Forget Russian hackers.
The real digital threat in Spain is named Javier Tebas.
And he’s not acting alone.
He acts with a judge who can’t tell an IP from a printer.
With ISPs forced to obey without question.
With a government that hides as if the Internet were a minor issue.
This is the T-DDOS:
Tebas Distributed Denial of Service.
A massive, reckless, institutional attack.
A denial of service executed straight from the courts, ordered by LaLiga, sealed with the stamp of state-level incompetence.
LaLiga’s Playing Candy Crush
While you’re watching a movie, making an online payment, or trying to access a perfectly legal website, someone in a suit—completely clueless about networks—is hitting “block” like they’re playing Candy Crush… or Space Invaders.
That’s how the T-DDOS is born.
Not as a technical error, but as a conscious decision.
A deliberate execution.
🔻 Blocking IPs without review
🔻 Taking down servers without direct cause
🔻 Destroying the digital reputation of completely legal businesses
🔻 Ignoring proportionality like jumping a fence
Effectiveness against piracy? Zero.
Collateral damage? Devastating.
Accountability? Nonexistent.
This Isn’t Piracy. It’s Institutional Sabotage.
T-DDOS doesn’t discriminate. It just wrecks everything in its path.
Doesn’t matter if your website is clean, legal, and fully compliant.
If you shared a provider with someone who streamed a goal…
BOOM. You’re collateral damage.
And the best part?
No warning.
No explanation.
Just a blank screen calling you a criminal on your own domain, linking directly to LaLiga, where they drop this charming paragraph:
“Cloudflare is involved in illegal activities such as pimping, prostitution, pornography, distribution of counterfeits, fraud, and scam operations, among others.”
Well then—https://www.tebascoiduras.com/—created in 1987 by Javier Tebas Medrano and Marta Coiduras Aybar, uses Weebly, which in turn uses Cloudflare.
Well, https://www.tebascoiduras.com/, created in 1987 by Javier Tebas Medrano and Marta Coiduras Aybar, uses Weebly, which in turn uses Cloudflare. Ugh, this seems like a double entendre, and here’s the proof. Yes, I went to a directory on the website so this screen would pop up on purpose and make it clear we weren’t lying.
Let’s see, one of his son’s where he is the sole administrator, Skelton Enterprise SL
If so, there is nothing more to say, Your Honor.
What Gets Hit with the T-DDOS?
Everything.
Cloudflare.
Redsys (payment systems interrupted).
Independent media.
Legal forums.
Educational projects.
State services.
…
Who didn’t fall?
The pirates.
Those using VPNs, proxies, the Tor network…
The ones who know how to dodge this charade with two clicks.
They laughed and kept watching the game for free, yes, for free, Tebas, because your Candy Crush sessions are only messing up innocent people, while the pirates remain untouched.
Judges Legislating with Word and Executing Like It’s Age of Empires
A court decided to shut down half the Internet, and not a single eyebrow was raised.
There were no impact assessments.
No network experts.
Just a legal stamp based on 56k modem logic.
A judge dictating the rules of cyberspace as if they were signing a speeding ticket.
This isn’t justice.
This is a digital missile launched from an office that still thinks “router” is a brand of bread.
The Government: VIP Witness to the Disaster
And the government?
Gone.
The Ministry of Culture is silent.
Justice doesn’t even blink.
Digital Transformation is missing in action (Irony of life…)
Nobody raised their voice.
Nobody said: “Hey, maybe shutting down servers without technical control isn’t a good idea.”
With their silence, they signed off on the largest attack against civil digital infrastructure in Spain’s history.
And they did nothing.
They will do nothing.
This isn’t inaction.
This is complicity.
Javier Tebas, Emperor of Ridicule
When the chaos started spreading across the network, those who really know—those who understand how the Internet works from the inside—raised their hands.
They warned about the error. Explained the damage. Offered solutions.
And what did Tebas do?
Ignored them. Disdained them.
As if the Internet were his. As if the national router hung in his office.
He didn’t listen.
Because listening means understanding.
And understanding means accepting mistakes.
And that doesn’t fit the script of someone who prefers to swing the hammer before reading the manual.
ALERT: Three Days of Football… and Three Days of Fire
Buckle up.
Three matchdays.
Three more opportunities to obliterate the Internet with blindly issued judicial orders.
Three more excuses to hit the red button without caring who it affects.
And this time, it won’t be a failure due to incompetence.
It will be repeated out of arrogance.
This isn’t strategy. It’s stubbornness in a robe.
This isn’t defending sports. It’s legal artillery fired blindly.
This isn’t protecting football.
It’s launching legal missiles from disconnected offices with the accuracy of a rusty cannon and the judgment of a mosquito.
The T-DDOS is the New Censorship
This isn’t protecting copyright.
It’s wrecking the Internet with sledgehammers.
A digital policy worthy of 12th-century feudal lords with access to the red button.
And if no one stops it, it will become normalized.
It will be repeated.
And the network—the one the Government loves to boast about as “digitalized”—will become a minefield where everything can be taken down without warning.
Ultimatum
To the Government: Either react, or you’ll be active accomplices in the most botched censorship ever applied.
To the judges: Stop signing off on technical rulings without knowing what you’re signing. You’re destroying more than you realize.
To LaLiga: Keep striking matches in a room full of digital gasoline… and brace yourselves for the real fire.
Because this isn’t about piracy.
This is about fundamental rights.
About responsibility.
About not governing the 21st century with a VHS manual.
The Internet is not your private property.
And those who keep it running…
are no longer willing to stay silent.
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