Exchange Cccam 【Official × EDITION】
The community has largely moved from CCCam to OSCam and Cache Exchange (CacheEX) . CacheEX allows sharing of already-decrypted CWs (control words) without revealing the original card, offering better security and lower latency—but it is still illegal.
Let’s break down a realistic example:
User A (London) has a Sky UK card.
User B (Berlin) has a Sky Deutschland card.
User C (Madrid) has a Movistar+ card.
They agree to a 3-way exchange. Each provides a CCCam line to the other two. exchange cccam
When User A wants to watch a Bundesliga match on Sky Deutschland:
From A’s perspective, they are watching foreign TV as if they had a local subscription. All three gain access to three different packages for the price of one (or free, if they only exchange without payment).
Short answer: No.
As of 2026, major broadcasters have moved to:
The only remaining CCCam exchanges involve:
For 99% of users, the effort, risk, and instability of CCCam exchange no longer justify the reward. The community has largely moved from CCCam to
The exchange relies on specific configuration lines usually found in a file named CCcam.cfg:
In virtually all jurisdictions (EU, UK, USA, Canada, Australia), CCCam exchange constitutes illegal hacking under copyright and anti-circumvention laws.
Key acts violated:
Many users claim: “I own the card, so I can share it with a friend.”
The law disagrees. Pay-TV subscriptions are licensed for single household use only. Distributing the decryption stream over the internet violates the Terms of Service and the law.
Many modern "exchange" sites are actually resellers. You pay a monthly fee (e.g., €15) to access a massive pool of exchanged lines. You are not technically buying the channels; you are buying a slot on a server that aggregates exchanges from thousands of peers.