Cccam Exchange Auto New ((full)) May 2026

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Disclaimer: This report is for educational and cybersecurity awareness purposes only. The use of CS (Card Sharing) systems, including CCcam, to access pay-TV content without a valid subscription is illegal in most jurisdictions and violates the terms of service of content providers.


Issue 1: "No new line found" error

  • Cause: Your exchange credit is empty.
  • Fix: Log into your exchange panel. If you are in a P2P network, share more local cards. If you are on a paid service, renew your subscription.

What is "Auto-New"?

In a traditional CCCam exchange, you trade your local card (or a peer’s line) for another person’s line. If the other person’s server went down, you had to manually find a new peer and swap C lines.

Auto-New automates this. It is a script or server module that monitors the health of the peers in your exchange group. If a line dies, has high ECM times, or goes to sleep, the system automatically replaces it with a fresh, active line from a pool.

2.2 The "Exchange" Concept

Instead of selling access, servers trade shares: "I give you access to my card (e.g., Sky DE), you give me access to your card (e.g., Canal+ FR)." This creates a distributed network.

Pros of Auto-New Systems

  • Zero Downtime: You stop needing to babysit your receiver. The bot works 24/7.
  • Quality Control: Most auto-new bots have a "Rating" system. Bad peers get kicked out; good peers stay in.
  • Dynamic Load: As users come and go, the pool constantly refreshes, giving you access to a rotating list of providers.

Prerequisites

  • An Enigma2 based receiver (Vu+, Dreambox, Octagon, Zgemma).
  • Internet connection (minimum 10 Mbps).
  • An account on a reputable CCcam exchange forum or premium auto-renewal service.

The Cons (The Bad & Ugly)

1. The "Freeze" Nightmare Auto-new gives you a line, but rarely a good line. Expect freezing every 10–30 seconds during peak hours (evenings, sports events). The auto-new feature cannot detect quality – only expiration. A dead line is replaced; a glitchy line is kept.

2. Security Risks You are executing unknown scripts (often with wget and chmod 777) from anonymous forum posters. There is a real risk of:

  • Your CCcam config being uploaded to a stranger's server.
  • Your receiver being added to a botnet.
  • Malware that logs your local network traffic.

3. Unstable Sports & PPV Forget about watching Premier League, UFC, or WWE PPVs. The moment a major event starts, the auto-exchange servers get hammered. You will see "Card not found" or "Timeout" errors repeatedly. Auto-new will just swap one dead line for another dead line.

4. Short Lifespan Typical line life on these exchanges: 6 to 48 hours. While the "auto" part handles the swap, you may still experience 5-10 minutes of downtime between the old line dying and the new one activating.

Step 5: Test Your Setup

Reboot the receiver. Within 10 minutes, the script should pull a "new" line. To verify, check the "Clients" tab in OSCam Webif. You should see a "Last Switch" time indicating the line was auto-renewed.

Technical Overview: CCcam and Newcamd Protocols

1. The Protocols

  • CCcam: A network protocol primarily used for sharing subscription card decryption keys over a local network or the internet. It allows a "server" (holding the smartcard) to share the decryption data with "clients."
  • Newcamd: Another protocol often used in conjunction with CCcam. It is generally considered slightly more secure and bandwidth-efficient than standard CCcam, often utilizing a specific port (usually 15000-15050 range) and des-key encryption for the handshake.

2. Automated Exchange (Auto-Exchange) In the context of server management, "Auto-Exchange" refers to a system where servers automatically share their available node information with one another without manual intervention.

  • Mechanism: Server A and Server B run scripts that communicate their connection details (IP, Port, Username, Password).
  • Benefit: This allows servers to aggregate decryption capability (hops) automatically. If Server A has access to specific packages and Server B has others, an auto-exchange merges these resources.

3. Managing "Auto New" Connections When setting up an automated environment for exchanging these lines, administrators typically focus on:

  • Validation Scripts: Automated bots are used to test incoming lines. They check if the line is "active" or "dead."
  • Hop Control: A major aspect of automation is filtering "Hops." A "Hop 1" card is local to the server (fastest), while "Hop 2" or "Hop 3" are shared from other servers further down the chain. Automation scripts are often configured to reject lines with high hops (e.g., > Hop 2) to maintain streaming stability.
  • Cache Exchange: Modern automation often moves away from direct line exchange toward "Cache" exchange. Instead of sharing the actual card connection, servers share the decrypted Control Words (CWs) momentarily. This reduces the load on the physical smartcard and lowers the latency, making the stream more stable.
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Cccam Exchange Auto New ((full)) May 2026

Disclaimer: This report is for educational and cybersecurity awareness purposes only. The use of CS (Card Sharing) systems, including CCcam, to access pay-TV content without a valid subscription is illegal in most jurisdictions and violates the terms of service of content providers.


Issue 1: "No new line found" error

What is "Auto-New"?

In a traditional CCCam exchange, you trade your local card (or a peer’s line) for another person’s line. If the other person’s server went down, you had to manually find a new peer and swap C lines.

Auto-New automates this. It is a script or server module that monitors the health of the peers in your exchange group. If a line dies, has high ECM times, or goes to sleep, the system automatically replaces it with a fresh, active line from a pool.

2.2 The "Exchange" Concept

Instead of selling access, servers trade shares: "I give you access to my card (e.g., Sky DE), you give me access to your card (e.g., Canal+ FR)." This creates a distributed network. cccam exchange auto new

Pros of Auto-New Systems

Prerequisites

The Cons (The Bad & Ugly)

1. The "Freeze" Nightmare Auto-new gives you a line, but rarely a good line. Expect freezing every 10–30 seconds during peak hours (evenings, sports events). The auto-new feature cannot detect quality – only expiration. A dead line is replaced; a glitchy line is kept.

2. Security Risks You are executing unknown scripts (often with wget and chmod 777) from anonymous forum posters. There is a real risk of:

3. Unstable Sports & PPV Forget about watching Premier League, UFC, or WWE PPVs. The moment a major event starts, the auto-exchange servers get hammered. You will see "Card not found" or "Timeout" errors repeatedly. Auto-new will just swap one dead line for another dead line. Disclaimer: This report is for educational and cybersecurity

4. Short Lifespan Typical line life on these exchanges: 6 to 48 hours. While the "auto" part handles the swap, you may still experience 5-10 minutes of downtime between the old line dying and the new one activating.

Step 5: Test Your Setup

Reboot the receiver. Within 10 minutes, the script should pull a "new" line. To verify, check the "Clients" tab in OSCam Webif. You should see a "Last Switch" time indicating the line was auto-renewed.

Technical Overview: CCcam and Newcamd Protocols

1. The Protocols

2. Automated Exchange (Auto-Exchange) In the context of server management, "Auto-Exchange" refers to a system where servers automatically share their available node information with one another without manual intervention.

3. Managing "Auto New" Connections When setting up an automated environment for exchanging these lines, administrators typically focus on: