You're watching British IPTV. Suddenly, a different show appears. Then it switches back. Your reseller's IPTV Reseller Panel has a connection multiplexing issue. Here's why streams get crossed. To save resources, some panels reuse connections between users. When connection reassignment goes wrong, you temporarily receive someone else's stream. Here's a real scenario. A reseller's IPTV Reseller Panel uses connection pooling. User A finishes watching. Their connection returns to the pool. User B requests a stream. The panel assigns User A's old connection. Sometimes the old connection still has User A's stream in its buffer. User B sees User A's show for a few seconds. The panel logs show the reassignment. Most resellers never notice because it's brief. Honestly, this is disturbing. Seeing someone else's content feels like a security breach. The IPTV Reseller Panel is just reusing connections poorly. Your privacy isn't compromised. But the experience is terrifying. Most resellers don't even know this happens. What actually works is reporting cross-connection immediately. A good British IPTV reseller will disable connection pooling in their IPTV Reseller Panel. That fixes the issue. Most resellers won't because pooling saves server resources. Your brief glimpse of someone else's screen is their cost savings. I've watched customers panic thinking they were hacked. The IPTV Reseller Panel logs showed connection reuse. The reseller could disable pooling. They didn't because "it's rare." Your terror was rare. Therefore acceptable. Here's another layer. Some resellers use connection multiplexing intentionally to serve more users with fewer resources. Their British IPTV panel shares connections aggressively. Cross-pollination is common. They accept it as a trade-off. Your occasional view of someone else's screen is their business model. The panel can dedicate connections. Your reseller chooses to share. Your privacy loses because sharing saves money. So next time you see someone else's screen, you've found the connection hijack. Your reseller's IPTV Reseller Panel is reusing connections. They could stop. They won't because stopping costs resources. Your brief glimpse into a stranger's viewing is their efficiency. The panel knows whose stream you're seeing. Your reseller could fix it. They choose not to. Your terror is acceptable collateral damage in their resource optimization.