
As Africa’s broadcasting and digital media industry continues its rapid transition towards streaming, on-demand and multi-platform content delivery, safeguarding valuable content assets has become a strategic imperative. Against a backdrop of rising digital piracy, illegal content redistribution, and increasingly sophisticated copyright infringement, industry leaders will gather to examine effective solutions during the Broadcasters Convention – West Africa 2026, taking place on 22–23 September 2026 at the Labadi Beach Hotel in Accra, Ghana.
The Convention will feature a dedicated session titled “Content Protection and Anti-Piracy Strategies in the Digital Ecosystem,” bringing together broadcasters, content owners, regulators, technology providers, legal experts and digital platform operators to explore how the industry can better protect intellectual property while supporting innovation and sustainable business growth.
As broadcasters continue to invest heavily in original programming, live sports, entertainment, and premium content, piracy remains one of the industry’s most significant threats. Illegal streaming services, content theft, signal piracy, unauthorised redistribution and digital copyright violations continue to erode revenues, undermine content investments and weaken the commercial sustainability of media organisations across Africa.
The session will examine the latest technologies, policies and collaborative approaches being deployed to combat piracy across digital platforms. Discussions will focus on Digital Rights Management (DRM), forensic watermarking, content monitoring and detection technologies, AI-powered piracy tracking, legal enforcement mechanisms, cross-border regulatory cooperation and industry partnerships designed to strengthen content security throughout the content value chain.
Commenting on the significance of the topic, Mr Benjamin Pius, CEO of Broadcast Media Africa (BMA) and Convener of the Convention, said, “The future of Africa’s content economy depends not only on producing compelling content but also on protecting it. As digital distribution expands, piracy is becoming more organised, technologically advanced and increasingly difficult to combat. The industry must respond with equally sophisticated strategies that combine technology, regulation, collaboration and consumer awareness. This session will provide an important platform for sharing practical solutions that strengthen content security while enabling continued innovation across Africa’s broadcasting ecosystem.”
The Broadcasters Convention – West Africa 2026 will convene senior executives from broadcasting organisations, streaming services, telecommunications operators, content producers, regulators, technology companies and industry stakeholders to discuss the trends, innovations and strategic priorities shaping the future of broadcasting and digital media across West Africa and the continent.












