Cccam | Skynet

Posted by Tom Barrasso on (updated on )

Cccam | Skynet

CCCam is a client-server protocol that shares CWs in near real-time. A legitimate card in a server sends ECMs to the card; the recovered CWs are forwarded to connected clients. Clients emulate a local card, allowing their decoders to decrypt the stream without owning a valid subscription.

If you are a legitimate satellite enthusiast, here are the modern equivalents: Skynet Cccam

| Feature | Skynet Cccam (Legacy) | Modern Oscam | Legal IPTV | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Protocol | Cccam (v2.0 - v2.3) | Oscam (cache exchange) | HLS / MPEG-DASH | | Latency | 200-500ms | <50ms (local) | <10s (buffer) | | Security | Weak (plain text keys) | Strong (SSL, DVBAPI) | Legal DRM (Widevine) | | Cost | $5-15/month | Free (self-hosted) | $10-20/month | | Legality | Illegal (in most regions) | Illegal if sharing paid cards | Fully legal | CCCam is a client-server protocol that shares CWs

Modern broadcasters use:

The pricing of Skynet CCcam varies depending on the subscription plan chosen by the user. The plans might differ in terms of channel offerings, server access time, and support levels. While some users find the service to be reasonably priced for the quality and quantity of channels offered, others have expressed concerns about the cost, suggesting that comparable services might offer better value. If you are a legitimate satellite enthusiast, here