logo
Can I get in trouble for having a 'dodgy box' in my home?

Can I get in trouble for having a 'dodgy box' in my home?

Extra.ie​19-06-2025
The Data Protection Commission said they are engaging with Sky in a fresh clampdown on 'dodgy boxes'.
It comes as the broadcaster issued a 'consequences' warning to thousands of dodgy box users if they are caught streaming content illegally. Pic: Getty Images
'Dodgy boxes' are devices which allow users to watch pay TV channels illegally.
Sellers provide customers with codes or links to watch streamed premium content, including sports, movies and more.
Typically, the content is downloaded onto an Amazon Fire Stick, which can be plugged into a TV.
Sellers have a range of services, ranging in different prices, with some as low as €50 annually.
The Federation Against Copyright Theft (FACT) are working alongside An Garda Síochána as part of the clampdown on illegal streaming operators. Typically, the content is downloaded onto an Amazon Fire Stick which can be plugged into a TV. Pic: Getty Images
Sellers are 'breaking the law, making criminal profits and putting consumers at real risk of malware, data loss and identity theft,' Kieron Sharp, chairman of FACT states.
Under the Copyright Act 2000 it is illegal to see or use a 'dodgy box,' with those breaking the law facing a fine of up to €127,000 or a maximum prison sentence of five years.
FACT also state that many of the piracy networks are linked to organised crime, with profits gained from selling the service likely used to fund other illegal activities. The illicit streaming of Internet Protocol Television is a copyright offence under Section 140 of the Copyright and Related Rights Act 2000. Pic: Getty Images
The clampdown on 'dodgy boxes' started in 2023 following a rise in the use of the illegal platforms.
It came following an EU report that Ireland had the sixth highest use of the gadgets across Europe with 171,000 people using the services.
While Gardaí previously focused on the sale of the gadgets, rather than leisurely use, it is still a punishable offence to use a dodgy box at home.
A statement from An Garda Síochána told Extra.ie: 'The Garda National Bureau of Criminal Investigation (GNBCI) Intellectual Property Crime Unit works with industry and service providers to investigate and prevent illicit streaming, this encompasses all content and not exclusively sports content.
The illicit streaming of Internet Protocol Television is a copyright offence under Section 140 of the Copyright and related rights Act 2000.
Last year, a married father-of-four was jailed for the possession of nearly €1m in criminal proceeds from his illegal streaming business.
Ciaran Donovan had been operating King Kong Media which charged customers for codes to access pay TV channels such as Sky and BT Sports.
Donovan was sentenced to three years and four months with the final two years suspended for a 30-month period on several conditions — including that he does not engage in any activity involving illegal TV streaming.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘He hit me over and over': Olympian on abusive relationship with Jonathan Creswell, the trainer accused of showjumper Katie Simpson's murder
‘He hit me over and over': Olympian on abusive relationship with Jonathan Creswell, the trainer accused of showjumper Katie Simpson's murder

Irish Independent

time14 hours ago

  • Irish Independent

‘He hit me over and over': Olympian on abusive relationship with Jonathan Creswell, the trainer accused of showjumper Katie Simpson's murder

The Bangor-born equestrian was in a relationship with Creswell from 2008 to 2009. A year after it ended, he was jailed for six months for multiple vicious and prolonged assaults on Ms Lyle who has revealed the extent of what she suffered ahead of Death of a Showjumper, a new three-part documentary series by Sky. It tells the story of a predatory abuser who operated in plain sight of Northern Ireland's 'horsey community' and explores police failings. Speaking to The Irish Times, Ms Lyle said she had just turned 23 when she started a relationship with the Greysteel man and was only beginning her career with horses. 'He was just so confident, charming and cocky and cheeky,' Ms Lyle recalled. 'But also very thoughtful, sweet and kind — just an alluring person.' However, the romance took a twist when Creswell assaulted Ms Lyle in February 2009 during a row before she left to go out with friends. He later sent a text apologising for his behaviour and asked if he could collect her. 'We got in the car and he swerved right, and my phone flew out of my hand... He said, 'You won't be needing that',' she said. 'Out of nowhere, he grabbed the back of my head [and] he hit my head off the window, off the dashboard. 'I was like, curled up, and he just hit me over my body, over and over and over. The shock of it. I always thought I would defend myself, but this crazy instinct took over. ADVERTISEMENT 'You will do or say anything to calm that person down because you are very aware you cannot win that fight. When he started to say, 'I'm really sorry, I'll never do that again. Oh my goodness. I really love you. Why did I do that?'… As soon as they say, 'Sorry', that pain is gone. Lifted. 'The relief was unbelievable, and it was like oxygen. By then I was in it. 'You think it's because of you. I shouldn't be doing these things, shouldn't be saying these things, I should be acting in a different way to stop this side of him coming out. But he got worse.' Ms Lyle's father contacted Nuala Lappin, a specialist PSNI domestic violence officer, which she described as her 'saving grace'. 'We kind of started a communication, just on the phone, for a couple of months before I left [Creswell],' she said. 'She said, 'I know you are not ready to [leave Creswell], but you can, and you will'. She was amazing, she was the only person who understood... Everyone's reaction [to her relationship with Creswell] was anger. A lot of people were so angry with me. They were like: 'Why are you going back? Why?' 'Nuala was the only person who truly understood why at that time I couldn't. Having her advice is probably why I am here today.' On August 3, 2020, Creswell drove Katie Simpson part-way to Altnagelvin Hospital before the unresponsive passenger was transferred to an ambulance. He told paramedics and two police officers that she had attempted to take her own life. She died in hospital without regaining consciousness a week later. Following a botched PSNI investigation, Creswell was eventually charged with Katie's murder but died after just one day of evidence in the case. At his trial, it was alleged he had strangled her and tried to cover it up by claiming she had hanged herself. Ms Lyle said that news of Creswell's arrest for Katie's murder 11 years after she walked away was 'devastating', but not surprising. 'I always thought he was capable of something like that,' she said. Death of a Showjumper is set to air on Sky and Now on Wednesday, July 16

Irish Olympian on her abusive relationship with trainer linked to murder of showjumper
Irish Olympian on her abusive relationship with trainer linked to murder of showjumper

Sunday World

timea day ago

  • Sunday World

Irish Olympian on her abusive relationship with trainer linked to murder of showjumper

Dressage rider speaks ahead of documentary on tragic death of Katie Simpson Irish Olympian and dressage rider Abigail Lyle has opened up on the abuse she suffered at the hands of Jonathan Creswell more than a decade before the death of showjumper Katie Simpson. The County Down equestrian was in a relationship with Creswell from 2008 to 2009. A year after it ended, he was jailed for six months for multiple vicious and prolonged assaults on Ms Lyle who has revealed the extent of what she suffered ahead of Death of a Showjumper, a new three-part documentary series by Sky. Abigail Lyle and Jonathan Creswell. News in 90 Seconds - Sunday July 13 It tells the story of a predatory abuser who operated in plain sight of Northern Ireland's 'horsey community' and explores police failings. Speaking to The Irish Times, Ms Lyle said she had just turned 23 when she started a relationship with the Greysteel man and was only beginning her career with horses. 'He was just so confident, charming and cocky and cheeky,' Ms Lyle recalled. 'But also very thoughtful, sweet and kind — just an alluring person.' Jonathan Creswell However, the romance took a twist when Creswell assaulted Ms Lyle in February 2009 during a row before she left to go out with friends. He later sent a text apologising for his behaviour and asked if he could collect her. 'We got in the car and he swerved right, and my phone flew out of my hand... He said, 'You won't be needing that',' she said. 'Out of nowhere, he grabbed the back of my head [and] he hit my head off the window, off the dashboard. 'I was like, curled up, and he just hit me over my body, over and over and over. The shock of it. I always thought I would defend myself, but this crazy instinct took over. 'You will do or say anything to calm that person down because you are very aware you cannot win that fight. When he started to say, 'I'm really sorry, I'll never do that again. Oh my goodness. I really love you. Why did I do that?'… As soon as they say, 'Sorry', that pain is gone. Lifted. 'The relief was unbelievable, and it was like oxygen. By then I was in it. 'You think it's because of you. I shouldn't be doing these things, shouldn't be saying these things, I should be acting in a different way to stop this side of him coming out. But he got worse.' Ms Lyle's father contacted Nuala Lappin, a specialist PSNI domestic violence officer, which she described as her 'saving grace'. 'We kind of started a communication, just on the phone, for a couple of months before I left [Creswell],' she said. 'She said, 'I know you are not ready to [leave Creswell], but you can, and you will'. She was amazing, she was the only person who understood... Everyone's reaction [to her relationship with Creswell] was anger. A lot of people were so angry with me. They were like: 'Why are you going back? Why?' 'Nuala was the only person who truly understood why at that time I couldn't. Having her advice is probably why I am here today.' Katie Simpson On August 3, 2020, Creswell drove Katie Simpson part-way to Altnagelvin Hospital before the unresponsive passenger was transferred to an ambulance. He told paramedics and two police officers that she had attempted to take her own life. She died in hospital without regaining consciousness a week later. Following a botched PSNI investigation, Creswell was eventually charged with Katie's murder but took his own life after just one day of evidence in the case. At his trial, it was alleged he had strangled her and tried to cover it up by claiming she had hanged herself. Ms Lyle said that news of Creswell's arrest for Katie's murder 11 years after she walked away was 'devastating', but not surprising. 'I always thought he was capable of something like that,' she said. Death of a Showjumper is set to air on Sky and Now on Wednesday

'I suspected the priest in the old black and white photos was my real father'
'I suspected the priest in the old black and white photos was my real father'

Extra.ie​

time2 days ago

  • Extra.ie​

'I suspected the priest in the old black and white photos was my real father'

The son of an Irish priest has called for a criminal investigation into the whereabouts of his father's assets and demanded: 'I want to know what happened to my father's fortune.' Aidan Wilson had always suspected that the local priest who baptised him as a baby in the UK was his father. The 'man in black' in a photograph in his house growing up was Fr Paddy Crowe, originally from Tuam, Co Galway, who worked and lived in England for much of his life before his death in 2000. But it was a full 22 years later before Mr Wilson, 57, was finally told by his brother Pat, who had three months to live at the time, that the priest who bore a close resemblance to him was indeed his father. Aidan Wilson had always suspected that the local priest who baptised him as a baby in the UK was his father. Pic: Supplied Over the past three years, Mr Wilson has been searching for answers about the man who fathered him, and what has become of the wealth he amassed during his lifetime. In an exclusive interview with Mr Wilson said the Catholic Church has many questions to answer, including if its members in England know what happened to the money his father allegedly amassed over his lifetime. He suspects that an Irish-based nun could hold the all-important information on Fr Crowe's fortune, but she has refused to speak to him about the matter. Attempts by to contact the nun were rebuffed by her order. A photograph published for the first time today shows Fr Crowe baptising Aidan at St John's Church in Norwich, knowing the baby was his own child. Pic: Supplied Mr Wilson said the nun was very close to Fr Crowe and would take holidays with him, and that she accompanied him to hospital for the surgery where he died on the operating table. Mr Wilson has spoken with the Bishop of Northampton, the Bishop of East Anglia, three of Fr Crowe's colleagues in Luton, as well as the head of the Columban fathers in the UK concerning the case. The police force in Bedfordshire, England, is also liaising with Mr Wilson after he tried to submit a criminal complaint regarding his father's missing money. He is now attempting to hire a UK-based solicitor to help him get answers. A photograph published for the first time today shows Fr Crowe baptising Aidan at St John's Church in Norwich, knowing the baby was his own child. Fr Crowne eventually settled in Luton. Pic: Getty Images Through DNA websites such as My Heritage and Aidan was able to determine that his first cousins were the children of Fr Paddy's siblings. A DNA test also proves his brother Pat is actually his half-brother. He now wants Fr Crowe's body to be exhumed to finally clear up any doubts about his parentage. Mr Wilson is also demanding that a 'proper investigation' is carried out into this father's missing fortune. But Mr Wilson insists it's not about the money, but about finding out the truth. 'I don't want people to read this and think, 'oh yeah, here we go, he's only after his money.' I was lied to for over 50 years of my life. I want the lies to stop, and I just want the truth.' Aidan's story begins in the 1960s, when Fr Crowe was a curate in Norwich, a historic cathedral city in the southeast of England. 'From a very, very young age, I always felt that my mum's husband, Bob, wasn't my dad,' he recalls. 'When I was very, very young, I questioned it. For a start, I never called him dad. I called him Bob. And I would say, 'Why do I call you Bob?' He said: 'Well, everyone calls me Bob.' And I said, 'well, I don't look like you' and he'd just say that I took after my mum. 'When I was young, I had a baby book and there were all things to do with the baby; locks of hair, pictures, what-have-you. But there's two pictures in that. One was a picture of a man in black holding a baby, which was me, and another picture was the man in black, my mum and me. And I would say to my mum, 'who is that man?' She'd say that was the priest who baptised you, and I'd say, 'he looks like me, mum', and then she'd change the subject.' Aidan said it was only when his mother was dying in 1999 that the subject of Fr Crowe and the family secret became more pronounced. Aidan has since gone on to say that had he been told the truth, he would have had the opportunity to meet Fr Crowe before his death. 'I always thought that that man in the picture was my dad, the man who baptised me. Anyway, this went on. I got nothing out of Mum and Bob, but when I was 12 years old, my big brother Pat, who is 17 years older than me, he and my mum had a massive falling out to the tune that they never spoke for 20 years until her deathbed. 'Pat disappeared, basically, for 20 years, but when mum was dying, I told Pat he had better go and see mum in Ireland, because she's dying, and he did so. 'So me and Pat got together for the first time in 20 years, and we went for a drink. We're still waiting for mum to be buried, and that's the first time I said to Pat: 'Is Bob my dad?' He was a bit taken aback about this because I said, 'I don't think he is. I never thought he was,' and he would lie and say, 'yeah, yeah, he is.'' Aidan said this 'went on for over two decades', in the early 2000s, when the brothers temporarily lived together, Pat hinted he had something to tell him. 'Sometimes, when he'd had a few, he nearly told me something. He almost told me a few things. 'He said he [priest] had to get out of Norwich quickly. Something happened.' Finally, after pressing the matter, Pat finally told his brother the truth while they were out having Christmas dinner in 2022. Pat was dying of cancer,' Aidan said. 'Pat only had a few months left to live, and I said to Pat at the table: 'Right, Pat. Same question I've been asking you for decades – is Bob my dad?' And he said, 'No, he's not. Your dad is Patrick Crowe. He's the bloke in the picture.' 'I said, I knew it all these years! You lied to me.' After that, Aidan said, 'Pat told me everything.' He told his brother Fr Crowe and their mother were always close, and that he was suspicious the pair were in a romantic relationship. He also recounted how Fr Crowe burst into the hairdressers where Pat was apprenticing at the time and announced to everyone: 'It's a boy! It's a boy! We have a boy!' Fr Crowe used to watch Pat play football every Thursday, but he began to notice that, shortly after the whistle blew, the priest would leave and head towards the Wilson household. Aidan said that one Thursday, Pat got himself subbed, went home early and 'caught mum and [Fr] Paddy naked having sex in the living room'. He told 'He [Pat] got himself into an altercation with Paddy. And mum was shouting at him, in the living room, to 'leave that man alone'. Anyway, Paddy grabbed his clothes, scurried out the house, putting them on, and ran out, and disappeared. And then mum was pregnant.' Aidan said his brother was scared for the future of his family as Fr Crowe continued to come around to the house. At one stage, Pat went to St John's Church in Norwich and told a senior priest Fr Crowe was the father of his little brother. Months later, after hearing nothing back, Pat returned to the church to demand that something be done. On this occasion, Aidan said his brother spoke with 'a more senior priest. He said: 'I want something done. Everyone knows what's going on here. Something needs to happen.'' Days later, Fr Crowe arrived at their family home and revealed he was being sent away. He never returned to the Wilson home but took up several new parishes, eventually settling in Luton. After Aidan finally discovered the truth about his father, he tried to get in touch with his relatives in Ireland. He said some were delighted to hear they had 'a piece of Paddy still alive', but others were less forthcoming. It was through Aidan's conversations with his new-found cousins that he heard of Fr Crowe 'fortune'. He said multiple people told him his late father was 'minted' and that he had always been successful when it came to money. This came as a surprise to Aidan, as he had heard that the only thing that was handed over after his death was Fr Crowe's car, which went to the priest's brother, Anthony. From this point, Aidan began carrying out his own investigations with the help of Vincent Doyle of Coping International – an organisation set up to help children of priests around the world. Through the organisation, attempts are now being made to find out exactly what happened to Fr Crowe's fortune.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store