Irdeto and Binance partner to disrupt cryptocurrency-funded video piracy
Irdeto has established a Memorandum of Understanding with Binance to enhance its cybersecurity services by targeting cybercriminals using cryptocurrency for piracy, particularly within the video entertainment and gaming ecosystems. This collaboration allows Irdeto to identify illicit crypto transactions and work with Binance to remove threat actors from the platform, disrupting their ability to receive payments for illegal services. The partnership also facilitates reporting to law enforcement to track and seize illicit crypto assets.
Key Takeaways
- Crypto-funded piracy in video and gaming ecosystems surged from 13% in 2022 to 20% by late 2025.
- The collaboration targets payment disruption rather than just technical takedowns, aiming to seize illicit assets.
- Irdeto provides detailed investigative reports to Binance to identify and remove bad actors early in their operations.
- This agreement follows a similar 2025 partnership with Coinbase as Irdeto expands its global payment disruption network.
Why It Matters
This move signals a shift from technical countermeasures to aggressive financial attrition. By partnering with the world’s largest crypto exchange, Irdeto can disrupt the pirate economy at the transaction level, making illicit business models harder to sustain. For the broader ecosystem, it validates the role of blockchain exchanges as critical enforcement partners in the B2B security stack. In a market where 20% of illicit operators now rely on digital assets, platform-level intervention is no longer optional. Watch for the first reported asset seizures resulting from this specific MoU to gauge its actual teeth compared to standard account bans.
Additional Context
The collaboration with Binance reflects a broader trend of cross-sector enforcement as digital piracy becomes increasingly professionalized. In November 2025, an international operation supported by Irdeto and Europol traced approximately $55 million in cryptocurrency linked to 69 digital piracy sites, demonstrating the scale of the financial infrastructure underlying illegal re-streaming, per The Record. This operation involved both Binance and Coinbase, marking a pivotal moment where cryptocurrency platforms began taking proactive enforcement actions based on external cyber threat intelligence. Simultaneously, the streaming industry is facing mounting pressure from decentralized technologies. According to a March 2026 survey by decodeTV, 20% of video business insiders now categorize piracy as an existential threat, with commercialized re-streaming and credential theft cited as the primary concerns. While traditional DRM remains the standard, only 6% of respondents have adopted blockchain-supported encryption, often citing cost or perceived utility issues. This gap highlights why Irdeto is focusing on payment disruption—targeting the monetization phase rather than relying solely on next-generation content protection tools. Regulatory scrutiny is also intensifying. In June 2026, U.S. lawmakers introduced legislation to create a Department of Justice-led task force specifically to coordinate investigations into cryptocurrency-facilitated crimes, per Cointelegraph. This legislative push aims to bridge the gap between blockchain forensics firms and local law enforcement. For Binance, these partnerships serve a dual purpose: they assist in identifying threat actors early while bolstering its compliance record amid ongoing global regulatory pressure, which in 2025 saw the exchange process over 71,000 law enforcement requests and assist in seizing more than $131 million in illicit assets.
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