A bench of justices Pradeep Nandrajog and A K Pathak also said that to "block the website as a whole is justified" as these were illegally streaming "pirated" videos.
"The respondent (Star India Pvt Ltd) has placed enough material in the suit to show that the rogue websites are indulging in rank piracy and, thus prima-facie the stringent measure to block the website as a whole is justified because blocking a URL may not suffice due to the ease with which a URL can be changed, and as noted above, the number of URLs of the rogue websites range between 2 to 2026 and cumulatively would be approximately 20,000.
The court's order came on a review plea by Star India, a leading sports broadcaster which has an exclusive licence of media rights in various sporting events, seeking blocking of these 73 websites for allegedly uploading pirated content.
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Aggrieved with the order, the Department of Electronics and Information technology (DEIT) had filed a plea against the blanket order on the ground that blocking websites would violate freedom of trade on Internet.
The court, however, in March this year had directed that only the specified URLs be blocked. Star India had filed a review plea against the March order.
Allowing the review, the bench observed that the argument regarding freedom of trade on Internet "would have no content where the offending activity by the rogue website is to carrying on hardly any lawful business and in its entirety or to a large extent, piracy is being resorted to".