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European police smash ‘world’s largest’ TV piracy operation

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EUROPEAN police officials said they have smashed what they called the world’s biggest pirate streaming TV network with five million customers in Italy alone.

Italian police stormed various locations while police in Bulgaria, France, Germany, Greece and the Netherland­s also carried out raids coordinate­d by the EU’S judicial cooperatio­n agency Eurojust.

Police arrested at least 23 suspects as part of the ongoing operation against Xtream Codes, an alleged illegal pirating operation which Eurojust said caused damages worth some €6.5mil (Rm30.1mil) to the market.

Italian financial police said the operation had “deactivate­d the largest internatio­nal pirate pay TV streaming network”.

For €12 (RM55), far below normal prices, subscriber­s to the cutprice pirate streams could access all content from such giants as Sky Italy, Netflix and Mediaset

“The damage caused to the broadcast companies, the private sector and public institutio­ns so far is immense,” Filippo Spiezia, Italy’s representa­tive at Eurojust, told a press conference in The Hague.

“The effects created by this illegal activity include unfair competitio­n, financial loss ... and thousands of jobs put in danger,” he said.

Germany, France and the Netherland­s shut down around 200 computer servers as part of the operation.

Law officers also seized hardware and shut down 800 Internet sites used to re-broadcast channels.

The piracy operation was allegedly created by two Greek nationals, said Valeria Sico, deputy prosecutor at the public prosecutio­ns office in Naples.

Italian media reported that the network’s mastermind had been arrested in Thessaloni­ki, Greece.

“We discovered a new system ... which was much more evolved” than previous pirating attempts, Sico said in The Hague.

The gang’s platform decrypted copyright protected television images and re-broadcast them on the Internet “on a wide scale”.

The scheme was first discovered when police raided a home in Naples, where they found that the criminals used a new system to infiltrate legitimate pay-per-view channels, Sico said.

Once the signal was intercepte­d, it was re-routed through Internet servers in the Netherland­s and France and then sent to viewers’ IP addresses.

Subscripti­ons were advertised on a Facebook page “telling people for a small price they could access all TV channels on demand”, Sico said.

Lodewijk van Zwieten, Dutch prosecutor specialisi­ng in cybercrime, said the Netherland­s shut down 93 servers based in and around The Hague.

“This was a criminal group that used a sophistica­ted technical network that was really intended to resist actions by the authoritie­s,” he said.

Those responsibl­e for the piracy face up to three years in prison and a fine of €25,000 (RM115,000), law officials said.

 ?? — 123rf.com ?? Germany, France and the netherland­s shut down around 200 computer servers as part of the anti-digital piracy operation.
— 123rf.com Germany, France and the netherland­s shut down around 200 computer servers as part of the anti-digital piracy operation.

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