Italy fines thousands as crackdown on pirate IPTV targets viewers

Skye Jacobs

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Staff
Editor's take: Whether these fines will persuade the public to switch to legal streaming services remains to be seen. For now, Italian authorities have made clear that they are prepared to pursue not only the suppliers but also the consumers of pirated content, marking a new chapter in the fight against digital piracy.

In a significant escalation of its campaign against illegal streaming, Italy has begun issuing fines to thousands of individuals who subscribed to pirate IPTV services. This move follows a recent memorandum of understanding among the Prosecutor's Office, the Guardia di Finanza (a military police force in Italy), and the country's communications regulator AGCOM, which established a framework for sharing information on users of unauthorized streaming platforms.

While the precise origin of the subscriber data remains undisclosed, it is believed to have been gathered during frequent law enforcement raids targeting illicit IPTV operations. These raids have yielded databases containing emails and other identifying information, enabling authorities to target end-users directly for the first time.

The crackdown is rooted in Law 93/2023, anti-piracy legislation passed last year that allows for fines of up to €5,000 ($5,581) for repeat offenders. The law also introduced the Piracy Shield, a system enabling rapid ISP blocking of unauthorized streams.

After the legislation passed, authorities wasted no time making it clear that the era of impunity for IPTV pirates was over. That warning has now materialized into action. At a recent press conference, the Guardia di Finanza revealed that 2,282 individuals across Italy have been fined for their involvement with pirate IPTV services. Initial penalties start at €154 ($172), but officials have stressed that repeat violations could dramatically increase fines, reaching the €5,000 maximum.

This marks the first time the new law has been enforced against consumers, not just the operators of illegal services. The current wave of fines is reportedly linked to an operation in Lecce last October, where a major IPTV network was dismantled and subscriber information seized.

Authorities have indicated that this is only the beginning, with ongoing investigations in several regions aimed at identifying further offenders. Three additional prosecutors' offices have already launched their inquiries, signaling a sustained national effort.

The crackdown is part of a broader strategy to combat digital piracy in Italy, particularly the illegal streaming of football (soccer) matches – a major concern for the country's lucrative sports industry. The financial stakes are high. Luigi De Siervo, CEO of Serie A, has repeatedly emphasized the severe impact of piracy on Italian football, estimating losses of around €1 billion ($1.1 billion) every year due to unauthorized streaming.

These losses threaten the financial stability of clubs and the entire football ecosystem, as television rights constitute a vital revenue stream. Paolo Scaroni, president of AC Milan, has highlighted the importance of enforcing existing laws, arguing that providers and consumers of pirated content must face consequences if the industry is to recover from the damage inflicted by piracy.

Political support for the crackdown is strong, particularly from Senator Claudio Lotito, the architect of the anti-piracy law and owner of Lazio football club. Lotito has stated unequivocally that those who break the law will now face real and personal repercussions, declaring that the time for leniency is over. Inter Milan president Beppe Marotta echoed this sentiment, likening the new enforcement regime to a shift from a yellow card to a red card in soccer.

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What fool would use their real email and CC for a pirate sub?

Also the average wage in Italy is only $27k per year, and you want to fine $5k? Hey, Italy, just a suggestion, maybe fix your broken economy and people wouldn't have to pirate?
 
What fool would use their real email and CC for a pirate sub?

Also the average wage in Italy is only $27k per year, and you want to fine $5k? Hey, Italy, just a suggestion, maybe fix your broken economy and people wouldn't have to pirate?


Agreed get a prepaid Visa and use a VPN to set up a burner Gmail account and then stream your content while on a secure VPN people that don't are deserving of what they got
 
Millions of asylum seekers from the mid-east and North Africa I’m sure don’t have subscriptions to pricey Champions League streaming outlets.

When the fees and access are simple, people are happy to use official services.
 
There is still 0 evidence that piracy affects revenue in any field… the fallacy that people who pirate would pay if they couldn’t pirate is laughable…

The TV / AD revenue system is unsustainable and the people on top know it. They use piracy as their excuse for waning profits in an attempt to keep their own cushy jobs…
 
What fool would use their real email and CC for a pirate sub?

Also the average wage in Italy is only $27k per year, and you want to fine $5k? Hey, Italy, just a suggestion, maybe fix your broken economy and people wouldn't have to pirate?

The sort of people that watch soccer.
 
I don’t know about Italy, but if it’s anything like the U.S., don’t blame the pirates.

In the U.S., NBC bought the broadcasting rights to the English Premier League and packaged it under its streaming service Peacock (which swallowed streaming service NBC Sports). A lot of folks sign up for Peacock just to watch English league matches.

But they soon find out, after having purchased a year-long subscription, that not all matches air live on Peacock (they don't tell you this in the ads or during the sign-up process). Some games (impossible to tell which or why) will air only on NBC's cable-only channel USA. (You can watch the replays on Peacock a day later.) So, you need both a streaming and a cable subscription to watch the EPL "legally" in the U.S.

Louis Rossmann made some very sound pro-piracy arguments because of the current market, where paid subscriptions fall behind their pirated counterparts in terms of accessibility and quality.

A lot of people would be happy to source their content legally. Even pirated content + VPN can cost money that many do pay. But the legit services must be accessible and worth the money. And, right now, we are getting milked without recourse because of monopolies, oligopolies, and corporate greed.
 
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The sports industry’s involvement explains the scale here. When piracy threatens billion-euro revenue streams, governments start treating it less like a nuisance and more like economic sabotage.
 
I thought those were gone long ago. 10 years ago, I could find streams for most major events.
But idk, they must have gotten a lot more private because I saw fewer and fewer of them
trying to watch from USA. I should thank whoever made sure they disappeared though because
it definitely cured my interest to sports.
 
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