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Lawsuit to combat piracy via h.TV STB

April 19, 2016 09.12 Europe/London By Robert Briel

Dish and Chinese-language programmers TVB and CCTV announced a lawsuit to halt illegal streaming of content via the “h.TV” device.

In the filing with the US District Court for the Eastern District of New York, Dish, TVB and CCTV state that HTV International Limited (HTVI) has set up a pirate broadcasting network that captures entire channels of TVB and CCTV television programming and streams that programming over the internet to users of the h.TV device in the US, 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

Dish owns exclusive rights to retransmit TVB and CCTV channels and programs via satellite in the United States, as well as exclusive rights to retransmit TVB content Over the Top (OTT) in the US.

“The h.TV Retransmission Service accomplishes this massive piracy in part through a peer-to-peer network–like Napster, Grokster, and BitTorrent, but designed to stream video content rather than to download media files,” the plaintiffs state in the complaint.

“Through this peer-to-peer network, some h.TV users not only receive unauthorized streams of CCTV and TVB programming in the United States, but also simultaneously retransmit that programming to other h.TV users in the United States.”

Consumers are paying as much as $300 for an h.TV device and accessing a variety of “apps” that enable users to access, view and share infringing streams of television programming. Many of these apps unlawfully retransmit TVB and CCTV programming.

“Not only are consumers being scammed when they buy the h.TV device, which relies on content obtained illegally, they are being exploited to help facilitate this scheme through a peer-to-peer network that retransmits unauthorized programming from one user to another,” said Samuel Tsang, vice president, operations for TVB USA.

“We work with providers like Dish to offer our content legally to consumers and won’t stand for pirates who seek to profit from our content without our authorization.”

“HTVI has built its entire business around blatant copyright infringement, brazenly advertising and promoting the capability of the h.TV device to provide users with infringing streams of CCTV and TVB television programming,” the plaintiffs state in the complaint.

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Related

Filed Under: Newsline, Regulation Tagged With: CCTV, DISH, h.TV, Piracy, TVB, US Edited: 19 April 2016 09:12

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About Robert Briel

Arnhem-based Robert covers the Benelux, France, Germany, Austria and Switzerland as well as IPTV, web TV, connected TV and OTT. Email Robert at rbriel@broadbandtvnews.com.

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