How Amazon, Google, Meta, and Microsoft became a class enemy of football

June 2 – A damning new report from Enders Analysis has dropped the hammer on Amazon, Google, Meta, and Microsoft, calling them out for what can only be described as willful negligence in the face of “industrial scale theft”. 

We’re talking about premium sports content – the lifeblood of football broadcasting – being ripped off on a scale that would make the current Trump administration jealous.

The numbers are staggering. Sports broadcasting rights hit $60 billion globally last year. And while legitimate broadcasters like Sky and DAZN are hemorrhaging money to pirates, the big four of tech are seemingly in no rush to stop the theft.

The preferred tool of the pirates is the innocent-looking Amazon Fire Stick plugged into your telly? According to researchers it has become the weapon of choice for football pirates. The report doesn’t mince words – they’re calling it “a piracy enabler” that’s responsible for “billions of dollars in piracy.”

The proof is in the pudding. Sky’s own data shows that 59% of UK pirates used Amazon Fire products in the first quarter of this year. That’s not coincidence – that’s systematic failure.

In a world of increasing subscription charges and fans forced to join competing platforms to watch their clubs play in multiple competitions, supporters are being priced out of watching the beautiful game they’ve loved since childhood.

These illegal streams aren’t just stealing from broadcasters though. They’re putting fans at risk. Credit card fraud, malware, phishing scams – the whole criminal enterprise is designed to fleece supporters twice over.

Two Liverpool men have already been jailed for flogging modified Fire Sticks on Facebook. Meta’s platform became the marketplace for piracy, and they’re acting like it’s not their problem however, technology exists to stop this madness. Google’s Widevine and Microsoft’s PlayReady are supposed to protect premium content.

The report pulls no punches: these Digital Rights Management systems are “in steep decline” due to the companies’ complete lack of interest in maintaining them. They’ve given pirates “the upper hand” through sheer negligence.

Sky’s Nick Herm hit the nail on the head – this isn’t just about money, it’s about the future of football broadcasting. When rights holders can’t recoup their investments because half their audience is watching stolen streams, the whole ecosystem collapses.

Football fans deserve better than choosing between bankruptcy and criminality just to watch their team. Broadcasters deserve protection for their massive investments. And the beautiful game itself deserves a digital ecosystem that supports rather than sabotages its future.

*The Enders Analysis report should be required reading for anyone who cares about the future of football broadcasting.

Contact the writer of this story at moc.l1748967972labto1748967972ofdlr1748967972owedi1748967972sni@r1748967972etsbe1748967972w.kci1748967972n1748967972