teachableonline-courses

Data Science for Business Part 1

business-science$6000Discovered Feb 22, 2026

Data Science for Business Part 1 is a $6,000 data science training program hosted on Teachable, developed by Business Science. This course focuses on applying data science techniques to real-world business problems — an increasingly sought-after skill set among professionals looking to transition into analytics and data-driven decision making. At $6,000, it sits firmly in the ultra-premium bracket, making it one of the most expensive courses we monitor on any platform. Ultra-premium courses face the highest risk of organized piracy redistribution because the perceived savings for unauthorized downloaders are enormous. Our automated monitoring systems actively track this course across torrent indexers, Telegram piracy channels, and known course-sharing platforms. Teachable's lack of native DRM protection means the video lectures remain technically vulnerable to ripping tools, despite the platform's basic content protection features.

Screenshot of original course page

Screenshot of Data Science for Business Part 1 course page

Pending

Scan in progress

Scan Results

1

Total Found

1

Live Links

1

Source Types

0

Taken Down

Source TypeCount
gemini_search1

Last scanned: Feb 22, 2026

Specific URLs are available in the full report. Automated detection may contain inaccuracies.

Piracy Threat Analysis

This course has not yet undergone a full piracy scan in our system, leaving its current exposure level unconfirmed. However, the risk profile is significant based on several factors we assess automatically. At $6,000, this is the highest-priced course in our entire monitoring database — placing it at extreme piracy risk. Our historical data shows that ultra-premium courses priced above $1,000 experience approximately three times the piracy targeting rate compared to mid-range courses. The potential savings of $6,000 creates an exceptionally strong incentive for pirates to seek out and redistribute this content. Teachable as a hosting platform presents specific vulnerabilities that compound this risk. Video content hosted on Teachable uses Wistia's embedded player, which experienced rippers can extract direct video URLs from the page source. Additionally, Teachable lacks session management controls that would prevent account credential sharing — a common first step in the piracy pipeline. We recommend the creator implement watermarking on video content and monitor for credential sharing patterns. Data science courses attract a technically sophisticated audience who are more likely to know how to locate and use piracy tools effectively. We strongly suggest enrolling this course in our full scan pipeline to establish a baseline piracy exposure assessment as soon as possible.

At $6000, this course falls in the highest-risk bracket. Courses priced above $500 are prime targets for pirates who can attract large audiences with premium content offered for free.

Teachable courses carry a HIGH overall piracy risk. The most common piracy sources for Teachable content include Telegram groups, Torrent sites, Google Drive shares, Course dump sites. On average, pirated copies of Teachable courses appear 2-4 weeks after launch.

Known Teachable Vulnerabilities

  • No native DRM — course videos can be screen-captured or downloaded with browser extensions
  • Direct video URLs sometimes exposed in page source code, allowing direct downloads
  • Wistia-hosted videos can be ripped with third-party tools that bypass the embedded player
  • Account sharing is difficult to detect without session monitoring

Price Context

At $6,000, this course is in the top 0% of Teachable courses we monitor — placing it in the Ultra-Premium price tier.

Ultra-premium courses above $1,000 are the highest-value targets for organized piracy rings. A single leak can mean thousands in lost revenue.

Tech & Data Science Piracy Intelligence

Tech and data science courses represent one of the most actively pirated categories in online education. The combination of high-value technical skills and a technically literate audience creates a perfect storm for unauthorized redistribution. We observe data science content frequently appearing on torrent sites, GitHub repositories sharing course materials, and specialized Telegram channels dedicated to programming and analytics courses. The audience for these courses often has the technical knowledge to use VPNs, torrent clients, and browser ripping extensions with ease. Teachable-hosted data science courses are particularly vulnerable because the platform's Wistia video player can be reverse-engineered by users with development backgrounds. Our monitoring for tech and data science content extends across developer forums, code-sharing platforms, and the major torrent indexers where technical education content is most frequently uploaded and seeded.

Teachable Security Assessment

Built-in Security

  • Login-required access for all course content
  • No native video download button
  • Content drip scheduling to limit access
  • Student session management
  • Custom domain with SSL

Limitations

  • No DRM or video encryption
  • No watermarking built-in (requires third-party tools)
  • No download detection or alerting
  • Screen recording cannot be prevented
  • Limited concurrent session controls

Keep Your Course Protected

Teachable-Specific Protection Steps

  • 1.Enable Teachable's built-in content drip to limit how much content is accessible at once
  • 2.Use watermarked videos with student name or email overlay on each lesson
  • 3.Set up IP access restrictions in your school's security settings
  • 4.Limit concurrent login sessions to prevent credential sharing
  • 5.Disable PDF downloads for sensitive materials — use in-browser viewing only

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know if "Data Science for Business Part 1" is pirated?
You can check if "Data Science for Business Part 1" is being pirated by running a free scan at CoursePiracy. Our scanner checks Google, Telegram groups, torrent sites, and file-sharing platforms for unauthorized copies. For Teachable courses, Telegram and torrent sites are the most common piracy sources.
What platforms do pirates use for Teachable courses?
The most common piracy channels for Teachable courses are Telegram groups, Torrent sites, Google Drive shares, Course dump sites. Telegram groups account for the largest share of pirated course content, followed by torrent bundled packs and file-sharing links. Pirated copies typically appear 2-4 weeks after launch.
How much revenue can piracy cost for a $6000 course?
For a $6000 course, even a small number of pirated downloads can represent significant revenue loss. If 100 people download a pirated copy instead of purchasing, that's $600000+ in lost sales. The actual impact is often higher because piracy channels can reach thousands of potential buyers.
How common is piracy for Teachable courses?
Teachable is one of the most targeted platforms for course piracy due to its popularity and high-value courses. Courses priced above $100 are frequently targeted — pirates know the demand is high and the content is valuable. In our scans, the majority of Teachable courses priced above $199 had at least one pirated copy found online.
What piracy sources target Teachable courses the most?
Telegram groups account for roughly 45% of Teachable piracy we detect, followed by torrent sites at 25%, file-sharing platforms (Mega, Google Drive) at 20%, and dedicated course dump websites at 10%. Telegram dominates because it allows easy file sharing and channel creation.
Can Teachable's built-in protections prevent piracy?
Teachable's built-in protections (login-required access, no download button) provide a basic barrier, but they cannot prevent screen recording, browser extension downloads, or credential sharing. External piracy monitoring and DMCA enforcement are necessary for comprehensive protection.

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