A statement this afternoon from the TSJ of Catalonia led to a mistake or misinterpretation about football piracy in Spain. In it, the commercial court number 8 of Barcelona concluded that the decision about piracy implies the ability to request teleoperators to provide personal data of those who disseminate pirated images. That means, and according to this afternoon’s order, that television operators no longer have to communicate or provide employers with personal data (DNI, etc.) of football users without prohibition but instead those who share its contents are forbidden, those who redistribute the contents of The league illegal and also get profit from them. The so-called ‘cardsharers’.
But as he clarified in a moment The league and his own president Javier Tebasthe historic decision known last Thursday against football piracy in Spain is very clear in giving the green light to take direct legal action against users who use football illegally.
Too much The league because television platforms will have a new, more effective tool to combat piracy, penalizing consumers who watch it from home.
Last Thursday’s order clarified that operators need to be informed The league about those who connect to the pirate servers: IP address assigned to the user, name and surname of the owner who contracted the internet access service, postal address of line installation and billing and identification document ( DNI, NIE).
The same decision also clarified that operators currently offering The league They will be obligated to provide this information. As soon as operators start sending user data, complaints start coming in from people who watched football illegally.
Source: La Verdad

I’m Rose Herman and I work as an author for Today Times Live. My expertise lies in writing about sports, a passion of mine that has been with me since childhood. As part of my job, I provide comprehensive coverage on everything from football to tennis to golf.