The High Court has given RTÉ permission to publish all but two paragraphs of a report on Denis O'Brien's banking arrangements with IBRC.
The bank pushed for the redactions over concerns the information derived from privileged interactions between IBRC and its lawyers.
Yesterday, Mr O'Brien initiated legal proceedings against the Houses of the Oireachtas and the State over Dáil comments made about his finances.
In the light of an injunction stopping Mr O'Brien's confidential banking affairs going public, his lawyers said he wants to establish the 'correct demarcation between the role of the Oireachtas and the courts'.
It is six weeks since RTÉ planned to run a 'Six One' report on corporate governance at IBRC - and the script can now finally go public almost in its entirety.
The High Court has ordered that two paragraphs be redacted from the piece.
That is because IBRC's legal team argued they contained information derived from privileged interactions between the bank and its lawyers.
RTÉ was first blocked from airing the story last month when Mr O'Brien secured an injunction stopping his private banking arrangements with IBRC going public.
But all has been in flux since then because of comments made in the Dáil first by TD Catherine Murphy and then Pearse Doherty.
The Sinn Fein TD claimed Mr O'Brien made four attempts to extend a loan with the former Anglo Irish Bank and secured a 12 month extension on borrowing of over €315m.
What is public can no longer be confidential but the endgame played out in court today - IBRC, which had stood firm against RTÉ's attempts to have the injunction completely lifted - more or less got the redactions it wanted as the broadcaster sought to vary the terms of the order.
Barrister Andrew FitzPatrick said it was not for the court to parse what RTÉ wanted to say and give pre-publications clearance.
But Mr Justice Donald Binchy was satisfied it was not unreasonable given the history of the case.
And because of the flux he has made no order for costs.
Sean O'Conaill, lecturer from the School of Law in UCC, spoke to Newstalk Breakfast about the proceedings: