Get the latest tech news

Streaming Pirates Are Hollywood's New Villains


Illegal subscription services that steal films or TV shows bring in $2 billion a year in ads and subscriber fees (non-paywalled link). From a report: Ever since taking on Netflix at its own game, old Hollywood has struggled to turn a profit in streaming, with the likes of Disney+, Peacock and Paramo...

But the age of streaming has been a boon for some unintended winners: pirates that use software to rip a film or television show in seconds from legitimate online video platforms and host the titles on their own, illegitimate services, which rake in about $2 billion annually from ads and subscriptions. With no video production costs, illicit streaming sites such as myflixer and projectfreetv have achieved profit margins approaching 90%, according to the Motion Picture Association, a trade group representing Hollywood studios that's working to crack down on the thousands of illegal platforms that have cropped up in recent years. But now piracy involving illegal streaming services as well as file-sharing costs the US economy about $30 billion in lost revenue a year and some 250,000 jobs, estimates the US Chamber of Commerce's Global Innovation Policy Center.

Get the Android app

Or read this on Slashdot

Read more on:

Photo of Hollywood

Hollywood

Photo of new villains

new villains

Photo of streaming pirates

streaming pirates

Related news:

News photo

Streaming Pirates Are Hollywood’s New Villains

News photo

Another Hollywood strike? Musicians union ‘prepared to do whatever it needs’ for AI protections and streaming residuals

News photo

Sun sets on Kim Kardashian: Hollywood mobile game after 10 years