Delhi High Court has granted a “superlative injunction” in favour of Star India, empowering the broadcaster to take immediate action against mobile applications and websites that illegally stream its content.
The order, issued by Justice Saurabh Banerjee on May 29, allows Star India to block new piracy platforms including mobile apps without the need to approach the court each time a violation is discovered.
As reported by Storyboard18, the court’s decision represents a major leap in legal enforcement against piracy, particularly in the realm of live sports streaming. Star India, which holds exclusive broadcast and streaming rights for major cricket tournaments like the Indian Premier League (IPL) and the upcoming England Tour of India in 2025, has been battling illegal platforms such as “IPTV Smarters” that continue to stream its content without authorisation.
The broadcaster had previously secured a temporary injunction on February 10, blocking several websites known for piracy. However, as the IPL season progressed, Star India identified 16 additional rogue websites and three mobile apps that surfaced to exploit the surge in viewer demand. Arguing that the traditional legal process was too slow to counter the speed at which pirated streams appear especially during live events the broadcaster urged the court for stronger, pre-emptive relief.
Odisha mulls starting TV channel dedicated to Lord Jagannath
MIB extends by 4 weeks ban on news channels’ TRP by BARC India
Reliance eyes LEO satellite play to rival Starlink in India: ET report
FIFA offered $20mn for WC’26 broadcast rights for India market
KPMG in India, CleverTap partner to boost customer engagement
IPL 2026 becomes biggest season yet with record reach
Shemaroo celebrates Mother’s Day with ‘MAA’dness’ campaign
Anant V Joshi replaces Vaibhav Raj Gupta in ‘Gullak’ S5
Omnicom Media wins Netflix India’s Rs 300 cr media mandate 

