Key Points

Industry leaders at WAVES 2025 stressed the urgent need for a unified approach against piracy, blending AI, legal action, and public awareness. Experts revealed unchecked piracy could slash revenues by 10%, while enforcement could boost legal streaming by 25%. ISB announced a summit with CBI to tackle cybercrime-linked piracy, and sports platforms highlighted watermarking as a key deterrent. The panel agreed proactive measures, not reactive fixes, are vital to safeguard India’s growing digital content economy.

Key Points: Experts Push Unified Tech and Legal Action Against Piracy at WAVES 2025

  • Piracy may cost 10% revenue loss by 2029
  • AI and blockchain key to tracking leaks
  • ISB to host Digital Piracy Summit with CBI
  • Sports sector uses watermarking for early detection
3 min read

Experts call for unified action against piracy, blending technology, law, and awareness at WAVES 2025

Global leaders at WAVES 2025 call for tech-driven, legal, and awareness-based strategies to combat digital piracy and unlock $3.8B content potential.

"Effective anti-piracy enforcement could drive a 25% increase in legal video users and unlock $0.5B in content investment – Vivek Couto, Media Partners Asia"

Mumbai, May 3

A panel discussion on "Piracy: Safeguarding Content through Technology" brought together global leaders in media, law, and cybersecurity to address one of the most pressing challenges facing the digital content economy at WAVES 2025, the Ministry of Information & Broadcasting said in a release on Saturday.

Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], May 3 (ANI): A panel discussion on "Piracy: Safeguarding Content through Technology" brought together global leaders in media, law, and cybersecurity to address one of the most pressing challenges facing the digital content economy at WAVES 2025, the Ministry of Information & Broadcasting said in a release on Saturday.

Moderated by Neil Gane, Vice President and Head of Asia Pacific at IP House, the conversation reflected the growing consensus that piracy is no longer a fringe concern but a mainstream threat demanding coordinated, multi-dimensional responses.

Vivek Couto, Managing & Executive Director of Media Partners Asia, underlined the economic cost of unchecked piracy. "Online piracy is expected to cost the industry over 10 per cent in lost revenue between 2025 and 2029," he said. "But effective anti-piracy enforcement could drive a 25 per cent increase in legal video service users and unlock a USD 0.5 billion boost in content investment, raising the total value to USD 3.8 billion by 2029."

He urged stakeholders to reframe the piracy discussion from protection to potential, especially as India's digital video economy scales.

Dr Shruti Mantri, Associate Director at ISB Institute of Data Science, highlighted the intersection of digital piracy and cybercrime.

"Piracy often involves malicious tools like trojans, ransomware, and spyware. Users between 18-24 years old are particularly vulnerable," she said.

She called for comprehensive public awareness campaigns and educational initiatives, noting that prevention must begin with informed consumers. She also announced that ISB will organise a Digital Piracy Summit in collaboration with CBI and Interpol on July 9-10.

Speaking on anti-piracy operations in the sports sector, Anurag Kashyap, Head of Anti-Piracy Operations at DAZN, explained the preventive approach. "Our strategy is built around the three Ds: detection, disruption, and deterrence. We start enforcement even before the event goes live," he said. Invisible watermarking, he added, plays a pivotal role in tracking leaks.

Legal expert Anil Lale, Head-Legal at Jio Hotstar, stressed the importance of strong enforcement. "The biggest deterrent is prosecuting the pirates. Law enforcement must identify the source of leaks and stop playing catch-up," he said. Prevention, he asserted, should be proactive rather than reactive.

Praveen Anand of Anand and Anand Associates emphasized that the solution lies in both technology and judicial reform. "Tools like AI, blockchain, and watermarking are crucial. But we must also make camcording difficult with measures like metal detectors. Timely legal action is essential to create deterrence," he noted.

The panel converged on the need for a united front, where technology, legislation, enforcement agencies, and public awareness work in tandem to protect the future of digital content. WAVES 2025, through such discussions, continues to spotlight actionable strategies for the Media and Entertainment industry's most pressing concerns.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rahul K.
Finally some serious discussion on piracy! Our film industry loses crores every year because of illegal streaming. The 3D approach (detection, disruption, deterrence) makes perfect sense. Hope they implement it fast before the next big cricket tournament 🏏
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Priya M.
While I appreciate the efforts, I wonder how effective this will be when many Indians still see piracy as 'jugaad'. We need better awareness - maybe Bollywood stars should do PSAs about how piracy hurts their own industry. Change has to start at the grassroots level.
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Amit S.
₹0.5 billion boost in content investment sounds great! But will OTT platforms reduce subscription prices if piracy is controlled? Right now many families can't afford 5 different subscriptions. Maybe a unified affordable platform would help reduce piracy temptation.
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Sneha R.
The cybercrime angle is scary 😨 My cousin downloaded a 'free' movie and got his bank details stolen. More power to ISB for organizing that Digital Piracy Summit with Interpol! We need to teach digital safety in schools along with regular studies.
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Vikram J.
Good initiative but implementation is key. Our laws need teeth - remember how China cracked down on piracy? Within 2 years, their legal streaming market boomed. We need that kind of political will plus better tech solutions like the watermarking they mentioned.
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Neha T.
As a content creator myself, I've seen my web series leaked within hours of release. The invisible watermarking tech sounds promising! Hope smaller creators can access these tools too, not just big studios. Piracy hurts indie creators the most 💔

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