Boxing fans who illegally streamed Jake Paul fight offered clemency if they pay up

The YouTube star was a big hit on the newfound pay-per-view network for his fight against former MMA star Ben Askren

Rory Carroll
Tuesday 04 May 2021 03:31 EDT
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(Getty Images for Triller)

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Triller does not intent to pursue legal action against boxing fans who illegally streamed the platform’s 17 April fight between Jake Paul and Ben Askren as long as those individuals pay the original $49.99 price before June 1.

A company executive has told Reuters that the policy comes amid more than two million illegal streams of the Triller Fight Club broadcast.

There is the potential for Triller to pursue legal action and a maximum penalty of $150,000 per illegal stream of the fight.

“VPNs all have to comply and turn over the actual IP addresses of each person who stole the fight in discovery,” Triller’s head of piracy Matt St. Claire said.

“We will be able to identify each and every person, VPN or not, as each stream has a unique fingerprint embedded in the content,” he said.

“Triller will pursue the full $150,000 penalty per person per instance for anyone who doesn’t do the right thing and pay before the deadline,” he added.

Paul, a YouTube star who has made a name for himself in the boxing world, knocked out retired mixed martial arts (MMA) fighter Askren in the first round.

Triller has set up a website for those who want to pay the amount before the deadline - https://http://www.fite.tv/page/041721piracysettlement/

Triller filed legal action on April 23 in U.S. District Court of Central California against the owners of the H3Podcast website for piracy of the event, and a dozen other sites that restreamed and profited from as many as hundreds of thousands of users each, the company said.

H3Podcast did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

“The fines are calculated at $150,000 per instance, so for H3 and other sites who rebroadcast the event to many people, the (potential) damages are large,” St. Claire said.

“We are taking this position because it is outright theft. It is no different than walking into a store and stealing a video game off the shelf,” he said.

“In the case of the offending sites, it’s worse because they also then resold it to many people, illegally profiting from work they do not own.”

Triller Fight Club’s next event will pit Teofimo Lopez against George Kambosos, Jr. on June 5.

Reuters

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