Spain hits illegal IPTV with €43M bill and shutdown
Spain’s National Court issued a judgment against a large illegal IPTV network for market/consumer offences, intellectual property violations, and money laundering, with defendants accepting the joint accusation supported by LALIGA, Nagravision, Movistar Plus+, Mediapro, and EGEDA. The ruling includes €12 million in compensation to affected companies and more than €30 million in money-laundering fines, plus confiscation of assets and permanent shutdown of domains used to distribute pirated live football, films, and series to over two million users across 13 countries. LALIGA also cited a reported 60% reduction in piracy consumption in Spain in the 2024/25 season as part of its broader anti-piracy strategy.
Key Takeaways
- €12M in compensation awarded to rightsholders, plus €30M+ in money-laundering fines and additional sanctions
- Permanent shutdown ordered for domains including rapidiptv.com, rapidiptv.net, and iptvstack.com
- Case built via a multi-party coalition (LALIGA, Nagravision, Movistar Plus+, Mediapro, EGEDA) and supported by Europol/Eurojust coordination
- Court spotlighted laundering tactics common in piracy ecosystems: crypto, payment gateways, shell companies, and false invoicing
- LALIGA claims a 60% drop in piracy consumption in Spain during the 2024/25 season
Why It Matters
This is the anti-piracy playbook evolving from whack-a-domain to “follow the money.” For streaming and sports rights, the strategic signal is that courts are increasingly willing to treat illegal IPTV as organized financial crime—unlocking bigger penalties, asset seizures, and cross-border enforcement that can actually change operator economics. The meme to watch: anti-piracy is becoming a compliance-and-risk story for payment providers, crypto rails, and hosting infrastructure, not just a content enforcement story. If Spain’s claimed 60% reduction holds, it strengthens the ROI case for coordinated, multi-stakeholder action.
Read full article at laliga.com