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La Liga’s anti-piracy crackdown in Spain is blocking legitimate sites, including WEC streams, as aggressive IP bans spark backlash and unexpected digital chaos.

The worlds of Spanish football and Endurance racing have collided — unpleasantly (Credit: Red Bull Media, Getty Images)
If you’re in Spain and planning to tune into Max Verstappen’s much-anticipated debut at the Nurburgring this May, you might want a backup plan.
Because in a bizarre twist, Spanish football and endurance racing have collided — and not in a good way.
When Football Broke The Internet
Spain’s top-flight league, La Liga, has gone all-in on its war against piracy. Armed with a court order, the league has begun aggressively blocking IP addresses linked to illegal streams.
Sounds straightforward, right? Not quite.
The crackdown has triggered widespread disruption, with legitimate websites getting caught in the crossfire.
Among the unexpected victims? The official streaming platform of the FIA World Endurance Championship.
Yesterday, La Liga (the Spanish Football League) blocked the WEC’s official website due to its anti-piracy measures“Access to this IP address has been blocked in compliance with the provisions of the Judgment of December 18, 2024, issued by the Commercial Court No. 6 of… pic.twitter.com/qjnFkCdbgR
— Holiness (@F1BigData) April 12, 2026
How Did WEC Get Dragged Into This?
Here’s where it gets messy.
The court order allows La Liga to carry out “dynamic, instantaneous” IP blocking. But crucially, it doesn’t require them to distinguish between infringing and non-infringing services.
That means if a platform shares infrastructure (like IP ranges) with a site accused of piracy — say, via providers like Cloudflare — the entire range can be blocked.
That’s exactly what happened. The WEC platform wasn’t streaming anything illegal. It just happened to be in the wrong digital neighbourhood. Simply collateral damage.
La Liga’s Hardline Stance
From La Liga’s perspective, the aggressive approach is justified due to the financial drain.
The league estimates that piracy costs clubs between $700-800 million annually. A 2025 study by Grant Thornton found over 10.8 million illegal retransmissions of live events in 2024 alone, with most going unchecked.
To combat this, La Liga has even rolled out a bounty system, offering €50 for verified reports of illegal match broadcasts across bars and pubs in Spain.
The Bigger Problem
While La Liga’s intent is clear, their execution is raising eyebrows.
Websites across Spain are reportedly being blocked without warning, VPN providers are sounding alarms, and regulators have begun probing the collateral damage.
Yet, despite the backlash, the league isn’t blinking.
April 12, 2026, 3:57 pm IST
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