
U.S. Seizes Nearly 400 Websites Streaming FIFA World Cup Matches Illegally
U.S. Seizes Nearly 400 Websites Streaming FIFA World Cup Matches Illegally.
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Summary
U.S. Seizes Nearly 400 Websites Streaming FIFA World Cup Matches Illegally. Authorities noted that confiscated servers originated from Peru and Bulgaria, which they alleged are the epicentres of black market streaming services as well as disruption to the operation in Croatia, Romania, Poland and Colombia. “Servers and domains linked to illegal streaming of World Cup games were targeted in Peru and Bulgaria, two known centers of online piracy activity. The U.S. Justice Department said the domains were identified with the assistance of soccer governing body FIFA and others, including NBC Universal and Warner Brothers.
Furthermore, Attendance for the matches has set a record, according to FIFA. FIFA and broadcasting partners have intensified global enforcement efforts throughout the tournament to protect media rights and curb unauthorized online broadcasts. Last week's matches were some of the most watched television programs, according to Nielsen.
Cross-referenced from 3 sources.
Factual coreconfirmed by several independent voices
U.S. Seizes Nearly 400 Websites Streaming FIFA World Cup Matches Illegally.
reliability moderate2/3 sourcesAuthorities noted that confiscated servers originated from Peru and Bulgaria, which they alleged are the epicentres of black market streaming services as well as disruption to the operation in Croatia, Romania, Poland and Colombia. “Servers and domains linked to illegal streaming of World Cup games were targeted in Peru and Bulgaria, two known centers of online piracy activity.
reliability moderate2/3 sourcesThe U.S. Justice Department said the domains were identified with the assistance of soccer governing body FIFA and others, including NBC Universal and Warner Brothers.
reliability low1/2 sources
Reported detailssecondary facts, each attributed to its source
Attendance for the matches has set a record, according to FIFA.
according to The Hindu — InternationalFIFA and broadcasting partners have intensified global enforcement efforts throughout the tournament to protect media rights and curb unauthorized online broadcasts.
according to Khaama PressLast week's matches were some of the most watched television programs, according to Nielsen.
according to The Hindu — International
Disputedincompatible versions — to verify
No factual contradiction detected between sources.
Framing by sidesame fact, different words — loaded terms highlighted
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Blind spotwhat one side keeps silent
No blind spot detected: every side covers the same facts.
Sources3 sources cross-checked
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