Net users face web ban for illegal downloads


Recommended Posts

Web users who illegally download films and music could be cut off from the internet by their service providers under proposals which are set to be unveiled next week.

The Government wants to force internet service providers (ISPs) to clamp down on the six million people who access pirated material every year as companies are claiming the practice costs them billions of pounds in revenue, it was reported.

Internet users who illegally download music or films will receive an email warning for a first offence, face a suspension for a second offence and have their internet contract terminated for the third offence.

The proposal comes from a Green Paper on the creative industries called The World's Creative Hub, which is due to be unveiled by Culture Secretary Andy Burnham and Gordon Brown next week.

According to the paper the government will 'move to legislate to require internet service provider to take action on illegal file-sharing'.

A consultation document on the proposal is expected to be issued within coming months.

Britain's four biggest internet providers - BT, Virgin Media, Tiscali and Orange - have been in talks with music companies and film distributors and studios about a voluntary code.

One of the disputed points is the problem of 'wifi piggy-backing' - the practice in which someone accesses the internet using another person's wifi network.

But Roz Groome, vice-president of anti-piracy for NBC Universal, welcomed the prospect of legislation.

'We welcome the signal from Government that it values the health of the creative industries and takes seriously the damage caused by widespread online copyright infringement,' she said.

'We call upon ISPs to take action now.'

A spokesman for the Internet Service Providers Association said he hoped a voluntary arrangement would be preferable to legislation.

'Every right thinking body knows that self-regulation is much the better option in these areas,' he told The Times.

And Ed Vaizey, the Conservative's Shadow Arts Minister, said: 'David Cameron called on the internet providers to address this issue last summer.

'The credibility of the Government's latest threat is underminded by the fact that ministers have spent so many years dithering on whether to legislate.'

Source

It's not law yet just being brought up and this part should be highlighted in the article, "proposals which are set to be unveiled next week". Hopefully for people in England this won't pass or else your becoming like the US of A ;)

I doubt the ISPs are going to want to cut off about 50% of their user-base. Also, if they cut someone off, what's to stop them just going straight to a different ISP? There's about 1000 of them in the UK.

Sounds a bit stupid, I *need* internet access every day for work so say if the other guys/girls in my flat were to get caught downloading I lose my job... good job government :huh:

On the flip side, they're trying to prevent theft, the component driving this suggestion. Theft, not someone downloading copies and copies of free software, but downloading an illegal copy of a file that is simply not theirs to own. On the surface this is a fair action, but in the end I don't see this passing. Still though, if half the people on Comcast in Houston were shut off, I'd have much more bandwidth for my TF2 fragging and web streaming TV shows....

Well, that would imply ISPs constantly monitoring your traffic, to see what you download and upload... based on what? Name of the files? Who's going to monitor all that data? Software?

Also, I'm aware that everything I do on the internet can be monitered, but I also know that practically speaking no one really gives a damn except if I engage in mass distribution of movies, etc., and that gives me a comfortable feeling known as privacy.

lol I've had a brain wave!

I'll download the first 80GB of the internet and everyone else can download as much as they can! and if we work together we can do this!!!

I've already started, I'm starting with the pr0n websites... don't want it all to go to waste

It shouldn't be up to the ISP's to enforce the law, if the police care about it so much, they should setup their own unit to investigate file sharers (and if it's illegal, the police should file some charges, stop letting the record companies be the law).

Which is why I live in Canada. United States is a country that can have you arrested for farting in your bathtub in Arizona.

Good to know.

The article is about the UK though, you know that, right?

It's not law yet just being brought up and this part should be highlighted in the article, "proposals which are set to be unveiled next week". Hopefully for people in England this won't pass or else your becoming like the US of A ;)

What do you mean by that? I'm pretty sure most ISPs in the USA don't just kick off users for suspicion of accessing pirated material. Like stated earlier, if you think the ISPs will willingly cut off revenue generating consumers, you're crazy.

Which is why I live in Canada. United States is a country that can have you arrested for farting in your bathtub in Arizona.

How typical... Stupid anti-American rants coming from immature little Canadians. :(

I thought uploading copyrighted content was illegal too.

All illegal downloads begin with an illegal upload, no?

Why target the downloaders?

Oh well, I'm a stupid American. What do I know?

Well, other than this whole Internet thing was Al Gore's idea.

... or rather he said he took the initiative in creating it.

If it was possible to track the whole of the UK for downloading this content, the RIAA and MPAA would already be doing it and taking everyone to court. THe amount it would cost to upgrade every ISP with equipment, software and manpower in order to pull it off would run into Billions, none of which could be recouped (in fact, money would be lost as less people would pay for the service).

This wont take off at all, so I wouldn't worry about it. A more likely scenario is they'll force ISP's to block websites that distribute this content and that would go down like a lead balloon.

Which is why I live in Canada. United States is a country that can have you arrested for farting in your bathtub in Arizona.

You live in Canada, because you were born there. (about 8 years ago by all accounts)

Will using encryption do anything to protect our privacy? What lengths are they going to stoop to?

You live in Canada, because you were born there. (about 8 years ago by all accounts)

Will using encryption do anything to protect our privacy? What lengths are they going to stoop to?

Encryption is one way to protect yourself, the likes of Tor is another (Assuming the Government doesn't create a bunch of Tor nodes themselves). Not to mention there are programs like Privoxy that actively block government IP's and anyone else who you don't want tracking you.

EDIT: The point is, there will always be people out there working to stay one step ahead of the likes of the people that would like to track us all.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Hello, It would appear so, according to https://finance.yahoo.com/news/how-to-hide-your-home-on-google-maps-apple-maps-204146687.html. Regards, Aryeh Goretsky      
    • Hello, The Nvidia Founders Edition 3080 video card is approximately six years old, correct? Have you looked into whether replacement fans are available for it? Perhaps replacing those will improve cooling, especially when combined with cleaning the card's heatsink and replacing the thermal interface materials. Regards, Aryeh Goretsky  
    • Hello, While ~104 GB of space may seem generous (at least compared to other e-readers which have 8-32GB), I feel at this price point the device should have a Micro SDXC card slot for expansion, particularly if it allows audio books to be installed and played. I hope to see more reviews of 6" phone-sized e-readers on Neowin in the future. It will be interesting to see how they compare. Regards, Aryeh Goretsky
    • Sandboxie Plus 1.17.8 / Classic 5.72.8 by Razvan Serea Run programs in a sandbox to prevent malware from making permanent changes to your PC. Sandboxie allows you to run your browser, or any other program, so that all changes that result from the usage are kept in a sandbox environment, which can then be deleted later. Sandboxie is a sandbox-based isolation software for 32- and 64-bit Windows NT-based operating systems. It is being developed by David Xanatos since it became open source, before that it was developed by Sophos (which acquired it from Invincea, which acquired it earlier from the original author Ronen Tzur). It creates a sandbox-like isolated operating environment in which applications can be run or installed without permanently modifying the local or mapped drive. An isolated virtual environment allows controlled testing of untrusted programs and web surfing. Sandboxie is available in two flavors Plus and Classic. Both have the same core components, this means they have the same level of security and compatibility. What's different is the user interface the Plus build has a modern Qt based UI which supports all new features that have been added since the project went open source. The Classic build has the old no longer developed MFC based UI, hence it lacks support for modern features, these features can however still be used when manually configured in the Sandboxie.ini. Sandboxie Plus 1.17.8 / Classic 5.72.8 release notes: Added added DisableCustomTitleOpt=[process,][y|n] to allow [#] sandboxie title markers on custom-titlebar windows (Delphi VCL, Qt, Electron) that were previously skipped to prevent DWM repaint CPU loops #5387 Changed updated bundled ImDisk driver to 3.0.2 #5419 Fixed fix Suppress logs for expected non-user SIDs #5422 SbieSvc.exe: SBIE2218/2219 error when run program as administrator #5417 fixed explorer.exe crashes in Application Compartment when Huorong Security is installed #5423 Download: Sandboxie Plus (64-bit) | 23.5 MB (Open Source) Download: Sandboxie Classic (64-bit) | 3.0 MB Links: Sandboxie Website | GitHub | ARM64 | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Hello, Christian Maas' XVI32 is a nice (and very small) hex editor. Speaking of hex editors, many years ago a colleague and I who both worked at Tribal Voice managed to edit a copy of the company's PowWow instant messaging client to make it behave better now that all of its lookup servers and other server-side tech was gone.  The program didn't support NAT (RFC-3022 was introduced in January 2001, the same time Tribal Voice was shuttered), but it still worked okay if you manually set up port-forwarding on your router.  The server at http://powwow.jazy.net/ hosts a copy (usual warnings about downloading and running untrusted code from random internet servers apply). I occasionally use some tools like Funduc Software's Search and Replace and Application Mover when I need to make mass-edits to text-based files or move programs with a hard-coded installation directories, respectively.  When I need to figure out the exact LCD panel inside of a laptop, EnTech Taiwan's Monitor Asset Manager is my go-to tool for that purpose. JD Design's website (now hosted on github.io) has a number of interesting freeware and shareware utilities.  I used to use their TouchPro utility to set the file timestamps on software I was mastering to match its version number (e.g., version 3.00 of a program had all of its files dates set to 3:00AM, and so forth). Karenware has a number of interesting freeware utilities, too. Regards, Aryeh Goretsky  
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      Jeroen Wilms earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      rolfus earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      Leroy Jethro Gibbs earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Conversation Starter
      flexorcist earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • One Month Later
      AndreaB earned a badge
      One Month Later
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      509
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      198
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      138
    4. 4
      ATLien_0
      90
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      82
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!