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Big ISPs to start sending out piracy warning letters

The big four internet service providers (ISP) in the UK have agreed to voluntarily begin sending out warning letters to customers that are suspected of piracy. That means customers of Sky, BT, Virgin Media and TalkTalk may now receive a warning if their IP address is thought to be involved in copyright infringement.

Warning letters are a scheme that has been tried in various parts of the world. They are different from the threatening, settlement demanding letters that some copyright lobby groups send out and is merely designed to let the consumer know that the ISP and a copyright owner are aware of their IP's involvement with piracy.

While it is debatable whether an IP address can constitute evidence against an individual person, no legal action will be taken or even suggested as part of the letter. They will instead be used to educate users and encourage them to use legal services like Spotify, Netflix or Amazon Instant Video.

letters

Source: NicoleMarieDev

The ISPs have also been quite clear in their announcements that there will be no threats of throttling either, so these warning letters are completely toothless. However it may be that the ISPs agreed to the voluntary scheme in order to prevent groups like the BPI – which championed these letters – from pushing for enforced, harsher responses to those thought to be breaching copyright law.

That doesn't mean there are no concerns surrounding the scheme though. Pirate Party UK communication spokesperson Jason Winstanley believes that there is the potential for ISPs to be forced to hand over lists of alleged pirates. Regardless though, he sees them as a benefit to society, rather than a hindrance.

“We have consistently seen that file sharers are actually helping the digital economy,” he said. “When content creators provide an honesty-box type system, allowing customers to “pay what you want”, we often give over three times the Recommended Retail Price (RRP), and even Ofcom's figures show for every 16 pounds normal users spend, file sharers pay 26 pounds. ISPs should not be
entertaining the myth that piracy is actually a problem and following this money wasting exercise, but instead should focus on what value they can be adding or what their customers are really asking for.”

It's not clear at this time whether smaller, subsidiary ISPs of the major ones – like PlusNet – will also take part in the letter scheme.

Discuss on our Facebook page, HERE.

KitGuru Says: One solution to many of the problems faced by intrusive ISPs tactics, is to use one of the smaller independent ones. They don't record anything. 

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One comment

  1. I pay for Netflix and Amazon Prime Video, and then still acquire shows in other ways. The fact that they offer shows that I watch on those services has no baring at all. I prefer to stream locally rather than over the internet. I know, I know, I download it at least once anyway, but it’s on my terms in my preferred quality and I do it when my network is the least busy and it has no impact on the kids and their YouTube or gaming usage.

    I also refuse point blank to get a TV Licence. There is no option on TV packages to refuse BBC services, so I simply don’t get TV services at all. No aerial. No cable. I also refuse to pay to be advertised to. How fucking ridiculous is it to pay Sky for their TV packages, then receive 20 minutes of every hour as adverts. What the fuck are you paying for? Literally paying them for the honour of them then making bucket loads of cash advertising to you.

    So, basically, in order to watch Game of Thrones, The Walking Dead and others, it’s a case of either pay to be advertised to on Sky, wait months for it to come to Netflix or Prime, or just download it and watch it when I want for nothing.

    As for encouraging the user of Netflix and Prime Video for users. Downloading is free, Prime and Netflix cost money. The benefits are nonexistent. They cost money and therefore and unappealing to tech savvy users who get stuff for nothing. Why pay money to get the same thing you were getting for free because of a toothless letter?

    Anyway, private SSL encrypted torrent trackers should sort out their ability to IP sniff people. Stop using The Pirate Bay.

    It’s clear the issue for most people is availability. I’m pretty sure TorrentFreak reported or or worked out that you’d need to pay about ~£140 a month to subscribe to everything to get access to everything, which is ridiculous and not going to happen ever for me.