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Wikipedia

beoutQ

beoutQ was a pirate pay television broadcaster that operated in Saudi Arabia between August 2017 and August 2019. The service consisted of ten satellite television channels that carried rebranded feeds of programming from Qatari broadcaster beIN Sports. beoutQ began operations after Saudi Arabia blocked beIN Media Group from offering its services in the country; the action stemmed from a then-ongoing diplomatic crisis between Qatar and other Arab countries over its alleged state sponsorship of terrorist groups. The service operated out of facilities in Saudi Arabia, and utilised the Arabsat satellites for transmission. The channels also carried propaganda accusing beIN Sports of being a monopoly.

beoutQ
CountrySaudi Arabia
Broadcast areaSaudi Arabia
Programming
Language(s)Arabic
Ownership
OwnerUnknown
History
LaunchedAugust 2017
ClosedAugust 2019

The service was condemned by beIN Media Group, sports bodies, and governments for its large-scale infringement of copyrights; beIN Sports's managing director described beoutQ as being an industrial-scale operation, and warned that the service was creating market conditions that would make them less likely to make larger investments in sports broadcast rights. Citing alleged inaction against the service, Saudi Arabia was placed on intellectual property watchlists by the United States Trade Representative and European Union. In turn, the Saudi government accused beIN Sports of engaging in anti-competitive behaviour and of participating in a smear campaign against the Kingdom with its sister company Al Jazeera.

Citing the impact of the service, beIN declined to renew its rights to Formula One and the Bundesliga in the MENA region. It also criticised football bodies for hosting super cups in Saudi Arabia. In June 2020, beIN Sports briefly pulled the Serie A from its channels worldwide until it was compensated for the impact of piracy on its rights. Issues surrounding beoutQ also impacted a bid by the Saudi Public Investment Fund to acquire Premier League club Newcastle United. In September 2021, a representative of the club accused beIN of engaging in lobbying efforts against the sale that improperly influenced the Premier League.

In August 2019, beoutQ abruptly ceased operations on satellite. Its set-top boxes continued to be usable via third-party IPTV services available on a built-in app store. In June 2020, the World Trade Organization (WTO) issued a report finding evidence that the service operated out of Saudi Arabia. The WTO also found that Saudi Arabia had frustrated beIN's ability to receive legal counsel in the country. In October 2021, after the diplomatic crisis was resolved, beIN Media Group stated that Saudi Arabia was planning to lift its ban on the beIN Sports service, ahead of the Premier League officially approving the Saudi purchase of Newcastle United.

Background Edit

The Qatar-based beIN Sports is the dominant broadcaster of sports programming in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA). It had held rights to prominent events such as the Olympic Games, the FIFA World Cup, UEFA Champions League, Asian Football Confederation (including the AFC Asian Cup), La Liga, and Premier League in association football, Formula One racing, international tennis events, and other events.[1][2]

In June 2017, as part of a diplomatic crisis over alleged funding of extremist groups by the government of Qatar, beIN was banned from selling its subscriptions in Saudi Arabia, and the beIN Sports channels were briefly banned in the United Arab Emirates (the ban was reversed the following month).[3][4][5] It was reported that Saudi Arabia planned to fund a new competitor out of Cairo, Egypt, known as PBS Sport,[6] but the proposed service never launched.[7]

A few months later, a new subscription service known as beoutQ emerged, which repackaged the beIN Sports channels as their own. Initially, the service was distributed online, but later began to be distributed via 10 satellite channels.[8] The service's launch was backed by a social media campaign on Twitter; Saud al-Qahtani, former adviser to King Abdullah, participated in the campaign.[8] It was reported that the service's associated decoder boxes and subscriptions had become widely available across the country,[9][10][11][12] bundled with a free one-year subscription.[8]

The service initially claimed that it was backed by Colombian and Cuban investors. However, this claim was denied by local officials in the two countries.[13] In September 2018 during legal proceedings in the United States, beIN linked the beoutQ website to Saudi businessman Raed Khusheim, who is chief executive officer of UAE-based television provider Selevision. Khusheim denied the claims, arguing that it was a "smear campaign" by beIN stemming from business disputes.[14]

Programming Edit

beoutQ's "Live Sports" programming was distributed via 10 channels.[15] Initially, most of beoutQ's programming came verbatim from the beIN Sports networks, except with beoutQ digital on-screen graphics (DOG) overlaid over those of beIN Sports.[16] The beIN Sports channels took on-air measures to frustrate these tactics, such as occasionally changing the position of its DOG so that beoutQ would have to reposition its own to cover it again.[8] beIN Sports also displayed intermittent watermark graphics that are harder to obscure.[8] After beIN Sports began to increasingly discuss and criticise the service on-air, beoutQ began to dub its own commentators over the beIN Sports feeds, and use feeds from other broadcasters such as Eleven Sports, and Telemundo Deportes (the U.S. Spanish-language rightsholder of FIFA tournaments).[16][8]

During commercial breaks, the channels broadcast propaganda attacking Qatar and beIN; one such example included a cartoon short where a beIN Sports executive (depicted as a cigar-smoking businessman surrounded by piles of money) realises that beoutQ was stealing away his customers. He attempts to meet representatives of FIFA (including a cartoon portrayal of its president Gianni Infantino), UEFA, and the Premier League, but they all ignore him. When he gets home, he discovers that his children were also watching beoutQ. The short ended with a caption reading "No to monopoly, no to politicising sport".[17][12]

beIN traced beoutQ's feeds to Arabsat, an Arab League-owned satellite operator;[18] its frequencies were frequently mentioned in beoutQ's marketing. Arabsat regularly denied that it was involved in beoutQ.[10][9][12] A French court commissioned an independent test that had also traced the signals to Arabsat. It was observed that beoutQ's satellite frequencies changed frequently during the test, likely to evade detection.[13]

Technical details Edit

In 2019, MarkMonitor performed an investigation into beoutQ's hardware and software at the request of FIFA, UEFA, and major European football leagues.[19] The beoutQ service was transmitted via Arabsat's Badr-4, Badr-5, and Badr-6 satellites,[15] and was received using Android-based "hybrid" set-top boxes manufactured by the Chinese company DreamMax. Their firmware contained several levels of geolocation checks in order to prevent the boxes from being activated outside of Saudi Arabia, including over-the-air programming during its first-time setup that required access to beoutQ's satellite signal.[15]

Alongside the beoutQ satellite channels, the boxes include a "beoutQ App Store" with a selection of third-party media apps. Of the 25 apps listed at the time of the review, most of them were for other pirate video on demand and subscription IPTV services. Of the three IPTV services highlighted by the MarkMonitor investigation, all three of them carried the beIN Sports channels (with one of them listing them in their program guide under the "beoutQ" name, but using the unmodified feeds from beIN), and one was listed on its website as being based in the Saudi capital of Riyadh.[19][15] The beoutQ App Store also contained apps for legitimate services such as HBO Go, Red Bull TV, SoundCloud, Spotify, TED, TuneIn Radio, and YouTube.[15]

In mid-August 2019, it was reported that beoutQ had shut down its satellite transmissions. The company claimed on social media that it was performing service upgrades, but its operations never resumed.[20][21] The beoutQ boxes remained usable with other IPTV services.[22]

Reactions Edit

The beoutQ service was widely condemned by beIN Media Group, broadcasters, and sports rightholders.[23][2][8] It was feared that the normalisation of piracy caused by beoutQ could hamper Saudi Arabia's efforts to redevelop its cinema industry.[8] The Hollywood Reporter observed that due to "the hugely sensitive nature of anything involving Saudi Arabia", there was relatively little reaction to the service from the entertainment industry.[8] Tim Fernholz of Quartz described Saudi Arabia's alleged involvement in beoutQ as an example of the country's "no-holds-barred attitude" in its dispute with Qatar, and as an effort to undermine Al Jazeera's "soft power".[18]

By beIN and Al Jazeera Edit

The owner of beIN Sports, beIN Media Group, condemned the beoutQ service. beIN Sports managing director Tom Keaveny described beoutQ as being an "industrial-scale" operation,[23][12][24] and not just "a small outfit operating out of someone’s bedroom."[25]

In February 2019, Keaveny stated that the stances of rightsholders over the unauthorised redistribution of their content would now be a "critical" consideration in future rights deals and that beIN would also pay less because their rights could no longer be protected.[24] He argued that piracy was "an existential threat to the economic model of the sports and entertainment industry".[24][26] That month, beIN declined to renew its MENA rights to Formula One, citing the market conditions. The rights would be acquired by the free-to-air satellite channel MBC Action, whose parent company Middle East Broadcasting Center is majority-owned by the Saudi government.[24][26]

In June 2019, beIN laid off 300 employees, citing the piracy issues as a factor.[27] In October 2019 at the Leaders Week conference in London, beIN Media Group CEO Yousef Al-Obaidly predicted that the market for sports broadcast rights could crash if rightsholders did not take enough steps to prevent the unauthorised redistribution of their content.[28]

On 21 September 2019, the Al Jazeera program What Lies Beneath broadcast an investigative report alleging that beoutQ's operations were based in Riyadh and tied to the service providers Selevision and Shammas. It also claimed to have obtained evidence of plans to potentially move the transmission site to North Africa, and a leaked video showing the operation's headquarters and infrastructure.[29]

In November 2019, beIN Sports stated that it was "actively reconsidering" its relationship with the Lega Serie A over its agreement to host editions of the Supercoppa Italiana in Saudi Arabia. beIN accused the league of "making a quick buck from the very entity that has been stealing its rights for two years". beIN's contract with the Serie A is valued at around US$500 million—accounting for just over half of the league's international media rights revenue.[30] The Supercoppa agreement had also faced criticism for Saudi Arabia's history of using sport to direct attention away from its human rights issues.[31]

When the Serie A resumed its 2019–20 season on 20 June 2020 after a suspension due to the COVID-19 pandemic, beIN suspended its broadcasts of the league on all of its networks worldwide. The company stated that its "legal and public position" had been "consistent and well-documented for three years".[32] The suspension ended on 29 June, after beIN reached an agreement to be compensated for the impact of piracy on its media rights.[33][34]

A bid led by Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund (PIF) to acquire Premier League club Newcastle United faced scrutiny due to beoutQ, among other factors. In May 2020, Conservative Party Member of Parliament Giles Watling proposed that the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport hold an evidence session regarding sports piracy in Saudi Arabia.[35][7][36] beIN Sports's lead English football presenter, Richard Keys, regularly expressed opposition to the Newcastle deal on-air, mentioning beIN's conflicts with beoutQ.[37][38]

On 22 September 2020, beIN announced that it would not renew its MENA region rights to Germany's Bundesliga. Chief sports officer Richard Verow argued that piracy was crippling the market and reaffirmed that beIN would "only bid for rights at levels that make economic sense and have a value proposition".[33]

By Saudi Arabia Edit

During the 2018 FIFA World Cup, beIN Sports commentators were accused by Saudi critics, including General Sports Authority head Turki Al-Sheikh, of making on-air comments critical of the country.[39] On 22 June 2018, Saud al-Qahtani stated that the Saudi Arabian Football Federation had filed a complaint with FIFA against beIN Sports's alleged monopolization of sports broadcast rights in the MENA region. He also stated that the government was coordinating "inspection campaigns" and confiscating beoutQ equipment.[40][41]

In July 2018, the Ministry of Media accused the All-England Club—organisers of Wimbledon—of "parroting" beIN's accusations surrounding beoutQ and the involvement of Arabsat, which it considered to be "baseless" and lacking credible evidence.[42] Furthermore, the Ministry of Media described beIN as having engaged in an "irresponsible" smear campaign against Saudi Arabia by means of its sister company Al Jazeera Media Network, which it described as "a media platform for terrorists to propagate their violent messages and to promote instability in the region".[42]

beIN Sports was fined US$2.6 million by the Saudi government on 21 August 2018 for violations of competition law, including forced bundling of its services with other unrelated channels. beIN accused the Saudi government of "putting politics ahead of the interests of Saudi consumers" and singling beIN out for engaging in business practices common to other sports and entertainment broadcasters in Saudi Arabia and worldwide.[43] Two days later, beIN Sports's license to broadcast in Saudi Arabia was officially revoked.[44]

By other countries Edit

In November 2018, the BBC and Sky plc sent letters to European Commissioner for Trade Cecilia Malmström, urging that action be taken against beoutQ's operations.[45]

Stan McCoy, the EMEA president of the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA), told The Hollywood Reporter that the MENA Anti-Piracy Coalition—which includes various broadcasters and service providers serving the region, including Arabsat—was "very much activated" on the issue of beoutQ, On 6 March 2019, the Coalition sent a letter to Arabsat demanding that it take a position and/or action towards beoutQ within two weeks, or else the Coalition would issue a public statement and begin the process of removing Arabsat from the group. The Coalition could not agree on the wording for the statement; thus, no action was taken.[8]

At an anti-piracy conference held in Abu Dhabi in April 2019 by members of the Coalition, there was little to no discussion of beoutQ. A moderator allegedly warned a speaker that they could potentially face legal issues if they went "too far" on beoutQ, but the organisers of the conference denied that such a restriction existed.[8] That month, the United States Trade Representative (USTR) designated beoutQ as a "notorious market" in its annual Special 301 Report, citing that its equipment continued to be "widely available" and "generally unregulated" in Saudi Arabia, and that the country had not taken steps to address Arabsat's alleged role in the service. Saudi Arabia was also added to the "Priority Watch List" for its failure to "address longstanding [intellectual property] concerns and the further deterioration of IP protection and enforcement within its borders".[46]

In January 2020, the European Commission placed Saudi Arabia on its priority watch list for violations of European intellectual property rights, citing the country's inaction against the service.[47] In April 2020, Saudi Arabia was placed on the USTR's Priority Watch List for the second year in a row, citing via submissions by the Premier League that illegal IPTV services continued to be available in the Saudi market on "up to three million" beoutQ boxes, among other devices.[22]

By sports bodies Edit

FIFA attempted to indirectly negotiate a deal with beIN to sub-license the Saudi team matches and final of the 2018 FIFA World Cup to a Saudi Arabian broadcaster. However, no deal was reached, and beoutQ ultimately broadcast the entire tournament from various sources, including beIN and the Israeli Public Broadcasting Corporation (which was offering Arabic-language broadcasts).[48][49]

The Asian Football Confederation (AFC) condemned beoutQ for airing the 2019 AFC Asian Cup, stating that it "has already instructed counsel to take legal action in Saudi Arabia and is working alongside other sports rights owners that have also been affected to protect its interest".[50] However, in March 2019, the AFC pulled its rights in Saudi Arabia from beIN Sports (moving them to an in-house streaming platform), in support of the Saudi claim that the network held a monopoly.[51] beIN announced that it would pursue legal action, considering the actions to be politically motivated and accusing the AFC of colluding with the Saudi Arabian Football Federation to violate its contract.[52]

In June 2019, the Serie A's new CEO Luigi De Siervo stated that the league was taking legal action and would not rule out pulling Saudi Arabia's hosting rights to the Supercoppa (which had been negotiated by his predecessor Marco Brunelli).[31]

In July 2019, FIFA, the AFC, the Bundesliga, La Liga, Serie A, and UEFA issued a joint statement condemning beoutQ, urging Saudi authorities to take "swift and decisive action" against the broadcaster. The parties stated that it was "not possible to retain legal counsel in the kingdom of Saudi Arabia which is willing or able to act on our behalf".[53]

WTO case, resolution of the conflict Edit

On 2 October 2018, Qatar filed a case against Saudi Arabia with the World Trade Organization (WTO), citing violations of the TRIPS Agreement. The same day, beIN Media Group also initiated an investment arbitration lawsuit against Saudi Arabia seeking US$1 billion in damages, citing beoutQ and other measures that had hindered its ability to do business in the country.[54][55]

On 16 June 2020, the WTO issued a 125-page report finding that there was evidence beoutQ was operated out of Saudi Arabia. The report found that beoutQ had received assistance from a Saudi-based content distributor, had used the facilities of Arabsat for transmission, and benefitted from promotion by government officials. The WTO also found that Saudi Arabia had obstructed beIN Media Group from receiving counsel in the country.[56][57][58] On 29 July 2020, Saudi Arabia appealed the ruling, arguing that it contained "serious errors of law and legal interpretation that need to be corrected". beIN then accused the Saudi government of "[lying] to governments and rightsholders across world sport about the WTO ruling" and "appealing a WTO decision that they said they won".[59]

On 4 January 2021, Qatar and Saudi Arabia agreed to restore their diplomatic ties under a deal brokered by Kuwait and the United States.[60][61] After the resolution, Reuters reported that restaurants in Riyadh had begun to screen beIN Sports programming via satellite, although beIN claimed Saudi Arabia had not yet reinstated its license to broadcast in the country.[62]

During a hearing of the UK Competition Appeal Tribunal (CAT) in September 2021, a representative of Newcastle United argued that the Premier League was "improperly influenced" from lobbying by beIN Sports and other Premier League clubs in its decision to block the sale, constituting an "unfair application of rules" and "abuse of its position which distorted competition".[63][64]

On 6 October 2021, beIN Media Group stated that Saudi Arabia was preparing to lift their ban on beIN Sports.[65][66] The decision was reported to have been a concession in order to expedite approval of the Public Investment Fund's acquisition of Newcastle United, which was officially cleared by the Premier League the next day.[67][68][69] In January 2022, it was reported that Qatar and Saudi Arabia had mutually agreed to suspend their case with the WTO.[70]

See also Edit

References Edit

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External links Edit

  • beoutq.tv, a website published by beIN Media Group that discusses its allegations and findings surrounding beoutQ.

beoutq, pirate, television, broadcaster, that, operated, saudi, arabia, between, august, 2017, august, 2019, service, consisted, satellite, television, channels, that, carried, rebranded, feeds, programming, from, qatari, broadcaster, bein, sports, began, oper. beoutQ was a pirate pay television broadcaster that operated in Saudi Arabia between August 2017 and August 2019 The service consisted of ten satellite television channels that carried rebranded feeds of programming from Qatari broadcaster beIN Sports beoutQ began operations after Saudi Arabia blocked beIN Media Group from offering its services in the country the action stemmed from a then ongoing diplomatic crisis between Qatar and other Arab countries over its alleged state sponsorship of terrorist groups The service operated out of facilities in Saudi Arabia and utilised the Arabsat satellites for transmission The channels also carried propaganda accusing beIN Sports of being a monopoly beoutQCountrySaudi ArabiaBroadcast areaSaudi ArabiaProgrammingLanguage s ArabicOwnershipOwnerUnknownHistoryLaunchedAugust 2017ClosedAugust 2019The service was condemned by beIN Media Group sports bodies and governments for its large scale infringement of copyrights beIN Sports s managing director described beoutQ as being an industrial scale operation and warned that the service was creating market conditions that would make them less likely to make larger investments in sports broadcast rights Citing alleged inaction against the service Saudi Arabia was placed on intellectual property watchlists by the United States Trade Representative and European Union In turn the Saudi government accused beIN Sports of engaging in anti competitive behaviour and of participating in a smear campaign against the Kingdom with its sister company Al Jazeera Citing the impact of the service beIN declined to renew its rights to Formula One and the Bundesliga in the MENA region It also criticised football bodies for hosting super cups in Saudi Arabia In June 2020 beIN Sports briefly pulled the Serie A from its channels worldwide until it was compensated for the impact of piracy on its rights Issues surrounding beoutQ also impacted a bid by the Saudi Public Investment Fund to acquire Premier League club Newcastle United In September 2021 a representative of the club accused beIN of engaging in lobbying efforts against the sale that improperly influenced the Premier League In August 2019 beoutQ abruptly ceased operations on satellite Its set top boxes continued to be usable via third party IPTV services available on a built in app store In June 2020 the World Trade Organization WTO issued a report finding evidence that the service operated out of Saudi Arabia The WTO also found that Saudi Arabia had frustrated beIN s ability to receive legal counsel in the country In October 2021 after the diplomatic crisis was resolved beIN Media Group stated that Saudi Arabia was planning to lift its ban on the beIN Sports service ahead of the Premier League officially approving the Saudi purchase of Newcastle United Contents 1 Background 2 Programming 3 Technical details 4 Reactions 4 1 By beIN and Al Jazeera 4 2 By Saudi Arabia 4 3 By other countries 4 4 By sports bodies 5 WTO case resolution of the conflict 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksBackground EditThe Qatar based beIN Sports is the dominant broadcaster of sports programming in the Middle East and North Africa MENA It had held rights to prominent events such as the Olympic Games the FIFA World Cup UEFA Champions League Asian Football Confederation including the AFC Asian Cup La Liga and Premier League in association football Formula One racing international tennis events and other events 1 2 In June 2017 as part of a diplomatic crisis over alleged funding of extremist groups by the government of Qatar beIN was banned from selling its subscriptions in Saudi Arabia and the beIN Sports channels were briefly banned in the United Arab Emirates the ban was reversed the following month 3 4 5 It was reported that Saudi Arabia planned to fund a new competitor out of Cairo Egypt known as PBS Sport 6 but the proposed service never launched 7 A few months later a new subscription service known as beoutQ emerged which repackaged the beIN Sports channels as their own Initially the service was distributed online but later began to be distributed via 10 satellite channels 8 The service s launch was backed by a social media campaign on Twitter Saud al Qahtani former adviser to King Abdullah participated in the campaign 8 It was reported that the service s associated decoder boxes and subscriptions had become widely available across the country 9 10 11 12 bundled with a free one year subscription 8 The service initially claimed that it was backed by Colombian and Cuban investors However this claim was denied by local officials in the two countries 13 In September 2018 during legal proceedings in the United States beIN linked the beoutQ website to Saudi businessman Raed Khusheim who is chief executive officer of UAE based television provider Selevision Khusheim denied the claims arguing that it was a smear campaign by beIN stemming from business disputes 14 Programming EditbeoutQ s Live Sports programming was distributed via 10 channels 15 Initially most of beoutQ s programming came verbatim from the beIN Sports networks except with beoutQ digital on screen graphics DOG overlaid over those of beIN Sports 16 The beIN Sports channels took on air measures to frustrate these tactics such as occasionally changing the position of its DOG so that beoutQ would have to reposition its own to cover it again 8 beIN Sports also displayed intermittent watermark graphics that are harder to obscure 8 After beIN Sports began to increasingly discuss and criticise the service on air beoutQ began to dub its own commentators over the beIN Sports feeds and use feeds from other broadcasters such as Eleven Sports and Telemundo Deportes the U S Spanish language rightsholder of FIFA tournaments 16 8 During commercial breaks the channels broadcast propaganda attacking Qatar and beIN one such example included a cartoon short where a beIN Sports executive depicted as a cigar smoking businessman surrounded by piles of money realises that beoutQ was stealing away his customers He attempts to meet representatives of FIFA including a cartoon portrayal of its president Gianni Infantino UEFA and the Premier League but they all ignore him When he gets home he discovers that his children were also watching beoutQ The short ended with a caption reading No to monopoly no to politicising sport 17 12 beIN traced beoutQ s feeds to Arabsat an Arab League owned satellite operator 18 its frequencies were frequently mentioned in beoutQ s marketing Arabsat regularly denied that it was involved in beoutQ 10 9 12 A French court commissioned an independent test that had also traced the signals to Arabsat It was observed that beoutQ s satellite frequencies changed frequently during the test likely to evade detection 13 Technical details EditIn 2019 MarkMonitor performed an investigation into beoutQ s hardware and software at the request of FIFA UEFA and major European football leagues 19 The beoutQ service was transmitted via Arabsat s Badr 4 Badr 5 and Badr 6 satellites 15 and was received using Android based hybrid set top boxes manufactured by the Chinese company DreamMax Their firmware contained several levels of geolocation checks in order to prevent the boxes from being activated outside of Saudi Arabia including over the air programming during its first time setup that required access to beoutQ s satellite signal 15 Alongside the beoutQ satellite channels the boxes include a beoutQ App Store with a selection of third party media apps Of the 25 apps listed at the time of the review most of them were for other pirate video on demand and subscription IPTV services Of the three IPTV services highlighted by the MarkMonitor investigation all three of them carried the beIN Sports channels with one of them listing them in their program guide under the beoutQ name but using the unmodified feeds from beIN and one was listed on its website as being based in the Saudi capital of Riyadh 19 15 The beoutQ App Store also contained apps for legitimate services such as HBO Go Red Bull TV SoundCloud Spotify TED TuneIn Radio and YouTube 15 In mid August 2019 it was reported that beoutQ had shut down its satellite transmissions The company claimed on social media that it was performing service upgrades but its operations never resumed 20 21 The beoutQ boxes remained usable with other IPTV services 22 Reactions EditThe beoutQ service was widely condemned by beIN Media Group broadcasters and sports rightholders 23 2 8 It was feared that the normalisation of piracy caused by beoutQ could hamper Saudi Arabia s efforts to redevelop its cinema industry 8 The Hollywood Reporter observed that due to the hugely sensitive nature of anything involving Saudi Arabia there was relatively little reaction to the service from the entertainment industry 8 Tim Fernholz of Quartz described Saudi Arabia s alleged involvement in beoutQ as an example of the country s no holds barred attitude in its dispute with Qatar and as an effort to undermine Al Jazeera s soft power 18 By beIN and Al Jazeera Edit The owner of beIN Sports beIN Media Group condemned the beoutQ service beIN Sports managing director Tom Keaveny described beoutQ as being an industrial scale operation 23 12 24 and not just a small outfit operating out of someone s bedroom 25 In February 2019 Keaveny stated that the stances of rightsholders over the unauthorised redistribution of their content would now be a critical consideration in future rights deals and that beIN would also pay less because their rights could no longer be protected 24 He argued that piracy was an existential threat to the economic model of the sports and entertainment industry 24 26 That month beIN declined to renew its MENA rights to Formula One citing the market conditions The rights would be acquired by the free to air satellite channel MBC Action whose parent company Middle East Broadcasting Center is majority owned by the Saudi government 24 26 In June 2019 beIN laid off 300 employees citing the piracy issues as a factor 27 In October 2019 at the Leaders Week conference in London beIN Media Group CEO Yousef Al Obaidly predicted that the market for sports broadcast rights could crash if rightsholders did not take enough steps to prevent the unauthorised redistribution of their content 28 On 21 September 2019 the Al Jazeera program What Lies Beneath broadcast an investigative report alleging that beoutQ s operations were based in Riyadh and tied to the service providers Selevision and Shammas It also claimed to have obtained evidence of plans to potentially move the transmission site to North Africa and a leaked video showing the operation s headquarters and infrastructure 29 In November 2019 beIN Sports stated that it was actively reconsidering its relationship with the Lega Serie A over its agreement to host editions of the Supercoppa Italiana in Saudi Arabia beIN accused the league of making a quick buck from the very entity that has been stealing its rights for two years beIN s contract with the Serie A is valued at around US 500 million accounting for just over half of the league s international media rights revenue 30 The Supercoppa agreement had also faced criticism for Saudi Arabia s history of using sport to direct attention away from its human rights issues 31 When the Serie A resumed its 2019 20 season on 20 June 2020 after a suspension due to the COVID 19 pandemic beIN suspended its broadcasts of the league on all of its networks worldwide The company stated that its legal and public position had been consistent and well documented for three years 32 The suspension ended on 29 June after beIN reached an agreement to be compensated for the impact of piracy on its media rights 33 34 A bid led by Saudi Arabia s Public Investment Fund PIF to acquire Premier League club Newcastle United faced scrutiny due to beoutQ among other factors In May 2020 Conservative Party Member of Parliament Giles Watling proposed that the Department for Digital Culture Media and Sport hold an evidence session regarding sports piracy in Saudi Arabia 35 7 36 beIN Sports s lead English football presenter Richard Keys regularly expressed opposition to the Newcastle deal on air mentioning beIN s conflicts with beoutQ 37 38 On 22 September 2020 beIN announced that it would not renew its MENA region rights to Germany s Bundesliga Chief sports officer Richard Verow argued that piracy was crippling the market and reaffirmed that beIN would only bid for rights at levels that make economic sense and have a value proposition 33 By Saudi Arabia Edit During the 2018 FIFA World Cup beIN Sports commentators were accused by Saudi critics including General Sports Authority head Turki Al Sheikh of making on air comments critical of the country 39 On 22 June 2018 Saud al Qahtani stated that the Saudi Arabian Football Federation had filed a complaint with FIFA against beIN Sports s alleged monopolization of sports broadcast rights in the MENA region He also stated that the government was coordinating inspection campaigns and confiscating beoutQ equipment 40 41 In July 2018 the Ministry of Media accused the All England Club organisers of Wimbledon of parroting beIN s accusations surrounding beoutQ and the involvement of Arabsat which it considered to be baseless and lacking credible evidence 42 Furthermore the Ministry of Media described beIN as having engaged in an irresponsible smear campaign against Saudi Arabia by means of its sister company Al Jazeera Media Network which it described as a media platform for terrorists to propagate their violent messages and to promote instability in the region 42 beIN Sports was fined US 2 6 million by the Saudi government on 21 August 2018 for violations of competition law including forced bundling of its services with other unrelated channels beIN accused the Saudi government of putting politics ahead of the interests of Saudi consumers and singling beIN out for engaging in business practices common to other sports and entertainment broadcasters in Saudi Arabia and worldwide 43 Two days later beIN Sports s license to broadcast in Saudi Arabia was officially revoked 44 By other countries Edit In November 2018 the BBC and Sky plc sent letters to European Commissioner for Trade Cecilia Malmstrom urging that action be taken against beoutQ s operations 45 Stan McCoy the EMEA president of the Motion Picture Association of America MPAA told The Hollywood Reporter that the MENA Anti Piracy Coalition which includes various broadcasters and service providers serving the region including Arabsat was very much activated on the issue of beoutQ On 6 March 2019 the Coalition sent a letter to Arabsat demanding that it take a position and or action towards beoutQ within two weeks or else the Coalition would issue a public statement and begin the process of removing Arabsat from the group The Coalition could not agree on the wording for the statement thus no action was taken 8 At an anti piracy conference held in Abu Dhabi in April 2019 by members of the Coalition there was little to no discussion of beoutQ A moderator allegedly warned a speaker that they could potentially face legal issues if they went too far on beoutQ but the organisers of the conference denied that such a restriction existed 8 That month the United States Trade Representative USTR designated beoutQ as a notorious market in its annual Special 301 Report citing that its equipment continued to be widely available and generally unregulated in Saudi Arabia and that the country had not taken steps to address Arabsat s alleged role in the service Saudi Arabia was also added to the Priority Watch List for its failure to address longstanding intellectual property concerns and the further deterioration of IP protection and enforcement within its borders 46 In January 2020 the European Commission placed Saudi Arabia on its priority watch list for violations of European intellectual property rights citing the country s inaction against the service 47 In April 2020 Saudi Arabia was placed on the USTR s Priority Watch List for the second year in a row citing via submissions by the Premier League that illegal IPTV services continued to be available in the Saudi market on up to three million beoutQ boxes among other devices 22 By sports bodies Edit FIFA attempted to indirectly negotiate a deal with beIN to sub license the Saudi team matches and final of the 2018 FIFA World Cup to a Saudi Arabian broadcaster However no deal was reached and beoutQ ultimately broadcast the entire tournament from various sources including beIN and the Israeli Public Broadcasting Corporation which was offering Arabic language broadcasts 48 49 The Asian Football Confederation AFC condemned beoutQ for airing the 2019 AFC Asian Cup stating that it has already instructed counsel to take legal action in Saudi Arabia and is working alongside other sports rights owners that have also been affected to protect its interest 50 However in March 2019 the AFC pulled its rights in Saudi Arabia from beIN Sports moving them to an in house streaming platform in support of the Saudi claim that the network held a monopoly 51 beIN announced that it would pursue legal action considering the actions to be politically motivated and accusing the AFC of colluding with the Saudi Arabian Football Federation to violate its contract 52 In June 2019 the Serie A s new CEO Luigi De Siervo stated that the league was taking legal action and would not rule out pulling Saudi Arabia s hosting rights to the Supercoppa which had been negotiated by his predecessor Marco Brunelli 31 In July 2019 FIFA the AFC the Bundesliga La Liga Serie A and UEFA issued a joint statement condemning beoutQ urging Saudi authorities to take swift and decisive action against the broadcaster The parties stated that it was not possible to retain legal counsel in the kingdom of Saudi Arabia which is willing or able to act on our behalf 53 WTO case resolution of the conflict EditOn 2 October 2018 Qatar filed a case against Saudi Arabia with the World Trade Organization WTO citing violations of the TRIPS Agreement The same day beIN Media Group also initiated an investment arbitration lawsuit against Saudi Arabia seeking US 1 billion in damages citing beoutQ and other measures that had hindered its ability to do business in the country 54 55 On 16 June 2020 the WTO issued a 125 page report finding that there was evidence beoutQ was operated out of Saudi Arabia The report found that beoutQ had received assistance from a Saudi based content distributor had used the facilities of Arabsat for transmission and benefitted from promotion by government officials The WTO also found that Saudi Arabia had obstructed beIN Media Group from receiving counsel in the country 56 57 58 On 29 July 2020 Saudi Arabia appealed the ruling arguing that it contained serious errors of law and legal interpretation that need to be corrected beIN then accused the Saudi government of lying to governments and rightsholders across world sport about the WTO ruling and appealing a WTO decision that they said they won 59 On 4 January 2021 Qatar and Saudi Arabia agreed to restore their diplomatic ties under a deal brokered by Kuwait and the United States 60 61 After the resolution Reuters reported that restaurants in Riyadh had begun to screen beIN Sports programming via satellite although beIN claimed Saudi Arabia had not yet reinstated its license to broadcast in the country 62 During a hearing of the UK Competition Appeal Tribunal CAT in September 2021 a representative of Newcastle United argued that the Premier League was improperly influenced from lobbying by beIN Sports and other Premier League clubs in its decision to block the sale constituting an unfair application of rules and abuse of its position which distorted competition 63 64 On 6 October 2021 beIN Media Group stated that Saudi Arabia was preparing to lift their ban on beIN Sports 65 66 The decision was reported to have been a concession in order to expedite approval of the Public Investment Fund s acquisition of Newcastle United which was officially cleared by the Premier League the next day 67 68 69 In January 2022 it was reported that Qatar and Saudi Arabia had mutually agreed to suspend their case with the WTO 70 See also EditQatar Saudi Arabia relationsReferences Edit Premier League gets tough with Saudi piracy Gulf Times 21 August 2018 Archived from the original on 26 August 2020 Retrieved 26 August 2018 a b Qatar s BeIN Sports Says It Has Proof of Saudi Role in Piracy Dispute The New York Times Archived from the original on 1 August 2020 Retrieved 26 August 2018 Alkhalisi Zahraa 8 June 2017 Blocked in Dubai Qatar cartoon and soccer channels CNN Archived from the original on 21 June 2019 Retrieved 13 August 2017 UAE restores Qatar s BeIN sports network on air Al Jazeera 23 July 2017 Archived from the original on 21 June 2019 Retrieved 13 August 2017 McCombe Steven Pennington Roberta 22 July 2017 BeIN Sports back on TV in the UAE The National Archived from the original on 6 July 2019 Retrieved 13 August 2017 Saudi Egyptian sports alliance to replace blocked Qatari beIN Sports Arab News 20 June 2017 Archived from the original on 22 March 2020 Retrieved 4 May 2020 a b Newcastle takeover could lead to Saudi bid for Premier League rights says report SportsPro Media 29 April 2020 Retrieved 4 May 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k Could This Be the World s Biggest State Sponsored Piracy Operation The Hollywood Reporter 20 June 2019 Archived from the original on 21 June 2019 Retrieved 21 June 2019 a b World Cup pirates Saudi Arabia s BeIN action threatens future of international sports broadcasting SportsPro Archived from the original on 26 August 2018 Retrieved 26 August 2018 a b Wintour Patrick 21 August 2018 Premier League games screened illegally via Saudi satellite firm The Guardian Archived from the original on 21 June 2019 Retrieved 26 August 2018 BeoutQ illegally shows opening Premier League and Ligue 1 games SportsPro Archived from the original on 26 August 2018 Retrieved 26 August 2018 a b c d Panja Tariq 9 May 2018 The Brazen Bootlegging of a Multibillion Dollar Sports Network The New York Times Archived from the original on 1 August 2020 Retrieved 22 June 2019 a b BeoutQ pirates every game of Women s World Cup in France Broadband TV News 15 June 2019 Archived from the original on 19 July 2019 Retrieved 21 June 2019 Stancati Margherita 6 September 2018 An Unlikely Victim of Saudi Arabia s Dispute With Qatar TV Rights The Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Archived from the original on 25 September 2018 Retrieved 25 September 2018 a b c d e beoutQ Investigation PDF MarkMonitor Archived PDF from the original on 2 February 2022 Retrieved 17 August 2022 a b NBCUniversal says FIFA World Cup broadcasts were stolen in Middle East ArabianBusiness com Archived from the original on 26 July 2020 Retrieved 26 August 2018 Saudi Arabia cartoon pirates and the great TV sports rights robbery SportsPro Media 20 March 2019 Archived from the original on 21 June 2019 Retrieved 21 June 2019 a b Fernholz Tim 13 July 2018 A political crisis in the Middle East means free World Cup streaming for millions Quartz Archived from the original on 1 September 2018 Retrieved 18 August 2022 a b Hawley Steven 19 September 2019 MarkMonitor research released by UEFA amp European football leagues traces beoutQ piracy Piracy Monitor PiracyMonitor Archived from the original on 17 August 2022 Retrieved 17 August 2022 beoutQ Notorious pirate is down but its echo reverberates Piracy Monitor May 2020 Archived from the original on 17 August 2021 Retrieved 15 August 2021 beIN slams persistent piracy menace Digital TV Europe 8 November 2019 Archived from the original on 26 July 2020 Retrieved 2 June 2020 a b Saudi Arabia is a centre of piracy says Premier League Digital TV Europe 1 May 2020 Archived from the original on 17 June 2021 Retrieved 17 August 2022 a b BeIN could scale back rights deals over lack of BeoutQ support SportsPro Media 15 November 2018 Archived from the original on 21 June 2019 Retrieved 21 June 2019 a b c d BeIN Sports opts out of F1 rights renewal amid BeoutQ stand off SportsPro Media 11 February 2019 Archived from the original on 11 January 2020 Retrieved 14 March 2019 Industrial scale piracy is plaguing the World Cup due to a diplomatic crisis in the Middle East The Independent 1 October 2018 Archived from the original on 18 August 2022 Retrieved 18 August 2022 a b Dubai s MBC picks up F1 rights in Mena until 2023 SportBusiness Media 18 March 2019 Archived from the original on 14 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Retrieved 7 October 2021 Saudi considers legal action after politicised beIN Sports World Cup coverage ArabianBusiness com Archived from the original on 26 August 2018 Retrieved 26 August 2018 Saudis dismiss beIN Sports FIFA World Cup TV piracy claim ArabianBusiness com Archived from the original on 21 June 2019 Retrieved 26 August 2018 FIFA Accuses BeoutQ Of Illegally Broadcasting Games Sports Business Daily 18 June 2018 Archived from the original on 21 June 2019 Retrieved 26 August 2018 a b Mann Colin 9 July 2018 Saudi Arabia rejects Wimbledon piracy claims Advanced Television Archived from the original on 22 June 2019 Retrieved 22 June 2019 BeIN Sports fined by Saudi authorities as BeoutQ row hots up SportsPro Archived from the original on 21 June 2019 Retrieved 26 August 2018 Saudis ban beIN Sports Advanced Television 23 August 2018 Archived from the original on 21 June 2019 Retrieved 26 August 2018 BBC and Sky call for EU action over BeoutQ piracy SportsPro Archived from the original on 21 June 2019 Retrieved 14 November 2018 US places Saudi Arabia on Watch List amid BeoutQ piracy case SportsPro Media 26 April 2019 Archived from the original on 14 December 2019 Retrieved 24 June 2019 Saudi Arabia criticised by European Commission over BeoutQ inaction SportsPro Media www sportspromedia com 28 January 2020 Archived from the original on 18 February 2020 Retrieved 18 February 2020 Why Arabs are watching a pirated World Cup feed The Economist Archived from the original on 27 August 2018 Retrieved 26 August 2018 Vivarelli Nick 13 June 2018 World Cup Diplomatic Crisis in Middle East Stokes Fears of Piracy Variety Archived from the original on 26 August 2018 Retrieved 26 August 2018 AFC Condemns BeoutQ s Pirated Asian Cup Broadcasts www sportsbusinessdaily com 10 January 2019 Archived from the original on 14 December 2019 Retrieved 25 June 2019 AFC cancels BeIN Sports rights in Saudi Arabia SportsPro Media 12 March 2019 Archived from the original on 22 June 2019 Retrieved 22 June 2019 BeIN Sports to launch AFC legal action Sportspro 13 March 2019 Archived from the original on 14 December 2019 Retrieved 22 June 2019 Sweney Mark 31 July 2019 World s football bodies urge Saudi Arabia to stop pirate TV service The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Archived from the original on 8 November 2020 Retrieved 3 August 2019 BeIN launches US 1bn suit against Saudi Arabia over BeoutQ piracy plague SportsPro Media 3 October 2018 Archived from the original on 21 June 2019 Retrieved 22 June 2019 BeIn Sports launches 1 billion suit against Saudi Arabia Broadband TV News 2 October 2018 Archived from the original on 22 June 2019 Retrieved 21 June 2019 Saudi Arabia appeals WTO piracy ruling SportBusiness 30 July 2020 Archived from the original on 4 January 2022 Retrieved 27 August 2020 Vivarelli Nick 16 June 2020 World Trade Organization Rules There is Evidence Saudi Arabia Supported Pirate Broadcaster beoutQ Variety Archived from the original on 17 June 2020 Retrieved 17 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takeover debate once again ChronicleLive Archived from the original on 7 October 2021 Retrieved 7 October 2021 Saudi to lift ban on Qatar s beIN Sports source France 24 6 October 2021 Archived from the original on 6 October 2021 Retrieved 6 October 2021 Qatar s beIN Sports says Saudi Arabia to lift ban on channels Al Jazeera Archived from the original on 6 October 2021 Retrieved 6 October 2021 Newcastle takeover completed Saudi led consortium end Mike Ashley s 14 year ownership Sky Sports Archived from the original on 25 November 2021 Retrieved 7 October 2021 Newcastle takeover All parties hopeful Saudi led consortium s deal can be announced on Thursday Sky Sports Archived from the original on 10 October 2021 Retrieved 7 October 2021 Saudi led takeover of Newcastle completed BBC Sport Archived from the original on 7 October 2021 Retrieved 7 October 2021 Mills Andrew 10 January 2022 Qatar Saudi Arabia halt WTO efforts to resolve piracy broadcast dispute Reuters Archived from the original on 17 August 2022 Retrieved 17 August 2022 External links Editbeoutq wbr tv a website published by beIN Media Group that discusses its allegations and findings surrounding beoutQ Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title BeoutQ amp oldid 1172734544, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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