Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Audio / Video
  3. News

Amazon cracks down on illegal streaming apps on Fire TV sticks

Amazon is moving to block third-party apps enabling illegal sports streams

Add as a preferred source on Google
The Amazon Alexa Voice Remote in someone's hand.
Phil Nickinson / Digital Trends

What Happened: If you’ve been using your Fire TV Stick to watch movies or sports for free using “unofficial” apps, the party might be over.

  • Amazon is cracking down hard on illegal streaming. It just confirmed it’s going to block pirated apps right on the device – even the ones you sideloaded yourself (downloaded from outside the Appstore).
  • This isn’t just a rumor. It came up in a new episode of The Athletic FC Podcast, where Amazon confirmed its new stance. This follows some wild stats showing that nearly 5 million people in the UK alone have been watching illegal streams, with almost a third of them using Fire Sticks to do it.
  • To put some muscle behind this, Amazon’s new Fire TV Stick 4K Select (which launched last month) runs on a new operating system called Vega OS.
  • This new software is way stricter and stops you from installing random apps that aren’t in the official store. But even if you have an older stick, Amazon says it’s rolling out updates to block apps that are known for piracy.

Why Is This Important: For a long time, the Fire TV Stick was the “cool parent” of streaming devices – it was cheap, easy to use, and let you install pretty much whatever you wanted.

  • That openness was great for techies, but it also made the devices a haven for piracy. People could easily grab apps that let them watch expensive sports or movies for free (or very cheap).
  • Now, Amazon is working with a big anti-piracy group called ACE (which includes giants like Netflix and Disney) to clean house.
  • By blocking these apps at the device level, the company is trying to shut down the easy access that made Fire Sticks so popular in the “underground” streaming world.

Why Should I Care: If you’re one of the people with a “fully loaded” Fire Stick, you might wake up one day to find your favorite free sports app just doesn’t work anymore.

  • Amazon is basically turning off the tap.
  • But there’s another angle Amazon is pushing: safety. The company points out that a lot of these shady apps are dangerous.
  • It says they can carry malware that steals your data or messes with your home network. So, while losing free TV sucks, Amazon argues it’s saving you from digital germs.
Recommended Videos

What’s Next: This crackdown has already started in Germany and France, and Amazon says it’s going to expand globally in the coming weeks.

  • It looks like the days of the “wild west” on Fire TV are numbering. Rights holders like the Premier League are putting massive pressure on tech companies to stop piracy, and Amazon is clearly deciding it’s time to fall in line.
  • If you want to keep watching, you might need to start paying for those official subscriptions again.
Moinak Pal
Moinak Pal is has been working in the technology sector covering both consumer centric tech and automotive technology for the…
LG C6H OLED Evo AI Review: The First Meaningful C-Series Upgrade in Years?
This one stays true to its roots, while delivering upgrades that revive the C-series as a worthwhy investment.
Electronics, Screen, Computer Hardware

Buy from Best Buy

The LG C-Series has long occupied a unique position in the TV market. For years, it has been the default recommendation for anyone looking for a premium OLED experience without stepping into flagship pricing territory. It consistently delivered the picture quality, gaming performance, and overall reliability that made it one of the safest OLED recommendations available.

Read more
Tidal lays down the rules for AI music. I wish Spotify and everyone else would follow
Tidal app showing on iPhone 15 Pro.

Every week, the AI music problem is getting increasingly hard to ignore, especially for streaming platforms. Deezer reported that 44% of all new music uploaded to its platform daily is now AI-generated; that's almost half the songs.

Spotify relabeled and tightened its AI policies last September, while Apple Music announced a tagging approach in March. However, the subscription-based artist-first music platform Tidal has done something none of them did. 

Read more
Netflix just got a whole lot more irritating if you share a screen in a household
Every profile will soon need its own email address, adding another hurdle for households that share a TV.
Netflix on TV couple watching

Netflix's password-sharing crackdown isn't over just yet. The streaming giant is now rolling out another change that could make shared household accounts a little more cumbersome, this time by asking every profile on an account to have its own email address. While the move isn't designed to stop families from sharing a subscription, it does add another layer of identity verification that many users probably weren't asking for.

Netflix wants every profile to have its own identity

Read more