SPANISH COURT STRIKES RECORD BLOW TO MAJOR ILLEGAL IPTV NETWORK

One of Europe’s largest illegal IPTV operations has been dealt a major blow after Spain’s National Court convicted the operators of an international piracy network that distributed films, TV channels and live football.
The ruling includes prison terms, multi-million euro fines and compensation, and has been described by rightsholders as one of the biggest anti-piracy judgments yet seen in Spain.
According to LaLiga and other parties involved in the case, the network served more than a million paying users globally, operated through close to 1,000 websites and generated more than €15 million in illegal revenue. Spanish business daily Cinco Días reported that the operation worked through brands including RapidIPTV and relied on infrastructure spread across 13 countries.
The alleged ringleader accepted a 23-month prison sentence, an €8.7 million fine and confiscation of seized assets, while the court also ordered around €12 million in compensation for affected rightsholders. The total financial impact of the ruling has been put at more than €43 million once fines and damages are combined.
The case dates back to a 2020 investigation and takedown, but the latest court decision closes what ACE, LaLiga and other complainants say has been a landmark prosecution. The coalition behind the action included ACE, LaLiga, Telefónica, Mediapro, Sky, EGEDA and Nagravision, with the investigation led by Spain’s National Police and supported by Europol and Eurojust.
“Collaboration between the Spanish National Police and the private sector is central to ACE’s strategy to detect, deter, and dismantle digital piracy networks,” said Larissa Knapp, Executive Vice President and Chief Content Protection Officer at the Motion Picture Association (MPA). “This case shows that when we work together, major illegal operations can be disrupted and those responsible are held accountable.”
José Luis Gómez Pidal, Chief Inspector of the Spanish National Police (UDEV), added,
“this is a landmark ruling against one of the largest international criminal organizations dedicated to audiovisual piracy. The investigation has been groundbreaking in exposing the inner workings of these structures and introducing new technological methods to the Spanish judicial system. At the same time, the case has revealed how digital piracy is intertwined with complex money laundering networks in various countries, using multiple channels to support and divert the enormous profits generated.”
The judgment is significant not only because of the scale of the network, but because it underlines the growing willingness of Spanish courts to impose severe financial penalties in large-scale piracy cases. It also comes just days after Spain moved to intensify real-time blocking of illegal sports streams, highlighting how anti-piracy enforcement in the market is becoming both more aggressive and more coordinated.
Source: broadbandtvnews.com



