IBCAP Opens New Anti-Piracy Lab in Denver

video piracy
(Image credit: iStock)

DENVER—The International Broadcaster Coalition Against Piracy (IBCAP) has announced the opening of a significantly expanded anti-piracy lab in Denver.

The new facility increases IBCAP’s operational capacity and, for the first time, gives broadcasters and content owners outside IBCAP’s traditional coalition model access to the organization’s specialized technology, expertise and lab services.

“This new lab represents a transformative step for IBCAP and for the broadcasters and content owners we serve,” said Chris Kuelling, executive director of IBCAP. “We have invested in developing proprietary automation and technology that allows us to monitor piracy at a far greater scale and speed. At the same time, we are expanding our model so organizations that need targeted, specialized lab support can work directly with IBCAP without becoming coalition members. As a nonprofit organization, IBCAP is uniquely positioned to offer the expertise and technology our members and new customers require at a cost-effective price. These enhanced capabilities position IBCAP to address the rapid evolution of piracy technology, including the proliferation of IPTV services and playlist-based piracy.”

In addition to more physical space, the new facility expands IBCAP monitoring capabilities and supports a broader portfolio of anti-piracy services. Powered by proprietary automated technology developed by IBCAP and first announced in April 2025, the lab enables IBCAP to monitor more IPTV and set-top-box-based services and at a faster rate, resulting in the discovery and removal of a greater volume of pirated streams.

Through relationships developed over the past 12 years, including widely used hosting providers and CDNs that cooperate with IBCAP’s takedown requests, the coalition typically achieves a 75% effective takedown rate. This cooperation, combined with enhanced automation, has helped IBCAP more than double its number of takedowns over the past year.

IBCAP described the capabilities of the new lab as follows:

  1. STB / IPTV Service Monitoring. Automated, 24/7 monitoring of hundreds of IPTV and set-top-box piracy services for live and video-on-demand (VOD) content. New IPTV monitoring capabilities that identify assets belonging to a specific member or customer across pirate services
  2. Web Live and VOD Monitoring. Scheduled monitoring of live channel streams and VOD piracy. Visual confirmation of infringement by analysts to support defensible enforcement actions.
  3. Automated Evidence Capture and Extraction. On-demand screenshots, data exports and forensic network captures for any monitored service. Extraction of critical technical evidence, including hosting provider and CDN identification and IP addresses, and key infrastructure such as authentication, authorization, EPG and content servers.
  4. In-Depth Understanding of Pirate Ecosystems. Comprehensive analysis of pirate operations and their underlying infrastructure. Mapping of relationships among services to support coordinated, multi-front takedown strategies. Analysis of payment and monetization models used by pirate services. Detection of emerging piracy-as-a-service operations before they scale.
  5. Validation and Delivery. Review of findings through IBCAP’s analyst validation hub for quality assurance. Flexible delivery options, allowing members and customers to receive raw monitoring data or fully validated, actionable intelligence packages. A direct path from identification to takedown through IBCAP’s established enforcement workflow.

More information is available at www.IBCAP.org.

TOPICS

George Winslow is the senior content producer for TV Tech. He has written about the television, media and technology industries for nearly 30 years for such publications as Broadcasting & Cable, Multichannel News and TV Tech. Over the years, he has edited a number of magazines, including Multichannel News International and World Screen, and moderated panels at such major industry events as NAB and MIP TV. He has published two books and dozens of encyclopedia articles on such subjects as the media, New York City history and economics.