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HBO Obtains DMCA Subpoena to Unmask 'Euphoria' Spoiler Account on X

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Why This Matters

HBO's recent legal move to obtain a DMCA subpoena highlights the ongoing challenges the entertainment industry faces with online leaks and spoilers. This case underscores the importance of digital rights enforcement and the potential impact on consumer access to exclusive content. It also signals a proactive stance by studios to protect their intellectual property ahead of highly anticipated releases.

Key Takeaways

HBO has obtained a DMCA subpoena, ordering X Corp. to identify the person behind a Euphoria fan account that allegedly posted spoilers from unaired episodes of Season 3. The action comes just days before the show's long-awaited premiere this weekend, but it remains unclear what the company plans to do with the requested information.

HBO has a history of being plagued by high-profile leaks.

Several Game of Thrones episodes leaked in the past, and the same applies to the sequel, House of the Dragon.

With the long-awaited third season of HBO’s hit series Euphoria coming up this weekend, the company was on high alert. So, when it saw several ‘spoilers’ being posted by an X account operating under the name “Lexi howard’s cat”, it wasted no time to take action.

Not the infringing tweet

The Lexi-inspired fan account has been around for a long time, sharing various Euphoria-related updates. However, a series of posts that were published in late March appeared to have hit too close to home.

On March 31, HBO’s parent company, Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) sent a takedown notice to X, flagging several posts. According to Michael Bentkover, WBD’s Director of Worldwide Online Enforcement, these were “spoilers for unaired episodes of our Euphoria TV Series”.

TorrentFreak was unable to find out what was posted exactly, but the DMCA notice identifies it as video/audiovisual recording.

The DMCA notice

X confirmed receipt on the same day and presumably removed the posts. However, that was not the end of it. A week later, on April 7, the company requested a DMCA subpoena at a California federal court, with the goal to identify the person behind the @maudesfancat account.

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