DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

The DOJ Just Shut Down Nearly 400 Illegal World Cup Streaming Sites

July 1, 2026
in News
The DOJ Just Shut Down Nearly 400 Illegal World Cup Streaming Sites

If the illegal streaming site you’ve been using to watch the World Cup suddenly doesn’t exist anymore, or has been replaced by a giant JPEG announcing that “this site has been seized,” it’s because the U.S. Department of Justice and an international coalition of law enforcement agencies have shut down nearly 400 websites accused of illegally streaming FIFA World Cup matches. At the same time, a separate effort by the advertising industry has stripped nearly 1,400 more of the ad revenue that kept them alive.

The crackdown, dubbed Operation Offsides, is being led by the DOJ’s National Intellectual Property Rights Coordination Center with help from Homeland Security Investigations, a squad of international prosecutors, and private companies including FIFA, NBCUniversal, Warner Bros., UFC, and beIN Media Group. Authorities targeted piracy operations in countries including Peru, Bulgaria, Croatia, Romania, Poland, and Colombia. Many of the seized domains now feature the aforementioned JPEG, essentially an illegal streaming site’s version of a tombstone.

Nearly 1,800 Piracy Sites Targeted in World Cup Streaming Crackdown

On the one hand, people are losing out on a free, albeit illegal, way to watch a sporting event they might otherwise be unable to access without paying an exorbitant fee. On the other hand, you don’t have to watch a soccer game with a live chat box next to it that’s filled with some of the most flagrantly racist s—t you’ve ever read in your life.

All the big illegal streaming operations are often thriving international businesses that generate millions through advertising, data collection, and subscriptions, and all while piggybacking on broadcasts that they never paid to distribute.

Governments and corporations have paired up to attack these sites with a one-two punch that involves taking some sites down and merely choking out the advertising revenue of some others. The latter is spearheaded by Trustworthy Accountability Group, or TAG, a name that could not sound less trustworthy. It’s a nonprofit backed by the digital advertising industry that says it has identified and demonetized 1,373 domains of piracy sites.

The problem with trying to kill one streaming site is that another exactly like it will almost immediately pop up. By distributing exclusion lists across major ad networks, the strategy is starving the entire advertising ecosystem that sustains the pirating industry.

The post The DOJ Just Shut Down Nearly 400 Illegal World Cup Streaming Sites appeared first on VICE.

Embattled California fruit farmer gives away more than 125,000 pounds of nectarines
News

Embattled California fruit farmer gives away more than 125,000 pounds of nectarines

by New York Post
July 1, 2026

A California farmer in the Central Valley is giving away more than 125,000 pounds of nectarines to anyone who wants ...

Read more
News

Taylor Frankie Paul’s ex-husband seeks restraining order, asks for sole custody of kids

July 1, 2026
News

James Kennedy engaged to pregnant girlfriend Jordan Meyers: ‘Luckiest guy in the world’

July 1, 2026
News

Massachusetts dad on ‘adventure of a lifetime’ left fighting for his life in Fiji after noticing bug bite

July 1, 2026
News

Paula Reid to Exit CNN Before Paramount Takes Control | Report

July 1, 2026
Karamo Brown seemingly confirms Jussie Smollett romance after PDA-filled outing in LA

Karamo Brown seemingly confirms Jussie Smollett romance after PDA-filled outing in LA

July 1, 2026
LeBron James fell short of greatness, but leaves a legacy in LA

LeBron James fell short of greatness, but leaves a legacy in LA

July 1, 2026
Remote-first fintech giant Revolut is making the office compulsory for new Gen Z grads—and they’ll earn flexibility like their peers after one year

Remote-first fintech giant Revolut is making the office compulsory for new Gen Z grads—and they’ll earn flexibility like their peers after one year

July 1, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026