Lulz... Not only myself, but my dad and brother download stupid amounts through a shared RS account and high classed Warez sites, right?BBC wrote:
Six of the UK's biggest net providers have agreed a plan with the music industry to tackle piracy online.
The deal, negotiated by the government, will see hundreds of thousands of letters sent to net users suspected of illegally sharing music. Hard core file-sharers could see their broadband connections slowed, under measures proposed by the UK government.
BT, Virgin, Orange, Tiscali, BSkyB and Carphone Warehouse have all signed up.
Geoff Taylor, chief executive of the BPI, which represents the music industry, said: "All of the major ISPs in the UK now recognise they have a responsibility to deal with illegal file-sharers on their networks."
My Father is PR boss for the MCA (Maratime & Coastguard Agency) so has close links with the Media - and has been used as an anon quote within the article. Hilarious! He e-mailed me as soon as it was up!
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So does this mean you will all calm it down? Me neither.Mark, Hampshire wrote:
"One BBC News website user Mark, from Hampshire, said he downloaded and shared files illegally and argued customers were "getting their own back".
In an e-mail, he said: "I used to run half a dozen record shops in the 80s and saw how far the fat cats of the record industry would go, in milking customers and retailers dry with more hyped rubbish."
"Why should I yet again pay for, say, the Beatles' White Album at full whack? I already bought it on LP, eight-track, cassette, and CD! This is those customers getting their own back."
"So will this make me sharing a CD with my next-door neighbour over the fence illegal?" he added. "
Especially with a Father being used as a quote FOR file sharing.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/7522334.stm
Last edited by naightknifar (2008-07-24 08:06:27)