Key Points

Media and legal experts at WAVES 2025 highlighted piracy's $3.8B economic threat and proposed tech-driven solutions. ISB announced a global anti-piracy summit with Interpol to tackle cybercrime links. Sports and streaming sectors shared preventive strategies like watermarking and pre-emptive enforcement. The consensus called for unified action combining tech, law, and public awareness.

Key Points: WAVES 2025 Experts Push Unified Anti-Piracy Tech and Legal Reforms

  • Piracy may cost 10% revenue loss by 2029
  • AI and blockchain key to tracking leaks
  • Youth most vulnerable to cybercrime via piracy
  • ISB to host Digital Piracy Summit with Interpol
4 min read

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

Global leaders at WAVES 2025 propose tech-driven solutions and legal reforms to combat digital piracy, potentially unlocking $3.8B in content investment.

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

New Delhi, 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.

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 and 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. But effective anti-piracy enforcement could drive a 25 per cent increase in legal video service users and unlock a US$ 0.5 billion boost in conten 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.

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 and 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. But effective anti-piracy enforcement could drive a 25 per cent increase in legal video service users and unlock a US$ 0.5 billion boost in content investment, raising the total value to US$ 3.8 billion by 2029," he said.

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

Shruti Mantri, Associate Director at ISB Institute of Data Science, highlighted the intersection of digital piracy and cybercrime. t investment, raising the total value to US$ 3.8 billion by 2029," he said.

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

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, and announced a Digital Piracy Summit being organised by ISB 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 emphasised 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! As a content creator myself, I've seen how pirated copies of my work appear within hours of release. The ₹0.5 billion potential gain mentioned is huge for our industry. Hope the government takes note and speeds up legal reforms 🤞
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Priya M.
While I agree piracy is wrong, we must also address why people pirate - high subscription costs! When 5 OTT platforms charge ₹500/month each, what do you expect? Make legal content more affordable first. The awareness campaigns should highlight budget-friendly legal options too.
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Arjun S.
Good initiative! But will this actually reach small towns? In my hometown in Bihar, most people don't even know streaming pirated content is illegal. Awareness campaigns need to be in regional languages and run on Doordarshan/All India Radio to have real impact.
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Sunita T.
The cybercrime angle is worrying 😟 My nephew got malware from a pirated gaming site last month. Schools should teach digital safety just like road safety. Proud to see ISB taking lead on this - hope they involve NCERT to create curriculum for younger students too.
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Vikram J.
Watermarking tech sounds promising for cricket matches! But what about regional cinema? Tamil/Telugu films suffer massive piracy losses. Hope the summit considers language-specific solutions. Also, why no representation from South Indian film industries in this panel? Missed opportunity!
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Neha P.
As a law student, I'm glad they're talking about judicial reforms. Our IP laws need updating for digital age. But enforcement is key - we have good laws on paper but slow courts make prosecution ineffective. Maybe special fast-track courts for cyber/IP crimes?

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