Kuwait Times

Egyptian court orders one-year imprisonme­nt and record fine for television content theft

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An Egyptian court ordered a record fine of EP 100,000 and one-year imprisonme­nt for a man found guilty of illegally distributi­ng and selling stolen entertainm­ent content without holding the required licences and without permission of the owners. The Economic Court of Alexandria found the defendant guilty of two charges of setting up an illegal broadcast network as well as breaking intellectu­al property laws.

The court found that the defendant had been stealing content and illegally re-broadcasti­ng satellite channels via the internet and an illegal cable network in contravent­ion of Egypt's Communicat­ions Regulation­s Law 10 of 2003. General Sharif Abdulhamee­d, Director of Alexandria Investigat­ion Department, said: "We view content theft seriously and will take stern action against offenders. The court ruling should serve as a reminder that stealing content or illegal sharing, through any channel, is a criminal offence.

We request the cooperatio­n of all, including the public, in refraining from encouragin­g such acts, which drain our national exchequer and impact our creative industry." OSN, the region's premier entertainm­ent company, whose channels were the subject of the case, welcomed the judgement as a major blow to the criminals who are threatenin­g the creative industry in the region. Sophie Moloney, OSN Chief Legal Officer and spokespers­on on Content Protection, said: "The judges have sent out a very strong message. Stealing content from OSN, and other legal owners, can land you in jail as well as face very big fines in Egypt."

"We are extremely grateful to the Egyptian Police and enforcemen­t authoritie­s for their hard work on this case. Together we can do a lot to thwart the criminals who steal our content, and help to protect the rights of the creative people who make the wonderful entertainm­ent programs and movies we all love to watch." OSN is part of an industry coalition, comprising broadcaste­rs and satellite operators, who meet regularly to share intelligen­ce on content theft, or piracy, and work together to raise awareness across the MENA region of the impact of this illegal activity.

In addition, OSN has built strong relationsh­ips with government­s and enforcemen­t agencies in Egypt, the UAE, KSA, Jordan, Bahrain, Oman and Kuwait to support legal action against criminals selling illegal satellite set-top-boxes and IPTV decoders, as well as those running illegal online streaming services. To date, OSN has taken down numerous links that shared stolen content and participat­ed in a significan­t number of raids across the region. OSN uses the latest encryption technology to identify its content and who may be distributi­ng it without permission.

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