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Racket in theft & piracy of satellite TV signals busted; kingpin arrested

Delhi Police raided premises in Kalyanpur area of Lucknow on May 22 and found illegal tapping and unauthorised uploading of live content of all popular Indian TV channels on pirated websites

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Racket in theft & piracy of satellite TV signals busted; kingpin arrested

Delhi Police raided premises in Kalyanpur area of Lucknow on May 22 and found illegal tapping and unauthorised uploading of live content of all popular Indian TV channels on pirated websites

BestMediaInfo Bureau | Mumbai | June 1, 2015

tv-channelsIn a major breakthrough, Delhi Police raided premises in Kalyanpur area of Lucknow on May 22, 2015 and found illegal tapping and unauthorised uploading of live content of all popular Indian television channels such as Zee TV, Star Plus, Colors, and Sony TV, among others, on pirated websites.

The police were acting on FIR No. 243/2014 lodged by Zee Entertainment Enterprises Ltd (ZEEL) and after carrying out detailed initial investigations.

During the raid, more than two dozen workers were caught red-handed, digitally stealing live feed of Indian pay TV channels using more than 50 DTH and cable TV set-top boxes. These persons were extracting TV feeds, removing watermarks and uploading them on their sites such as www.Desitvforum.net. These websites are being accessed by millions of viewers abroad in the US, Canada, Europe, the UK, Netherlands, etc., and thousands of dollars are being illegally earned by these pirates causing huge amount of losses to the broadcasters. In addition, there has also been rampant violation of foreign exchange regulations and money laundering.

The mastermind of this piracy racket, Md. Asif Siddiqui, was arrested by the Delhi Police and various equipment, including computers and other accessories, used in carrying out the piracy/ signal theft were also seized. Investigations in the matter are continuing and more such raids and arrests are likely to follow based on the interrogation of the accused.

As per a release issued by Zee, the media group had lodged an FIR No. 243/2014 u/s IPC 379/420/465/107/109/120B, u/s 63 Copyright Act 1957 and u/s 66/66C of IT Act 2000 with Delhi Police in Chanakyapuri Police Station for unauthorised streaming of the episodes of various Zee channel programmes within 10-12 minutes of their actual broadcast. The modus operandi was that in addition to tapping and stealing live feed of various channels from DTH and cable set-top boxes, the accused persons within these 10-12 minutes, were recording video, editing identifiable information, adding their logo and uploading it to several servers simultaneously.

This is the first occasion when an Internet-pirate has been caught red-handed in India. Normally identifying individual persons and their physical locations behind their pirated sites is very difficult. It took more than a year-long investigation and digital evidence gathering by Zee's in-house IT Security Team to collect irrefutable evidence to identify the people behind these websites, which were hosted from Sweden. With the proliferation of Internet-enabled devices, Indian TV channels industry has been bleeding badly. According to open-source web-based analytics, this particular group had more than 10 lakh daily viewers and have been earning thousands of dollars every day. The targeted customers were mainly from the US, Canada, Europe, etc.

The release further stated that piracy, stealing of signals and their unauthorised transmission and streaming on web has been a major stumbling block in revenue monetisation and broadcasters are losing huge revenue to these pirates. However, the provisions of existing laws such as Copyright Act, IT Act 2000 have not proved to be effective in curbing these kinds of new-age crimes as piracy is categorised as a “bailable” offence. In order to effectively deal with the menace of copyright piracy, the copyright infringement needs to be made “non-bailable”.  Similarly, whether signal theft could be regarded as theft of “property” as contemplated under Section 379 of IPC also needs to be clarified.

The need of the hour is to review these laws and introduce more stringent provisions to deal with such offences so that these provisions may act as an effective deterrent.

Info@BestMediaInfo.com

Info@BestMediaInfo.com

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