Indian court orders takedown of hundreds of pirate streaming domains

An Indian court has issued orders enabling domain name registrar takedowns, leading to the overnight disappearance of hundreds of pirate streaming websites. This approach goes beyond traditional ISP blocks and provides Hollywood studios with a faster method to shut down such sites. The development marks a significant shift in India's efforts to combat online piracy.

In a notable escalation against digital piracy, an Indian court has authorized the use of domain name registrar takedowns to target pirate websites. This new tactic allows for the instant removal of sites, resulting in hundreds of streaming domains vanishing without prior warning.

Previously, efforts to curb piracy in India relied mainly on blocking access through internet service providers (ISPs). The court's directive expands these measures, offering a more direct and immediate solution. Hollywood studios, long battling unauthorized content distribution, now have this additional tool at their disposal in the Indian market.

The change is described as altering the landscape of piracy enforcement in the country. No specific details on the exact number of affected sites or the names of the domains were provided in initial reports, but the scale is reported as substantial.

This ruling comes amid ongoing global concerns over intellectual property theft in the streaming sector. Indian authorities have not yet commented further on the implementation or potential appeals from affected parties.

Makala yanayohusiana

Culture Minister Chae Hwi-young ordered the immediate blocking of 34 copyright-infringing sites on May 11, marking the first action under a revised copyright law aimed at curbing online piracy of webtoons and novels.

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The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) has doubled its online content blocking orders to 24,300 in 2025, officials said, citing a surge in deepfakes and AI-generated content. Roughly 60% of these orders targeted URLs on X, formerly Twitter, with 25% for Facebook and Instagram, and 5% for YouTube.

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