US Justice Department seizes nearly 400 domains used to illegally stream World Cup matches.
Photo: Jerusalem Post
Other Added 1d ago · originally reported 2d ago Why the delay? Events only appear once a second similar article confirms the story. Additionally, many feeds (especially Google News-proxied sources like CNN, NYT, WSJ, WaPo) can take 10-20+ hours to index new articles. The pipeline also runs every 30 minutes, so there's always some inherent lag. 2 outlets

US Justice Department seizes nearly 400 domains used to illegally stream World Cup matches.

The US Justice Department seized approximately 400 internet domains that were illegally streaming World Cup matches. FIFA, NBCUniversal, and Warner Bros. assisted in identifying the domains. Servers and domains were targeted in Peru, Bulgaria, Croatia, Romania, Poland, and Colombia.

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Divergence score
2 outlets covered it, splitting into 2 framing camps across 2 bias groups.
2 camps
2 bias groups
Market signalBETA
The spectrum · how 2 outlets placed this story
LeftCenterRight
Jerusalem Post
Reuters
Horizontal = outlet biasColor = this story's framing
Supportive of action
Neutral
Dismissive
Critical
Alarmist
International angle
The split, in one line
Both outlets report identical core facts; Jerusalem Post adds malware warnings and World Cup attendance context that Reuters omits.
How each outlet covered it

No left-right split here

Coverage clusters in the center and international press. Here is each take as it stands.

Center & international coverage
JPJerusalem PostINTERNATIONAL1d ago

“US seizes nearly 400 websites that were illegally streaming World Cup, DOJ says”

RReutersCENTER2d ago

“US seizes nearly 400 websites that were illegally streaming World Cup, DOJ says”

Tracked claims from across the political spectrum
Fact ledger
Corroborated
Disputed