24 Jul 2008
BT, Virgin, Orange, Tiscali, BSkyB and Carphone Warehouse have agreed a plan with the music industry and the UK government to tackle online piracy.
The deal has been agreed with the British Phonographic Industry and will see hundreds of thousands of letters sent to internet users suspected of downloading material illegally.
The agreement follows a government consultation process that will look at new legislation designed to curb illegal file-sharing.
The announcement also comes ahead of a report by the Department for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform, which has been looking at possible punishments for ISPs that fail to stop users trading copyrighted material.
Martin Warner, co-founder of Technology of Tomorrow 08, hailed the deal as a "major breakthrough" for consumers and the record industry.
"However, many challenges still remain on how this is going to work out in practice and be policed," he said.
Warner explained that rapid advances in technology have had a major impact on how music is consumed.
"This has presented many opportunities and challenges for artists and record companies, but the consensus is that there is no alternative but to embrace new technology," he said.
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ISPs to crack down on music piracy
Block your snooping ISP with Peer Guardian. This software will show exactly when your ISP tries to invade you privacy. Keep these self appointed internet police firmly out!
Posted by: drmors 24 Jul 2008
drop price of cds and dvds
allot of people download due to them not bieng able to afford the scandolouse prices of dvds and cds. a lot of shops charge over £10 for a single album which is more then what the average child gets in pocket money. and as for the dvds i have seen them priced at over £20. maybee if the music and film industries dropped there redicoulas prices to more affordable prices then it may just cut down a hell of allot of people downloading.
Posted by: Brent Pickering 24 Jul 2008