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Aussie ISPs Propose Anti-FileSharing Warning Notice Scheme

Five of Australia’s largest ISPs have today put forward a detailed proposal to deal with the issue of illicit file-sharing. The paper proposes the implementation of a warning letter process, but unlike the 3 strikes-style regime in neighboring New Zealand, would not include an Internet disconnection sanction. Instead, rightsholders would head back to the legal system to punish persistent infringers.

In common with many other countries around the world, in recent years Australia has struggled with the issue of unlawful file-sharing. The messy and still-unfinished legal battle between AFACT and ISP iiNet has further highlighted the rift between rightsholders, the Internet industry and its subscribers, and their often conflicting needs.

But now a joint proposal from the Communications Alliance and ISPs including Telstra Bigpond, iiNet, Optus, iPrimus and Internode, with collaboration from telecoms company AAPT, Ericsson Australia and the Internet Industry Association (IIA), lays out what the contributing parties believe is a workable middle-ground.

The 14-page proposal, titled ‘A Scheme to Address Online Copyright Infringement’, puts forth the framework for a “Notice Scheme” which aims to educate Internet subscribers when their connections are flagged as engaging in copyright infringement.

CommsAlliance

Unlike schemes elsewhere, particularly in neighboring New Zealand, there is no ‘graduated response’ being proposed by the ISPs for dealing with persistent infringers – that means no throttling, suspensions or disconnections. Instead, a warning notice scheme “with a strong emphasis on educating consumers” would be put in place, operating as follows:

The responsibility for monitoring file-sharing networks would fall at the feet of rightsholders who would only be able to do so using pre-approved and tested systems. Notices would have to be sent to ISPs within 14 days of an infringement being logged and ISPs would then have another 14 days to match the provided IP address with a customer account and send out an infringement notice.

Subscribers being contacted about a first instance of illicit file-sharing would receive an ‘Education Notice’ noting that an infringement had taken place on the account, but would not mention the content of the material that was shared. It is not clear why this omission was put in place, but one might imagine that those sharing pornography would be pleased at the inclusion of such a safeguard. The notice would also include information on where to obtain legal content.

After receiving an Education Notice, a 12 month period would then follow where if a subscriber was caught infringing again they would receive a ‘Copyright Infringement Notice’ (CIN). This time the content shared would be detailed in the notice.

When an account holder has been sent an Education Notice and three CINs, their ISP would then send a new notice called a ‘Discovery Notice’. These would note that the account holder has been unresponsive to previous notices, that rightsholders have been informed of this fact, and that further action could follow. It is at this point that the rightsholders would have to decide whether to get a court order to obtain the identity of the account holder in order to sue them under existing legislation.

At every step of the way, from Education, to Infringement to Discovery Notices, subscribers would be given opportunity to appeal.

Notice

“We believe the Notice Scheme can greatly reduce online copyright infringement in Australia, while protecting consumer rights, educating consumers about how to access legal online content and helping rights holders to protect their rights,” said Communications Alliance CEO, John Stanton.

“Equally important is the need for rights holders to ensure that consumers have access to legal and affordable content online, to reduce the motivation to source content in ways that might be illegal.”

Stanton notes that Australians have turned to illicit file-sharing because accessing material through official channels often means a wait of months compared with the release schedules of the rest of the world

“This difficulty, combined with a proliferation of access technologies, such as file-sharing software, has reportedly seen a growth in the frequency of unauthorised access to online content and breaches of copyright laws,” he notes.

The ISPs propose that the scheme runs for an 18 month trial to be followed by an independent evaluation on whether it has successfully influenced consumer behavior and if any changes should be made.

At this point some readers might be thinking that the proposals appear much more reasonable than those seen elsewhere, but it should be noted that while the ISPs may have thrown their ideas into the ring, they are just that – their ideas.

The other side of the debate – the rightsholders – aren’t mentioned as being party to these proposals even though the Communications Alliance statement says that the education-based Notice Scheme “flows” from discussions held during 2011 between ISPs, the government, and rightsholders.

And there are always problems. When one looks at the number of warnings the ISPs are offering to send out they are fairly limited. No ISP party to this proposal will be required to send out any more than 100 in a month, and all ISPs combined aren’t offering to send out any more than 10,000 total throughout the entire 18 month trial. Further, the thorny issue of apportioning costs is yet to be hammered out and they will be substantial.

It will be interesting to see what the likes of AFACT have to say about the proposal. On track record they will want any agreement balanced more in their favor and the above will be just the starting point for their negotiations.

Full details of the proposed scheme can be obtained here (pdf)

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  • Aussie Bob

    hmmmnnn I wonder what they will say to ppl who download TV shows weeks before they come out? Not much point calling that up if its on free to air TV all they have to say is “I watched the TV broadcast so what if I saw it before hand on the cpu”

    • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100002639684444 Ryan Smith

      Copyright infringement , as it pertains to file-sharing, generally entails distributing content. You’re right. In most cases simply downloading content is not a problem.

      • Jmorse43508

        I’ll bet the majority of people who will be caught like this will be using their own ISP’s connection for torrenting popular and recent content, or otherwise uploading.

        I also see an increased use of VPNs and other means for file sharers to get what they want.

        The MAFIAA are going about this whole thing entirely wrong. By attacking file sharing and treating this as an infringement problem, they will never win. And measures to prevent casual copying (DRM) and other annoyances with legally purchased content (region restrictions and unskippable ads) will only drive ‘piracy’ even more.

        The MAFIAA refuses to update their business model for the Internet age by offering content inexpensively and without onerous and draconian DRM. Netflix was a good start, but by charging the service higher fees for content, they may as well have shot themselves in the foot.

    • Anonymous

      Producers of TV series have never been hostile to their fans. The simply fact is the more people downloading the more fans they have and where these same people can also later catch episodes on TV even if now a rerun.

      TV series productions are well aware of their rating (nielson?) when this is what keeps them on TV and forms the level of their contracts though share of the advertising revenue. It is true to say that advertisers and not the viewers are their true customers.

      So the more people who watch the better and the best viewers are the biggest fans who also have a habit of downloading… and buying the DVD/Bluray series packs. To attack such a fan base is like shooting themselves in the foot.

      You can rest assured they will not attack you but that does not mean their parent company won’t as some general media policy. They would still have to have an extra stupid day to do so though. Should a case like that go around their fans will be up in arms and rather annoyed.

      • Anonymous

        The producers are fine with it. Rupert isn’t.

      • Robert

        It was an Aussie TV producer that forced Diwana to close.

        • fr3ak_diwana

          As a matter of fact, my information says that AFACT pressured Matchbox Pictures into filing the claim that shut down diwana. The infringement notice I have in my possession (obtained from BREIN) doesn’t mention AFACT and has a Matchbox Pictures letterhead and is signed by Michael McMahon. I’m not really sure what the full story is but I’m unimpressed either way.

    • Guest

      While you’re all having a whinge, read between the lines – the Australian ISPs have bent over backwards to give AFACT and co almost nothing.

      No identification of users (they have to go to court the old fashioned way to get that), no legislation and no disconnections. Rights holders will be kept in the dark for most of the time – they have “an infringing IP number,” not the account holder. They won’t even know if someone has infringed four times unless the ISP tells them.

      If the Aussie government backs this proposal, it will be a big fuck off to Hollywood and the US government both.

      • Anonymous

        Or just go to court like in Europe where the judges will rule that an ISP is not responsible for what people do and are not allowed to monitor what their consumers are doing online and that blocking content is also illegal.

        As it should be.

    • some lad

      God damm i hope this scheme comes into place.
      Appeal at 4 different stages, rather than just 3 stikes in other places

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  • Jimbo

    if the rights holders were to give customers what they wanted, in the way they wanted it, drm free and sensibly priced, there would be no need for any of this shit at all! the failure is on the part of the rights holders for remaining stuck in the pre-internet age and wanting to keep total control of how their media is distributed, ie, on little plastic disks which are NOT indestructible as they were supposed to be, instead of upgrading themselves with the latest technology. i am waiting to see what happens after the sensible EUCJ ruling yesterday. it should be adopted world-wide, but i bet it wont be. i doubt if it will go unchallenged in EU either!

  • Anonymous

    Well in my opinion these Australian ISPs are acting foolish. The fact is that no matter what they offer this will not be enough to satisfy AFACT and the rights holders behind them. Sure AFACT will accept their offering when it allows them to get their foot in the door and where they then are in a better position to demand more. If anything this shows that AFACT harassment of ISPs is working.

    So they are only on a slippery slope that will infringe subscribers rights the more and more they go down it. The only answer is the day they realise this is not a good plan and they tell AFACT to fuck off.

    Now as to their plan then educating users on the surface is a good idea when not everyone considers what they do is unlawful infringement or gives value to rights holders. So there is little wrong with that idea until the day they state that someone downloaded gay midget animal nun porn and cause some serious household problems. A better idea is to always censor pornographic titles and simply state that it was pornographic media.

    Following education they run head to head against AFACT when it comes to punishment. It is not hard to see these days that rights holders do not want to take people to court and they want Governments… and ISPs… to punish people directly. So AFACT’s major point of attack will be to try and force these ISPs to restrict bandwidth and disconnects and to ISP blacklist them.

    Currently this trial is nothing for die hard Australian file sharers to worry about when at only 100 notices a month you would have to be very “lucky” to even see one. So go on infringing media all you want.

    All this ignores the most critical aspect which is who will pay for the scheme? Based on Hadopi data then you are talking about hundreds of thousands of people with so many looking to protest by phone, letter or undesired ISP contact. Even with Hadopi they have been unable to keep up with the infringement rate and this scheme has cost millions of Euros.

    A

    • Jon

      i wont get an email anyway it will send it to spam

  • Guest

    Anti-Filesharing is always a fail.

  • Soniclove

    so anyone in Australia using utorrent for anything from these ISPs will result is flagged accounts? I’ll switch to an alternative provider not in the clique. ISP loses.

    • R.
      • trustnoone

        Looks like I’m moving to TPG, cheers :)

      • Anonymous

        You lose 1 point for every time you link to delimiter.

      • Anonymous

        You lose 1 point for every time you link to delimiter.

      • Anonymous

        You lose 1 point for every time you link to delimiter.

    • Anonymous

      “so anyone in Australia using utorrent for anything from these ISPs will result is flagged accounts?”

      LOL no.

      Could you stick to reading news.com.au and Womans Day and try to leave articles that contain more than 10 words to the adults? Thanks.

      • Soniclove

        actually I have a PhD. ooops ikt123 go watch today tonigt, leeet biyatch!

        • Guest

          In what? Some pseudo-science like psychology, economics or astrology?

        • Soniclove

          No, neurobiology. Your degree must be in cyber bullying.

        • Anonymous

          Then read the fucking article you dolt.

          And I don’t believe for a second you have a Ph.D in anything, leeet biyatch!

  • R.

    “Subscribers being contacted about a first instance of illicit file-sharing would receive an ‘Education Notice’ noting that an infringement had taken place on the account, but would not mention the content of the material that was shared. It is not clear why this omission was put in place, but one might imagine that those sharing pornography would be pleased at the inclusion of such a safeguard. The notice would also include information on where to obtain legal content.”

    In other words, the information on where to obtain legal content will be completely irrelevant. 95% of the stuff I’ve downloaded is *still* not available here, and probably never will be.

    There haven’t been any major filesharing lawsuits in Australia yet, so the damages that will be sued for are unknown, but I’m guessing they’ll be a it on the high side, given Copyright Act 1968 (Cth) s115, which includes deterrence as a relevant factor in calculating them.

    I do like that the ISPs are imposing a cap on the number of notices though – that will hopefully limit the RIAA et al. enough that they won’t bother with the average person.

  • Calumais

    so happy i am with TPG right now :)

  • Morgz

    The easy answer is to streamline the overly restrictive international licensing issues that plague online media outlets and to finally give consumers some real value for money. If I am paying compact disc prices for an MP3, the audio quality needs to be the same (or better) and I need to be able to utilize it in every sense I was initially entitled to when I bought that physical compact disc. If I want to back it up, re-sell, store or destroy my legally purchased copy, that’s my prerogative as a consumer. Short of that you must discount your product since cleary there is a disparity in its value. Digital rights management (DRM) is a virus that only targets legitimate users and the only hurdle so far as I can see is that it has always been easier to appropriate media through less legitimate channels.

    Nobody wins when big business forces end users to scour for content through a third party. Are times really so tight that you must squeeze every last dollar out of your fans? Must you delay or deprive them of the latest releases, circumvent their civil liberties, invade their privacies, rob them at the checkout, license them an inferior product and then persecute them when they inevitability pursue the path of least resistance when choosing how to consume?

    The MPAA, the RIAA and the Major Labels are not going without, whilst their business model has deprecated, the fault lies with their inability to adapt. When they over enforce outdated and draconian intellectual property laws against their own supporters, providing zero compensation towards the artists that they supposedly represent, is it any wonder that they develop a negative relationship with the very people who support their livelihoods.

    It’s not complicated. There are too many people with a fistful of money who simply lack the channel to legitimately consume your product and while this continues to be the case, you will simply lose your slice of the pie to illegitimate file sharing. If you refuse to provide an alternative approach and then attempt you to pass legislation to censor the internet, intrude on our personal lives and litigate against your supporters, it will simply result in the strengthening of the stereotype that you are indeed a bunch of money hungry pricks.

    Get with the times. This problem is old hat, it has existed for the better part of two decades, it is an overwhelming failure on your behalf that you haven’t found a solution. I’ve heard estimates bandied about that file sharing costs the music industry a half a billion a year of lost revenue. Should you not feel ashamed that you have been unable to tap into that market as an agent for the artists who were so desperate, naive and foolish, that they would their sign their intellectual property rights away to management who would so hopelessly represent them.

    Go back to the drawing board and come back with a method to give the people the opportunity to, from the comfort of their own home and regardless of their geographic location, surprise you with the show of support they’ve been trying to direct towards the very same artists who’ve made such a profound impact on their lives.

  • Anonymous

    linkhide.com.ar/47632

    • Captain Buzzoverinthehead DFC

      Spam flagged, as usual.

  • Anonymous

    lol, OK thats pretty funny stuff when you think about it. Wow.
    secure-surf.at.tc

  • Anonymous

    phlpn.es/829r8s

    • Captain Buzzoverinthehead DFC

      … aaaaaaand another spam (via phlpn.es this time) flagged.

      • Guest

        What about the loser above the flagged loser? Let’s flag him also.

  • Paul K

    I received one, which linked to where I could have seen it legally… but it was barred to Australians…

    If that was supposed to educate me it failed.

    • Grumpygit

      play them at their own game…..Send THEM an “educational notice” informing them how wrong they are….Don’t forget to tell them you will change ISP if you receive any further nonsense from them. xD

  • RIAAtarded

    Educational warning? what a contradiction that is as it has no info on the infringement so you have no recourse to defend against it or if it wasn’t you in the first place how do you track it down?

  • http://twitter.com/AlyssaBlindy Alyssa Blindy

    If rights holders were a bit more reasonable than they currently are, then this scheme might work in it’s framed form. Rightsholders would have to come up with more affordable alternatives than they have now, and I see that this plan could work.
    Unfortunately, at the current time, this would bring about disaster.

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  • Anonymous

    linkhide.com.ar/47632

  • Anonymous

    linkhide.com.ar/47632

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_3P4YEMCHBFPEIZCRG3RJ33Z6UY Jerrod

    So, basically the whole system is designed to make pay-or-else lawsuit scams much easier and cheaper to run.

  • Anom

    this kind system is actually good now you will know when you get caught and can start using vpn:s, other anonymously services to avoid getting second notice or thirds ones and then possible save lots of money (if right holders sue you to court it will often get very costly to you)

  • Anonymous

    Kinda makes you wonder who comes up with all that stuff??
    surf-privacy.at.tc

  • Julian

    This make no sense. Someone can easily change ISP after the first or second notice. Cycling through 3 ISP, 12 months each would keep subscribers safe. If that’s not enough, simply get a VPN provider.

    • SF

      From the ISPs point of view this makes tons of sense.

      They don’t have to hand over customer information to copyright holders without a court-order and get plenty of chances to warn their customers if a copyright-holder is getting cranky.

      This is basically an attempt from the ISPs to avoid the far more draconian measures that has been taken in other countries, If it works out and stops at this level it would be awesome for australia. (I don’t think it will stop at this though, the copyright lobby will keep pushing and won’t be satisifed until they’re allowed to hang anyone who is suspected of not buying enough of their content.)

    • Anonymous

      One day like private health insurance we will get a “Lifetime Cyber risk-rating”.
      Get too many second notice letters and no Australian ISP will accept you anymore.

    • Anonymous

      One day like private health insurance we will get a “Lifetime Cyber risk-rating”.
      Get too many second notice letters and no Australian ISP will accept you anymore.

  • Anonymous

    Contacting Optus today to let them know that this will void our contract with them if they impliment it. We will move to TPG or back to Worldnet if they start offering naked adsl.

  • http://prowest.ua prowest

    The easy answer is to streamline the overly restrictive international licensing issues that plague online media outlets and to finally give consumers some real value for money. If I am paying compact disc prices for an MP3, the audio quality needs to be the same (or better) and I need to be able to utilize it in every sense I was initially entitled to when I bought that physical compact disc. If I want to back it up, re-sell, store or destroy my legally purchased copy, that’s my prerogative as a consumer. Short of that you must discount your product since cleary there is a disparity in its value. Digital rights management (DRM) is a virus that only targets legitimate users and the only hurdle so far as I can see is that it has always been easier to appropriate media through less legitimate channels.

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