Carphone Warehouse chief executive Charles Dunstone has rejected calls from
copyright groups to restrict illegal downloaders' internet access.
The issue of what to do with persistent downloaders is becoming a heated
political debate in the UK and across the European Union.
Dunstone discussed the issue after releasing the company's year-end results
on Friday, when he also revealed a
planned
demerger of the TalkTalk Group's fixed-line and broadband business from the
rest of the company.
"If you try speed humps or disconnections for peer-to-peer, people will
simply disguise their traffic or share the content another way," said Dunstone,
according to a report in The Guardian.
Dunstone was referring to proposals put forward by the entertainment industry
to introduce 'speed humps' that will punish file-sharers by slowing down their
internet connections. The alternative put forward by the entertainment industry
is to kick downloaders off the internet completely, a policy just adopted by the
French National Assembly.
"It is more about education and allowing people to get content easily and
cheaply that will make a difference," said Dunstone. "This idea that it is all
peer-to-peer and somehow internet service providers [ISPs] can just stop it, is
very naive."
His comments are in line with ideas put forward by the
Strategic
Advisory Board for Intellectual Property in a report entitled
Copycats?
Digital Consumers in the On-Line Age (PDF).
The report suggested that, if unauthorised downloading cannot be stopped, the
creative industries may have to start offering new ways of downloading the
material legally. It pointed to the BBC's iPlayer as an example of how business
models are already changing.
While some ISPs send letters to persistent illegal downloaders warning them
that they may wind up in court, the majority have long argued that it is only
their job to provide broadband services.
The
ISP
Association, meanwhile, has registered its concerns over the cost to ISPs of
policing broadband.
But Dunstone was more concerned that the government would introduce weak
legislation.
"It is a game of Tom and Jerry and you will never catch the mouse. The mouse
always wins in this battle, and we need to be careful that politicians do not
get talked into putting legislation in place that, in the end, ends up looking
stupid," he said.
Culture secretary Andy Burnham said on Thursday that cutting people of the
internet was not the "preferred option", although this policy may change with
Friday's Cabinet reshuffle.
UK copyright groups have been encouraged by fierce action taken against
downloaders in France and Sweden.
The French idea is referred to as the 'three strikes' policy because
individuals will have their access cut after three offences. The European
Parliament rejected the policy last month, but the idea will now be debated by
the Parliament and Council in the EU's conciliation procedure.
A court in Sweden
recently
jailed four men behind The Pirate Bay, one of the world's most popular file
sharing sites.
Do you agree?
Have your say on this article