BeIN is the 38th company to join ACE and the coalition's first sports broadcaster.
BeIN Sports, the flagship channel of BeIN Media Group, has become a member of the Alliance for Creativity and Entertainment (ACE).
Alliance for Creativity and Entertainment is a coalition launched on June 13, 2017, of over 30 major global entertainment companies and film studios aimed at protecting profits from copyrighted material.
The announcement comes on World Intellectual Property Day which is observed annually on 26 April.
The addition of beIN marks ACE’s newly expanded focus on the growing threat that large-scale piracy operations pose to live sports broadcasters. According to a recent study from Synamedia/Ampere, addressing global sports piracy could amount to an additional $28bn of annual revenue for the industry. According to the study, 52% of sports fans watching pirate streams are paying for at least some of their illegal access, and 74% of those currently using illegal streaming services might be willing to pay to switch to legitimate providers.
ACE’s comprehensive approach to reducing piracy includes criminal referrals, litigation, and direct communications among other tactics positions ACE and its partners to move swiftly into reducing piracy of live sports broadcasts globally. BeIN is the 38th company to join ACE and is the coalition’s first sports broadcaster; more sports leagues are expected to join in the coming months.
Speaking about the piracy issue, Cameron Andrews, Legal Director for Anti-Piracy, beIN Media Group, said: “We are delighted to be entering this partnership with ACE and foresee benefits from working with them to tackle piracy. Piracy is a truly global problem that threatens the full range of international and local movies and entertainment, as well as sport and live content. Threats to intellectual property rights is a major problem in many of the markets in which beIN operates, so we will be working closely with ACE to investigate and bring legal enforcement actions against the major pirates who are seriously threatening continued investment in the world-class sports and entertainment services and productions that consumers deserve.”
Jan van Voorn, Executive Vice President and Chief of Global Content Protection for the Motion Picture Association, added: “The addition of beIN Sports is an extraordinary step in the evolution and growth of ACE. Regardless of what the programming is, be it streaming, downloading films and television content or live sports, ACE continues to be the largest and most effective global operation dedicated to reducing piracy, and we are pleased that beIN sees the value of our leadership and innovation to protect their content worldwide.”
Unlawful piracy operations and the theft of online content puts incredible innovation, creativity and investment at risk, to the detriment of creators, innovators and consumers alike. It harms both local and foreign films and businesses, threatens jobs, undermines investment, reduces tax revenue to governments, and stifles creativity. Streaming piracy is a growing problem representing 80% of all piracy today. According to the Global Innovation Policy Center, piracy conservatively costs $29.2bn to as much as $71bn annually in lost domestic revenues. Additionally, consumers are harmed when accessing illegal content – one-third of pirate sites target consumers with malware that can lead to a range of problems, including identity theft and financial loss, according to a report by Digital Citizens Alliance.