The UK part of The Athletic has published some good writing and a podcast
documentary (
https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/the-underground-world-of-illegal-streaming/id1488521447?i=1000735929491)
on sports piracy in the last week or so. This feels like an existential
threat to sports rights owners now as they spread their wares across
multiple platforms, and people just can't afford all the different
streaming services to follow their favourite sports and teams.

The podcast documentary concentrates on the Premier League, but I think the
same is true for lots of other sports. "Fire Sticks" (using the term
generically rather than only Amazon devices) that run Android and can have
pirate streaming apps "sideloaded" onto them have proliferated enormously.
Lots of people are very open about the fact that they have one of these to
stream sports.

If you don't know, it basically works like this. You either already have a
Fire Stick or similar, and you find someone advertising on WhatsApp.
They'll point you to a website where you download an app to your Fire
Stick. You then pay someone an amount of money for access to the app. In
the UK that might be £60 ($79) for a year's access, and you get *everything*.
Every sport from Premier League to F1 to PPV Boxing. It might not come with
English commentary, and it might not have the usual graphics or
presentation that you're familiar with, but you get the sport that you
want, with the streams themselves often being sourced from an overseas
location. (Sidenote: In the UK, Premier League games often briefly display
numbers in the corner of the screen during the match. They're bespoke to my
box, and mean that if I pirated my feed, the Premier League's anti-piracy
people could trace the source of the pirate feed directly to me!).

The way that access is sold to these pirate apps is similar to drug
dealers. There are higher level folk who have distributors and then dealers
on the ground. The dealers are easiest to catch of course, and they're
probably using PayPal or direct bank transfers to collect their money
(Venmo isn't really a thing in the UK). So that's easy to trace. But
further up the chain it probably turns into crypto and is much harder to
follow. Organised crime gangs are running many of these schemes, with the
servers themselves being located overseas.

But obviously, as sports costs rise, and subscriptions are increased to
account for those costs, it becomes more attractive to more people to go to
piracy which is probably seen as a "victimless crime".

Incidentally, Amazon's very latest Fire Sticks no longer use Android and
you can no longer sideload apps onto them. Amazon, of course, is invested
in streaming sports itself, and was probably under pressure from sports
rights owners to do something. But there are a multitude of  no-name
generic Android sticks that you can buy on Amazon very cheaply and that can
do the same thing.


Adam

On Thu, Nov 20, 2025 at 1:23 AM Joe Hass <[email protected]> wrote:

> What is infuriating to me is that, once again, MLB is handing out
> exclusive windows like butterscotch at Grandma's house. If you lived in
> Chicago and wanted to watch all 162 Cubs regular season games and the first
> two rounds of the playoffs, you'd have to have access to (pay for):
> * Marquee Sports Network
> * ESPN
> * Apple TV+
> * Fox
> * Roku
> * TBS
>
> Now we're going to ditch Roku, but add Netflix and Peacock?!? Why does Rob
> Manfred (who screwed the pooch with the ESPN and Roku deals earlier this
> year) hate his own sport? This is why I've never understood the hatred
> towards the NFL with their multiple partners: since their first deal with
> ESPN in 1987, they've always ensured if you live in the local market, you
> always get *all* your games OTA, regardless of who's carrying them.
>
> Where's the Tylenol?
>
> On Wed, Nov 19, 2025, 16:03 'Bob F' via TVorNotTV <
> [email protected]> wrote:
>
>> WSJ saying it's $800MM/year over three years, between NBCU (who'll take
>> over the Sunday night banner on the main network), Netflix and, as many had
>> suspected, a smaller role for ESPN:
>> https://deadline.com/2025/11/major-league-baseball-rights-deals-espn-netflix-nbcuniversal-1236623833/
>>  (link)
>> But the lack of labor peace can complicate all that...
>> B
>>
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