BT ordered to block pirate links

Its ok when they bring in the new 'law' that means anyone who downloads something illegal gets a criminal record we can just start our own democratic party up and win the next election and abolish it :)

People seriously want millions of people to be sent to trial and given a record that would be political suicide for any party.

I have a 50mb connection, I use it for work, steam, iplayer, online gaming on consoles etc. I download stuff from time to time, I also have a LoveFilm membership, an unlimited cinema card, over 1000+ DVDs and I have lost count of the CDs/Vinyl I own. Too many sweeping statements get made on this subject.
 
No and it's not. As it would only be offences after the law was brought it.

It's like saying when drink driving was illegalised, it would make most car drivers criminals. Did it? Of course not.
You still have to get caught and charged.

Yes but drink driving can prove to be very dangerous, that's the whole point of context. Copyright infringement is nothing at all like drink driving and just make you look ridiculous.
 
You're talking ridiculous technicalities though. The beginning and end result are the same thing, there's very little difference in what's happening, the simple fact that one situation has physical media present, where the other doesn't is completely beside the point.

The difference is while I might lend my book to one or two friends your 'internet friend' is lending his copy to thousands of people. The other significant difference being that while my friend has my book I can't read it unlike your 'internet friend' who can still watch the origional DVD while thousands of other people can watch the copies simultaneously.

While yes in isolation you can say the two activities are the same the cumulative effect is entirely different and warrants a different response.
 
We actually need technically literate judges to make decisions with cases such as these. I'm not advocating piracy, but this is completely the wrong way of approaching this.

They're not attacking the infrastructure that supports this activity; merely nit picking at what they can, it's pathetic and completely futile.

Offer people a service for say, £30-£40 a month to download whatever movies/games/Music even if it's limited to X number of movies/games/music downloaded at a time and piracy would plummet.

But no, record industries are still in the stone age; refusing to embrace modern technology. If I can download a movie in an hour, store it digitally in perfect form and save space in my flat but not cluttering it all up with discs and cases, why should I have to get in my car, drive to town, park up, walk to a store, queue up, pay, and drive home? These people don't seem to realise that some people pirate stuff because the way we traditionally obtain these products is becoming old fashioned.

Blocking or preventing access is just going to force people to produce workarounds, they're not addressing the real issue.
 
It's a massive deterrent and it's a good thing.
Do you say the Same thing for all new laws?

That's not the point, it's obviously going to be a deterrent, but what for? Downloading movies, because it's such a terrible and immoral act? Do I have to post that link again in the hopes of you actually reading it instead of pretending the problem lies with just the public who download copyrighted media?
 
No and it's not. As it would only be offences after the law was brought it.

It's like saying when drink driving was illegalised, it would make most car drivers criminals. Did it? Of course not.
You still have to get caught and charged.

Yeah that's is fine, but we had to change that law as there were more and more cars and so more cases of DUI occurring. Plus it was a sensible one.

This new 'law' can not be judged the same, we are moving forward technologically but the industries that scream 'Copyright Infringement' are not. So they want to bring a law in to bring us back in line with their set of rules.
 
We actually need technically literate judges to make decisions with cases such as these. I'm not advocating piracy, but this is completely the wrong way of approaching this.

They're not attacking the infrastructure that supports this activity; merely nit picking at what they can, it's pathetic and completely futile.

Offer people a service for say, £30-£40 a month to download whatever movies/games/Music even if it's limited to X number of movies/games/music downloaded at a time and piracy would plummet.

But no, record industries are still in the stone age; refusing to embrace modern technology. If I can download a movie in an hour, store it digitally in perfect form and save space in my flat but not cluttering it all up with discs and cases, why should I have to get in my car, drive to town, park up, walk to a store, queue up, pay, and drive home? These people don't seem to realise that some people pirate stuff because the way we traditionally obtain these products is becoming old fashioned.

Blocking or preventing access is just going to force people to produce workarounds, they're not addressing the real issue.

You can buy music online. You can buy films online.
 
I'm not sure, as I don't know fully what the "no unauthorised lending" term in the license means.

You said yourself it's a grey area. I'm asking you, from a moral point of view, is lending it to one friend at a time until all your friends have seen it worse than sending them all a rip?
 
We actually need technically literate judges to make decisions with cases such as these. I'm not advocating piracy, but this is completely the wrong way of approaching this.

They're not attacking the infrastructure that supports this activity; merely nit picking at what they can, it's pathetic and completely futile.

Offer people a service for say, £30-£40 a month to download whatever movies/games/Music even if it's limited to X number of movies/games/music downloaded at a time and piracy would plummet.

But no, record industries are still in the stone age; refusing to embrace modern technology. If I can download a movie in an hour, store it digitally in perfect form and save space in my flat but not cluttering it all up with discs and cases, why should I have to get in my car, drive to town, park up, walk to a store, queue up, pay, and drive home? These people don't seem to realise that some people pirate stuff because the way we traditionally obtain these products is becoming old fashioned.

Blocking or preventing access is just going to force people to produce workarounds, they're not addressing the real issue.
Lovefilm, NetFlix, bigstar, Virgin Online, Blockbuster Online.
 
We actually need technically literate judges to make decisions with cases such as these. I'm not advocating piracy, but this is completely the wrong way of approaching this.

Precisely, 70 year old codgers who think a BlackBerry is a fruit should be kept well away. We need to get a group together includes the industries being 'harmed' the ISPs, the piraters (in some shape) and technology leaders to really iron where we can go forward with this.
 
Precisely, 70 year old codgers who think a BlackBerry is a fruit should be kept well away. We need to get a group together includes the industries being 'harmed' the ISPs, the piraters (in some shape) and technology leaders to really iron where we can go forward with this.

Or those breaking the law just need to realise they are breaking the law? :confused:

It's simple. You are downloading and viewing media you haven't paid for. It's illegal. There is no discussion.
 
And illegal file sharing can be proved to loss in revenue.

And that's enough reason to make it criminal? Do these companies have a divine right to earn at least a certain amount? There are plenty of things that could result in a loss of revenue, do we make them criminal too?

Should it be criminal not to buy every album movie and game released because it could be considered a loss in revenue if everyone didn't?

Are you aware of how they actually calculate these losses in revenue? They massively fudge the numbers, and AGAIN read the damn link http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20091207/1201017234.shtml.

You seem to think a loss in revenue for these companies is awful, yet you're ignoring the fact that they've been caught selling music that they don't have the legal right or a license to sell.
 
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