The original panel gives you granular control over how many "hops" your cards are shared. You can view the distribution tree, showing which clients are resharing your card to their own sub-clients. A "hop1" is a direct client; a "hop2" is a client of your client. The panel allows you to block resharing globally or per user.

A critical note for potential buyers: there are hundreds of "CCcam Panels" available for free or very cheap online. These are almost always nulled scripts containing malware or backdoors that allow the creator to steal your control server or user database. The "Original" panel reviewed here refers to the legitimate, licensed software. The peace of mind regarding security and updates is worth the price of admission alone.


Unlike many modern emulators, the original panel interacts directly with physical card readers (Phoenix, smargo, or internal slot). It displays ATR (Answer To Reset) strings and error rates, which is essential for debugging why a subscription card isn't updating.

The original CCcam panel was a minimalist masterpiece of reverse engineering and practical networking. It stripped away all pretense, offering a direct view into the hidden economy of control words. While its legal uses (e.g., watching your own subscription on multiple TVs in a home) were quickly overshadowed by mass piracy, its technical innovations were undeniable. The panel’s ability to demystify the flow of decryption keys—from smart card to network socket—democratized access to premium content for a generation of hobbyists. Today, the original CCcam panel stands as a historical artifact: a command line that once whispered the secrets of every scrambled channel, and then fell silent as the encryption arms race moved on.

Original CCcam Panel is a centralized web-based management interface used by administrators and resellers to control CCcam (Conditional Access Client) servers. These servers facilitate card sharing

, a technology that allows multiple satellite receivers to access encrypted television content using a single legitimate subscription card over a network. Alibaba.com Core Functionality

The panel acts as a control hub for managing the following server operations: User Management

: Administrators can create, edit, suspend, or delete user accounts and manage client permissions. Real-Time Monitoring

: Provides a dashboard to track active connections, server health, and channel usage. Configuration Control

: Allows manual editing of server settings, including ports, encryption protocols, and routing. Security & Protection

: Features include firewalls, IP filtering, and automated "debug" tools to ban illegal users or prevent attacks. Reseller Tools

: Specialized panels enable resellers to manage their own customer base and allocate lines. Alibaba.com Types of Panels

Different panels are chosen based on the scale of operation and specific features: CCcam Control Center (CCC)

: An advanced platform for professional server administration with high performance. Mini Panel CCcam

: Optimized for IPTV management, often featuring Entitlement Control List (ECL) management to restrict specific content tiers. Dual Satellite Dragon Panel

: Specialized for dual-server connectivity, providing redundancy and faster switching between satellites. Mobile-Supported Panels

: Some providers offer interfaces specifically optimized for Android and iOS devices for remote management. Alibaba.com Key Performance Indicators

When evaluating an "original" or high-quality panel, experts look for: Stability (Anti-Freezing)

: Premium panels often use proprietary "antifreeze" systems (e.g., v8.2) to ensure a smooth viewing experience without signal interruptions. : Reliable services typically promise 99.9% uptime

: High-performance panels optimize ECM (Entitlement Control Message) response times to minimize lag during channel zapping. Google Play Applications Commercial

: Used in hotels, bars, and gyms to provide varied programming across multiple rooms while reducing hardware and subscription costs. IPTV Integration

: Aggregates encrypted satellite feeds into unified streaming services for global delivery. Personal Home Use

: Allows families to watch different channels on multiple devices throughout a household using a single server. Alibaba.com

Note: I have included a Security Warning based on common practices in card sharing. You should ensure this post complies with the rules of the platform you are posting to, as discussing pay TV circumvention is restricted in many places.


Title: Finding a Real Original CCCam Panel (OSCam vs. Old CCcam 2.3.0)

Post Body:

Hi everyone,

I’ve been digging through the usual sources trying to find an untouched, original CCCam panel – specifically the old web interface that came with CCcam 2.3.0 (not the newer OSCam interfaces).

I know most people have moved to OSCam because it handles more encryption types (Tandberg, BISS, etc.), but I need the classic layout for a legacy setup.

A few questions for the veterans:

My goal: I want the nostalgic blue/grey interface with the live "Clients/ECM" logging view for a personal server.

What I've tried:

Does anyone have a clean backup of the original 2.3.0 Webpanel files? Or is everyone just using the CCcam protocol inside OSCam now?

Thanks!


To understand the panel, you first have to understand the protocol. CCCam (Card Sharing Control Cam) is a network protocol primarily used in the satellite TV community.

In technical terms, it is a method of sharing a conditional access smart card over a network. The goal was originally legitimate: to allow a homeowner to view their paid subscription channels on multiple receivers in different rooms without having to purchase a second physical smart card for every TV.

The protocol uses the internet to transmit the "control words" (keys) required to decrypt the signal from the satellite provider. The device holding the physical card becomes the Server, and the other devices in the house are the Clients.