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.

Source:  Reuters