UK ISP Says No To Music Industry Pressure
siloko sends us to the BBC for the story of one ISP standing up to the music industry. (But note that this ISP is one of the ones said to have worked with Phorm on plans to track customers' surfing.) "The head of one of Britain's biggest internet providers has criticized the music industry for demanding that he act against pirates. Charles Dunstone of Carphone Warehouse, which runs the TalkTalk broadband service, is refusing. He said it is not his job to be an internet policeman."
It's a matter of money, not principle. Why the hell would a provider invest in the required infrastructure upgrades? Now, if the record industry agrees to pay for it, perhaps with a small bonus on top for lubrication purposes, they'll switch to a different tune just like that.
He's not an Internet policeman, just an Internet marketer.
I can live with that.
You can't talk about Wikipedia's flaws on Wikipedia
basically the only thing the recording industry didn't toss out there was "its for the children"
My question about ISPs in Britain is, how much say does the EU have over them? How does the EU versus the law of England stack up in regards to this situation?
* Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
But note that this ISP is one of the ones said to have worked with Phorm on plans to track customers' surfing
I know nothing of this, honestly!
mod ISP +1 for standing up to gov lobbyists.
mod ISP -1 for cosying with phorm.
Net result: 0 points.
Is this what they mean by net neutrality?
The spokesman for the BPI makes it sound like the relationship between ISPs and the music industry is symbiotic. They dress up the "responsibilities" of the ISP in pretty words that make it sound like shutting down users is the greatest thing in the world.
If you read the article, you'll find Geoff Taylor's doublespeak amazing.
At the heart of this issue is ensuring that creators are fairly rewarded in the digital age
Okay so far...
and we passionately believe that working in partnership with ISPs to develop first-class, safe, legal, digital music services is the way forward.
Uh...
Here's the appropriate response to that idiocy from Charles Dunstone, TalkTalk head.
We are the conduit that gives users access to the internet. We do not control the internet, nor do we control what our users do on the internet.
Good job, Charles.
Absolute power corrupts absolutely. indymedia
(Sadly, they're probably on safe ground.)
I'm amazed it's taken this long before any of the ISPs have spoken out, any sort of policing at all is quite clearly not their job and the very second they begin to take an interest in the content they are transmitting, the second that happens they are going to monitoring and reporting everything to everyone and responsible for all manner of disasters and tragedies when the overwhelming technical impossibility of what they're being asked to do causes something to go wrong.
Any special interest group worried about a particular activity on the internet will want the ISP to ban it, ever media craze will lead to more things being banned and the ISP carrying the can for policing it, any government dept looking for some quick headlines will get them to report ( for example ) anyone talking about benefit fraud in chat rooms to the benefit agency.
Today Jaqui Smith, some brainless minister in the British government, is suggesting ( yet again ) that all paedophiles should register their e-mail addresses with the police and not be allowed to register on chat rooms with those addresses. She says she is in discussions with ISPs to police this. She is too stupid to realise what she is asking for and too moronic to understand palming her inability to convict people and lock them up should not be palmed off onto commercial entities who have no business whatsover doing her policing for her.
BPI chief executive Geoff Taylor:
No, the heart of this issue is who gets to decide when a creator has been wronged and what the penalty for that wrongdoing should be.What do you mean they cut the power? How can they cut the power, man? They're animals!
If you read the customers of talk talk tales of woe site http://talktalkhell.wordpress.com/ you will note that wow players (uses b/t) are penalised since they use b/t and are so deemed bit bandwidth eaters and bad for his business. Dunstones attempts at running an isp mean that most consider his first enterprise talk talk a failure, his next venture was to buy aol in the uk.
It's worth noting that Carphone warehouse/ Talk Talk are the only ISP to confirm a true opt-out from Phorms profiling. Phorm claim that the cookie based opt-out is sufficient but that prevents users receiving targeted ads, it doesn't affect the **cough** unlawful interception **cough** profiling. As for their position on disconnecting P2P users, kudos.
Perhaps if the BPI and friends weren't so stupid and greedy, this situation would have never arisen? There is a discussion to be had concerning renumeration for "artists" or anyone who traditionally relies on royalties as a major part of their income. I see no reason middlemen like the BPI, RIAA and friends should be relevant to that discussion.
It's a bit like asking the post office to open every single letter they deliver to check whether they have any illegally copied DVDs or CDs in there.
I can only imagine the people in charge over there emailing the lawyers and asking them what it means that the ISP is refusing to do what they want, and if they're even allowed to say no.
"Thanks for all the money you paid to us. We've used it to buy off ISO among other things" -Microsoft
I am glad someone finally spoke out, even more so because i am WITH TalkTalk!
What these idiots want ISPs to do is pathetic, it is NOT their responsibility to police the customers.
If the internets start getting policed, why not sales of adult material in stores?
Most shopkeepers are perfectly fine with giving stupid kids cigarettes and alcohol and other adult materials, OH MAI THE HORROR.
Hell, i even saw a video of it, i could get a shopkeeper jailed because the idiot let 2 kids record them on phone selling them cigarettes
Screw the music business, either you learn to adapt to the internet or kindly GET THE HELL OUT!
Also, if you haven't already, sign this petition!
Open Internet Petition
E-mail/mail/phone/harass everyone you can about this, we can't let them win!
Modded troll.
But since i am here, i may as well reply.
I have been with TalkTalk for a few months now.
I did have a rather stupid problem recently in LCP timeouts.
After resetting the password, the connection has been fine. (despite the odd servers that don't seem to have the updated details, too lazy to care about contacting them to see what the hell is going on)
As for internet speeds, well, the current area i am in has crappy speeds anyway (less than 1meg just now)
But i use torrenting all the time and i can keep a stable connection.
I do agree with the bandwidth intensive thing though (but i say this with pretty much all ISPs who reply on BTs crap hardware, go with a cable company if you can)
the guy who delivers news papers is responsible for teaching readers about better nutrition....
Republican leadership = Idiocracy
Really? Just exactly how can my ISP 'educate' me?
Sheesh, AS IF we don't already know where we all stand!
Thanks, but I think I'll pass on your free re-education.
As Carphone Warehouse bought the ISP operations of AOL UK, he should not only speaking for TalkTalk subscribers, but also AOL ISP customers in the UK.
Time Warner - who still operate the AOL portal in the UK - will be worried about the BitTorrents stealing their precious "Cats and Dogs" and other quality DVD releases. Interesting... could we end up with one AOL suing the other in the UK?
DON'T.
STEAL.
MUSIC.
(from HMV. Download it instead. Making a binary clone is NOT stealing. Stealing is where one party is deprived of whatever it is the other party is stealing [and no, data does not equal hard cash], I wish the music industry capitalists would get that distinction through their fucking heads. Apart from that the police deal with theft which is a criminal offence. Copyright infringement is a civil offence which the police and crown prosecutors have no jurisdiction over. And spare me the "Piracy funds terrorism" line, governments fund terorism not basement bootleggers.)
There. Said it.
Operation Guillotine is in effect.
When they get smug about it, it just reminds me why I was boycotting the RIAA-affiliated labels in the first place.
Look at this way:
Each time you purchase a CD from an RIAA label, you're paying the salaries of the jerks who say this sort of thing.
Boycott them all - let their album sales atropy to nothing.
It couldn't happen to a more deserving bunch of corporate slimeballs.