Online piracy continues to trouble the film industry, especially content on OTT platforms. Every few months, the issue returns to public attention, usually after a major incident. Recently, the arrest of Ravi Immadi, associated with the platform iBomma, once again brought piracy into focus. Industry reactions followed quickly. Statements were made, discussions took place, and social media was filled with anger.
As seen many times before, this attention was short-lived. The outrage faded within days. Piracy, however, continued without interruption. This repeated cycle points to a larger issue that often goes unaddressed. The problem is not sustained only by audience choices. It exists because the systems meant to protect digital content remain weak.
When Outrage Fades, Piracy Remains
Each time piracy becomes visible, the response follows a familiar pattern. Strong words are used. Audiences are blamed. Piracy is framed as a moral failure or a law-and-order problem. While such reactions create temporary pressure, they do not lead to lasting change.
Pirated content does not appear randomly. A high-quality digital copy must first exist. That copy usually comes from official digital platforms. When access is wide and security controls are weak, leaks become possible. This is a system issue, not an accident.
Blaming viewers alone ignores how behavior is shaped by convenience. When illegal copies are easy to access and free, many people choose them. This does not justify piracy, but it explains why repeated warnings and arrests fail to stop it. The root cause lies in how content is delivered and protected.
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Focusing only on punishment distracts from the vulnerability inside OTT delivery mechanisms. As long as these gaps remain, piracy platforms will continue to operate.
Proof That Piracy Can Be Contained
The idea that piracy is unavoidable does not hold true. A clear example comes from the Telugu OTT platform ETV Win. The platform made a specific security decision during the early release period of its content.
ETV Win restricted access by allowing viewing only through mobile applications and connected television apps. Browser-based access was blocked during the initial release window. This reduced the chances of easy copying and screen recording.
The impact was immediate. Films such as KA, Anaganaga, and AIR (All India Rankers) did not appear on piracy platforms during their crucial first days. These early days are important for legal viewership.
During this period, official viewing increased. This change did not happen because audiences suddenly became more ethical. It happened because illegal access was technologically limited. The result showed that piracy can be delayed through deliberate security choices.
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This example challenges the belief that piracy cannot be controlled. While it may not disappear completely, it can be managed when platforms reduce access points during sensitive release windows.
Why OTT Platforms Must Own the Problem
If a regional platform like ETV Win can protect its content, the continued struggles of larger platforms raise serious questions. Global OTT services such as Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, and Jio Hotstar invest heavily in acquiring films and series. Despite this, content released on these platforms often appears on piracy sites within hours.
This suggests that content security is not treated as core infrastructure. Growth, reach, and ease of access are prioritized, even when they increase the risk of leaks. Producers who embraced digital premieres and shorter theatrical windows did so in good faith, trusting platforms to safeguard their content.
The consequences of weak protection are largely borne by producers. Revenue losses affect both big and small films. The damage extends across the industry.
Piracy continues not because people are inherently dishonest, but because systems allow easy copying and sharing. Arrests may disrupt such platforms temporarily, but they do not fix the technical gaps that enable leaks. Those gaps exist within official OTT systems.
As long as security remains secondary, piracy will continue to thrive from within digital distribution channels.
