India Orders Telegram to Remove Pirated Content From 3,142 Channels
India's Ministry of Information & Broadcasting (MIB) has issued a notice to Telegram to remove pirated content from its platform, following complaints from OTT services including JioCinema and Amazon Prime Video. The action was taken under the Information Technology Act, 2000, after 3,142 Telegram channels were identified for distributing pirated movies and web series. The article also notes a separate recent MIB action, where five smaller OTT platforms were banned for obscene content.
Key Takeaways
- The MIB action targets 3,142 specific Telegram channels identified for distributing copyrighted content.
- The notice was prompted by complaints from major OTT players, specifically naming JioCinema and Amazon Prime Video.
- The MIB cited misuse of Telegram's features, such as large file-sharing limits and user anonymity, as enabling piracy.
- This move follows a separate, recent MIB action that banned five smaller OTT platforms for hosting obscene content.
Why It Matters
This action moves regulatory focus beyond content creators to distribution platforms, placing direct enforcement pressure on a major messaging app in a key growth market. For streamers, it signals the Indian government is responsive to coordinated industry complaints about piracy. The crackdown, paired with recent bans of smaller OTTs for obscene content, indicates a more aggressive enforcement posture from the MIB across the digital content ecosystem. Watch for Telegram's compliance level and whether the MIB escalates to more severe measures if the response is deemed insufficient.
Read full article at msn.com