Here's the thing: British IPTV daily restarts are needed because of token expiry. The IPTV reseller panel issues temporary access tokens. The British IPTV reseller sets token lifetime. 24 hours is common. After 24 hours, your token expires. Your app still tries to use it. Fails. Restarting the app requests a new token. Works again.
In most cases, the British IPTV reseller could set token lifetime to 7 days or 30 days. Their IPTV panel supports it. They choose 24 hours for security. If a token is leaked, it only works for a day. The British IPTV reseller values security over convenience.
What actually works is asking: "How long do your access tokens last?" A British IPTV reseller who says "7 days" means weekly restarts. One who says "30 days" means monthly restarts. One who says "24 hours" means daily restarts. Choose based on your tolerance for restarts.
The pattern that keeps showing up is this: British IPTV services with the shortest token lifetimes have the strongest security. The British IPTV reseller is paranoid about token theft. Services with longer lifetimes prioritize convenience. Both are valid. Your choice.
Take a real example. A British IPTV reseller has 24-hour tokens. You restart your app every morning. Annoying but secure. Another British IPTV reseller has 30-day tokens. You restart once a month. Less secure (leaked tokens work longer). Both work.
Honestly, daily restarts are fine. Automate it. Use an app that refreshes on launch. Or schedule a daily device reboot. The British IPTV reseller's IPTV panel isn't broken. It's configured for security.
That said, some British IPTV reseller operators use sliding token expiry. Tokens expire after 24 hours of inactivity. If you watch daily, token keeps extending. Only expire if you stop watching for 24 hours. Best of both worlds.
The best British IPTV services for convenience are those where you never restart. Open app. Everything works. Every time. Their IPTV panel has long-lived tokens. Security comes from other methods.