Go to archive.org and type exactly: "Jab Tak Hai Jaan" (use quotes for exact match).
After a 9-year hiatus from directing, Chopra returned with a story about a bomb disposal expert (Samar, played by Khan) who makes a deal with God: he will survive, but he can never again find love. The film is flawed, lengthy, and operatic—but it is pure Yash Chopra. The Swiss Alps, the winter snow, the melancholic poetry of Gulzar—it represents the last breath of a specific kind of Bollywood melodrama that no longer exists.
Officially: No. The film is still under copyright by Yash Raj Films (YRF). The Internet Archive operates under a "notice and takedown" policy (DMCA). This means the files exist until a copyright holder requests their removal.
In the annals of Indian cinema, few events have carried as much emotional weight as the release of Jab Tak Hai Jaan (2012). It was a film wrapped in irony: a celebration of life and love directed by Yash Chopra, the "King of Romance," who passed away just weeks before its premiere. For fans of Shah Rukh Khan, Katrina Kaif, and the late Yash Chopra, the movie is more than a narrative; it is a time capsule of an era ending.