Italy busts €300 million streaming piracy ring


The Netflix logo is pictured on a television in this illustration photograph taken in Encinitas, California, U.S., January 18, 2017. REUTERS/Mike Blake

ROME, May 22 (Reuters) - ⁠Italy's financial police said on Friday they had ⁠busted a sophisticated streaming piracy network that ‌caused roughly €300 million ($348 million) in damages to rights holders such as Sky, DAZN, Netflix, Disney+ and Spotify.

The operation targeted previously ​unseen technology built around an application ⁠called CINEMAGOAL, which connected ⁠users' devices to foreign servers that illegally decrypted streaming ⁠content, ‌the Guardia di Finanza police said.

Virtual machines operated around the clock on Italian ⁠soil, capturing and retransmitting access codes from ​legitimate subscriptions registered ‌to fictitious account holders every three minutes, ⁠police added.

The ​system bypassed streaming platforms' security checks and did not require a connection directly associated with a specific IP ⁠address, making it harder to detect ​users. Subscriptions were offered for €40 to €130 per year.

Prosecutors in Bologna, working with EU judicial cooperation body Eurojust, ⁠secured the seizure of foreign servers storing decryption data and the application's source code, with parallel operations carried out in France and Germany, police said.

The ​Guardia di Finanza also uncovered the ⁠use of traditional illegal streaming devices, commonly known ​in Italy as "pezzotto", and will ‌issue fines for 1,000 identified ​pirate system users ranging from €154 to €5,000.

($1 = 0.8616 euros)

(Reporting by Alvise Armellini; Editing by Alex Richardson)

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