who exactly TheDarkOverlord is or how they’ve gained access to the unreleased episodes of Funderdome. “We’re unwilling to discuss the source of this material, but we’ll go on the record stating that this is content that is owned by American Broadcasting Company and its just been released to the world wide web for everyone’s consumption,” the group triumphantly told TorrentFreak.

They added that they did approach ABC, offering a “most handsome business proposal,” but that the television giant “rudely denied” them an audience. Evidently, piracy still doesn’t pay.

Steve Harvey’s Funderdome is scheduled to premiere on ABC on June 11.