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BPI Asks UK ISPs To Block More Major Torrent Sites

Following its successful application to have The Pirate Bay blocked by several leading ISPs in the UK, the recording industry is back again with new demands. The BPI has reportedly asked Internet service providers such as BT, Virgin and TalkTalk to block leading torrent sites Kickass Torrents, H33t and Fenopy. The ISPs have refused to do so voluntarily but will all do so should a court order a blockade. That will happen, it’s just a question of when – the BPI has Christmas in mind.

Earlier this year, nine recording labels including EMI, Polydor, Sony, Virgin and Warner successfully argued that The Pirate Bay infringes their copyrights. Several ISPs including Sky, Everything Everywhere, TalkTalk, O2 and Virgin Media should implement a blockade under Section 97A of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, the labels demanded.

Having earlier deemed the site to be illegal, at the end of April the High Court ordered The Pirate Bay to be blocked. The decision followed similar rulings in Italy, the Netherlands, Denmark, Belgium and Finland.

On the back of this success it was a matter of when, not if, the labels came back for more. We didn’t have to wait long for the first signs.

In July, music licensing group PPL quietly polled its members to discover if they had licensed any of their music to torrent sites such as Extratorrent, Demonoid, Kickass Torrents, H33T, Torrent Reactor and Fenopy.

And now, in a move that will surprise no one, the record labels are indeed back with further censorship demands.

According to the BBC, last week six ISPs namely BT, Sky, Virgin Media, O2, EE and TalkTalk, received letters from the BPI asking them to block three leading torrent sites – Kickass Torrents, H33t and Fenopy.

“Like The Pirate Bay, these websites are profiting illegally from distributing music that isn’t theirs, without permission and without paying a penny to the musicians, writers and producers who created it,” a BPI spokesman told the BBC.

As expected, the ISPs have all refused to voluntarily comply with the BPI’s request – at least in the absence of a court ruling. It is important for the providers to show their customers that they have been forced to block sites, rather than simply caving in to the demands of private companies. In reality, and following the case against The Pirate Bay, none are putting up a fight.

“It looks like web blocking is now a reality in the UK – the BPI have found a way to censor sites they don’t like,” a spokesman for the UK Pirate Party told TorrentFreak.

“The excuse is piracy, which totally disregards the legitimate uses of torrent sites, and conveniently neglects to mention that they are a major platform for independent musicians. Essentially, it’s the classic behavior of monopolistic corporate bullies who want to stamp out competition.”

“The saddest thing is that they are just cutting off their noses to spite their own faces – just last week we had another study proving that users of file-sharing networks spend more money on music than non-sharers. So here’s yet another self-defeating attempt at censorship, which will not only be ineffective but actually antagonize music lovers and turn them further against the major labels.”

The BPI hopes that the High Court will order blockades against Kickass Torrents, H33t and Fenopy in time for Christmas. This is an extremely tight deadline but given that the process to have sites blocked has been tested comprehensively twice now – once against The Pirate Bay and earlier against Usenet indexing site Newzbin2 – it may just be possible.

Whether it will have any effect though remains to be seen. Dutch ISPs monitoring the block of The Pirate Bay in the Netherlands found that blocking the site was a futile activity. Nevertheless, the burning question now is what will happen when the blocks put in place.

When The Pirate Bay was blocked the Internet community rallied round in a big way, setting up dozens of proxy sites and ensuring that file-sharers knew how to circumvent the blockage. But The Pirate Bay has a significant profile that encourages a kick back against efforts to bring it down – will the response be the same for these other sites? The next few weeks will be telling.

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  • UKSuks

    The UK, fast becoming what the soviet leaders dreamed of.

    • joexxx

      Not exactly. You could copy all you wanted in Soviet Union.

      • UKSuks

        But they didn’t have the video surveillance or censorship the UK authorities currently enjoy.

        • http://twitter.com/ChristinaAngelV ChristinaAngel

          Chad responded I am amazed that any one able to earn $9857 in 4 weeks on the network. did you look at this(Click on menu Home)

        • http://twitter.com/ChristinaAngelV ChristinaAngel

          …..goo.gl/wFkWo

        • http://profile.yahoo.com/Y5DLRFFLJSKYZLOLH2DKZFM6IU Andrea Rosado

          writers and producers who created it,” a BPI spokesman told the BBC. ..Nipp.me/e48

      • Dondilly

        Piracy for profit was rife in the soviet union. They used to bootleg western recordings and as vinyl was in short supply, most bootleg ‘records’ were pressed as flexi discs on old/used xray accitates.

        Piracy there and now in the west have a few things in common. For whatever reasons they were both due to demand driven by market failure and that no one was being conned. People in the soviet union were aware they were buying illicit copies. Where they differ is that profiteering has been largely eliminated by p2p in the west by destroying the market for counterfeit sales where copies are passed off as original. So the criminal element the MAFIAA bleat on about is largely non existent.

        • joexxx

          No such thing as “bootleg western recordings” in Soviet Union since Soviet Union did not recognize western IP or IP law.

        • Qjo

          I’d love to get a copy of “Bad to the Bone” on an x-ray flexi of a broken leg. That would rock!

        • Scary_Devil_Monastery

          @joexxx

          “since Soviet Union did not recognize western IP or IP law.”

          Oddly enough, IP was the one area where the Sovjets did not recognize the need for information control – and not recognizing Immaterial Property was the key enabler of a free market.

    • Guest

      The U.K., fast becoming what George Orwell had nightmares of.

      • Guest

        And before Anon types “ITZ DA PIRATZ FALT!!11″ with his flippers, no, it’s the fault of fascists and their admirers.

        • 7th_Guest

          Earthworms do not possess flippers, sir. Methinks you need to study up on your biology!

    • TPB on TOR

      No worries, hopefully these sites will create .onion addresses as did The Pirate Bay jntlesnev5o7zysa.onion

      • Kiko

        That would significantly strain the Tor network unless there were more exit nodes.

        P.S – It’s Tor, not TOR.

  • First

    Not First

    • Second

      Liquid Fluoride Thorium Reactors for EVEYBODY!

    • joexxx

      But the most stupid so far.

  • Boxxy

    Because blocking websites worked the last time round…

    • Techanon

      Maybe it’s the sentiment what matters?

    • Violated0

      I visit TPB at least weekly while under BT’s awesome website block but naturally this block is for the uninformed which is why we need to educate them.

      Then the BPI can block all the sites they want while everyone just walks around their blocks.

    • Qjo

      What’s really needed is for some of these judges to see through the
      shitscreen these fuckers are spewing out and hiding behind, and recognize it for what it is. Then maybe one day these stupid fuckers will come to realize that their limp dick tactics are as effective at stopping file sharing as their limp dicks are at satisfying their fat woolly wives.

  • F2F

    I guess the BPI are really keen for people to start using the almost impossible to track F2F software, Tribler coming to the UK faster than the BPI can say ‘Oh, no we lost’

  • http://twitter.com/Sneckster Stewart Evardson

    member of public – Takes note of list of blocked torrent sites he wasn’t aware of.

  • TitusPhook

    Yet again the BPI prove themselves to be completely out of touch, especially after the recent study that found file sharers purchase up to 30% more music than non sharers.

    • Anyone

      I guess it is more important for them to deprive their artists of other distribution channels

      • BPIareWankers

        If they don’t get their cut then fuck everyone.

  • joexxx

    Like pissing against the wind… the wind doesn’t care… you’ll just get wet and that’s all.

    • Qjo

      Yeah but it’s so much fun to see some fuckers get wet.

  • Duke

    Maybe this time the court will let someone argue the case against the BPI, challenging their questionable evidence, and putting forward the case for all those musicians etc. who actually support these sites. Somehow I doubt it, though…

    • Block youtube

      This is england so that won’t happen. It goes, did those sites infringe those poor copyright holders rights?… yes (decides the court).. block them then.

      We all know they asked for just 1 site to be blocked first time, now 3 the second time

      How many next time and the time after and so on.. Where does this end?
      We have seen how many links have been removed from googles database because of DMCA complaints, will the same thing happen here?

      I am again ashamed of my country.

  • Guest

    Why do these fucking morons try to block torrent sites when it’s confirmed that site blocking doesn’t work?

    Wait, I just answered my own question. Because they’re fucking morons.

  • rndmfrd222

    Because it is shown that blocking access to websites decreases their traffic, not.
    Rather than fighting these sites, they should either leave them be or try and work with them.
    I feel for British citizens, your country is in a mess and now your government is censoring your internet even further.

    • http://profiles.google.com/zerianis10 Christopher Kidwell

      Agreed. Use the torrent sites as a secondary means of distribution and ask for a certain amount of the ad revenue (if they are getting anything over server costs) per month.

      I bet these torrent sites would be willing to go 25-50% of the over server costs cash to these companies in order to get the harassment to end.

      • Anyone

        Napster went to the studios with a blanque cheque and asked them to just fill in a number
        they refused

        this is not about the money, this is about control

        • Guest

          Yep its about control, they won’t be happy until they are the only ones who can sell and distribute music, as long as there is competition with selling and distribution they will forever be a bear with a full on rage.

  • Amused

    The flood gates are now opening. Bye Bye YouTube, Facebook, etc. I’m very glad that I stuck with my small, little known ISP that my first PC modem was locked into to all those years ago. They give me a good fibre optic connection and NO censorship.

    • Billy

      which one?
      in case i need to move isp, would be good to know…

  • http://profiles.google.com/zerianis10 Christopher Kidwell

    I don’t know if this will happen. The courts might come around and say “Blocking these websites didn’t do anything at all, people are still getting to them through other means (TOR, proxies) so maybe it’s time for you to just live in the 21st century and realize that you are not the gatekeepers anymore!”

    Yeah, only a 50/50 chance but if we get a smart and savvy judge, it could happen.

    • Guest

      I doubt the court will say no to blocking these websites because the high court has already ruled to block TPB and not one of the ISP’s appealed the decision.This ruling has now set a precedent for which the BPI etc will be rubbing there hands with glee because they no that this ruling can’t be appealed now.

  • http://torrentfreak.com/ Rob8urcakes

    I’m quite sure Prime Minister David Cameron (current leader of his Tory morons) will block the BPI in the interests of the free market he and his right-wing dummies love so much.

    After all his Party mantra is “competition is good for progress”, so he’ll probably remove all these anti-competition laws that the previous Labour government put in place via the evil Digital Economy Act 2010 (ch.24)

    And for the record it is section 17 that allowed sites to be blocked in the UK
    http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2010/24/section/17

    And if that shit isn’t bad enough check out sections 9 & 10 that allow YOU to get cut off :(
    http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2010/24/section/9
    and,
    http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2010/24/section/10

    Sorry for being the bearer of bad news folks, but don’t think this shit could never happen in the UK. The legislation is already in place and can be used now:( So it’s time to write to your MP and educate them properly to get these laws changed.

    • Guest

      Where was Prime minster David Cameron when the High Court ruled to block TPB? I doubt that he will block this decision by the BPI as the ruling has now been set that a website can be blocked even if it does block a free market. The decision of the High Court to block TPB was not appealed by any one of the ISP’s defending and I guess this will now be a decision that they will regret with the onset of more websites to be blocked.

    • IHaveNoBalls

      I’m reading that i can’t believe what i’m seeing

  • IHaveNoBalls

    Youtube HOSTS thousands if not millions of copyrighted works and makes money off them though ad’s. Should the Uk block youtube? Google links to those copyrighted works and makes money off ad’s. Should we Block Google…

    The answer is no because they have money to defend themselves in court…
    Thats how justice works

    • 7th_Guest

      The answer is “no” because Google/YouTube plays ball with the MAFIAA and even take into account their trollish local tribute collecting lackeys (like GEMA in Germany) to the point where any and every entity and subsidiary affil’d with the MAFIAA can block whatever they want on YT in an instant. All of that without even getting into Big G’s most recent aspirations to go into music distribution (Google Music) with the labels’ permission, but only after they agreed to censor even more autocomplete terms and start rankbusting “rogue” sites.

      Point is, every time I see someone going for that seemingly obvious “oh yeah, well if they’re doing that to these small-time sites based on principle or this and that argument, then why don’t they do that to Google/YT too?” like of reasoning, I think to myself, “if only things were as straightforward and simple as that, bub.” Google’s interests will (nearly) always prompt them to bend backwards for any major rightsholder and their associations because there’s something to be gained from them doing so. As such, they’ll always enjoy immunity. Quid pro quo, Clarice…

  • http://www.frontier-space.com/ Lethn

    “Following its successful ‘application’ to have The Pirate Bay blocked by several leading ISPs in the UK”

    I actually laughed, yep, the application definitely was the only thing successful when it came to Virgin trying to block me from accessing piratebay :D

    • Danny

      Yep.

      I also like the way torrentz.eu now gives you tpb links through the uk pirate party proxy. It makes it so much easier for the average user to access TPB.

  • Anonymous

    the only surprise with this is that it has taken as long for the BPI to ‘ask’ for more site blocking. instead of doing what they want, how about the government taking into account what the the public wants? how about the government making the BPI and the rest of the entertainment industries do what the the public wants? forcing those industries to actually do what the public keeps crying out for, ie many more legitimate sites, drm free downloads, different formats, sensible pricing and the ability to back up previously legally purchased media (you know the discs i mean? the ones that were billed as being ‘indestructible! fucking liars!), would all but resolve the ‘file sharing issues’. the problem is, the public dont have the money to line the pockets of the politicians that’s why they keep siding with the industries. what the public does have, but seems to refuse to use, is it’s ability to stop buying media and totally screw the industries. do that and what would they do then? no one can be forced to buy any product! hit them where it hurts, in the pocket!

  • Boblenton3

    TBH I dont think it will work. The way our country works is no matter what always hold on to your costumers, their greedy companies and they know that if each costumer leaves them they panic due to recession we always face. If they do start censoring people will no doubt leave for another ISP and lose money. If I rang Virgin up and said I want my contract canceling I garantee they will do EVERYTHING in their power to keep me. As for our PM I think he will just ignore and forget the BPI’s request, he’s heads far too up his arss over the hardships we face, rising prices, unemployment etc which he started.

    If it does get blocked then it will just be another site to use on the VPN

  • Fyvgg

    ‘mafiaafire thepiratebay dancing’ – nuff said.

  • Timbolton

    I just love how biased the BBC are. They don’t seem to understand that it’s the users and not the site that distribute and make available the files in question. They never provide a factual report on the situation. They have morons for reporters. They can barely use word processing software and never proof read.

    If I setup a forum and left it and people started posting torrents am I responsible even if I never touched the site again. I don’t think so.

    • TheyLie

      Let’s not forget the BBC is a major content provider it’s in their interest to be biased when reporting on filesharing.

      As is regularly stated the BBC is a unique institution they get the tax payer to help fund their projects then sell them worldwide.

      • Knowles2

        Yes and they give that content freely to the tax payers that fund them.

        • Hut The Jabber

          They’ll give me free Doctor Who DVD Box Sets? Woooooohooooooo!!!!!!!!

        • Knowles2

          No but they will let you watch the endless repeats on Three.

    • http://twitter.com/DuckTheNWO NewWorldStoner ?

      Indeed, the BBC is a fascist organization, which in cooperation with the government operate a totalitarian cycle of propaganda distribution and consumption.

      If you choose not to pay for the BBC’s propaganda through license fees, you will be fined and eventually imprisoned. The only freedom we have is to choose not to consume the propaganda they distribute.

      • I Heart Aunty Beeb

        You call it propaganda, I call it the best telly in the world. And I for one am proud to steal as much of it as I can.

        • IHaveNoBalls

          I think hes talking about BBC news in particular. How much BBC news do you download.. And BBC makes east-enders they can’t be that great :D

        • Guest

          Yeah, I love the BBC for it’s shows and don’t have a problem funding it. We should have unlimited access to that catalogue as we funded it. Why should I pay for something I’ve help to fund?

          Looking at Sky, I can’t understand why people still pay in for that crap. If they moved away from showing adverts on their own channels I might consider it.

  • Anon

    This is like a stretch of highway where motorists routinely speed, so signs limiting top speed appear. The motorists ignore the signs and so Police stand in the streets at intersections attempting to slow traffic down. When motorists speed right by the traffic cops giving them the finger while they roar past, then surveillance and chase cars finally go into place and now that motorists are getting pulled over and written summons to appear in court they bitch on TorrentFreak they’ve lost their “privacy” and their “freedom” and this “fascism” is all the courts and the cops fault. :-) Never theirs!!

    Keep living on in your own little world for us. You entertain! lol

    • Anyone

      but it’s a street where there is never any accident, so the speeding is not an issue

      • Bruddah

        and… i will drive my own car, built myself, from parts i own, down that stretch of highway, just as i can in real life

    • Fredrika

      > “This is like a stretch of highway where motorists routinely speed..”

      No it is not, because as, which you apparently seems to be unaware of, accessing these sites and downloading torrent files from them is <b<not illegal, unlike speeding.

      A correct comparison would be that a weak failed car dealership that can’t handle itself on the free market(because they sells useless car’s with so many artificial limitations and such a marked up price that no right minded capitalist would ever buy them) tricks the court to forbidding people to enter a competing fully legal car dealership, because some of the cars offered there have the possibly to travel at speeds which possibly is illegal in some places, but far from all.

      > “Never theirs!!”

      As lattari explained to you yesterday, you’re morbidly hung up on the rape victim/beaten wife mentality: It was my fault, If I just act nice enough he won’t harm me anymore.

      In reality, dismantling of civil liberties, violation of human rights and 100% of the responsibility for imposing such illegitimate legislation always falls on the legislator and secondly the entity which demands it, which would be the Mafiaa. It’s never the responsibility of ordinary people who do something fully natural, which causes no harm to society.

      Had you not been so embarrassingly ignorant and slept your way through elementary school, you would have known these facts about how society and democracies works.

      > “Keep living on in your own little world for us.”

      As explained to you again yesterday, pirates will continue to live in reality, where there already exists fully functioning next generation filesharing protocols which are completely unstoppable neither legislatively or technically, which the entire earth’s population can fileshare illegally with, and you can’t do anything about it. Ha ha ha.

      Was there something else you wanted? If so, please speak up and i will help you once again. You seem to need a lot of help.

      • Close To The Boner

        We really don’t see enough rape analogies on here. I wonder why?

    • Hut The Jabber

      Your analogy is flawed. In the UK speed limits have historically only ever been imposed as a response to accidents, they’re never a proactive action. The same goes for roadsigns highlighting dangers such as bends in the road, difficult to see junctions etc. If you see a road sign warning of an upcoming hazard when you’re driving you should be aware that it has been placed there in response to a previous accident in the hope of preventing another.

      Other than that, people routinely break the speed limits even knowing the consequences. The law doesn’t stop them. When they see traffic police or speed cameras they slow down, and then immediately speed back up again – fact of life. What you seem to advocate is the proverbial ‘nanny state’ where we as humans can’t be trusted to just live our lives in peace.

    • Guest

      After the Pirate Bay was blocked its web traffic stats showed NO drop in traffic from the countries that were blocking it. In other words, site blocking is worthless. It does absolutely nothing. Pirates know what proxies and VPNs are, so they just use them to effortlessly bypass the blocks. And teach others how to do the same.

      How many pirates are getting “pulled over”? So far this year, I count far less than 100. Out of at least 30 million.

      Yet somehow you claim that the copyright industry is winning. And you accuse us of living in our own little world? YOU accuse US, Mr. Fucking Delusional?

      • Andrew me

        I honestly doubt there are only 30 million torrenters worldwide, if anything i think the real figure is much much higher than that.

        • IHaveNoBalls

          30 Million is from the Pirate bay stats. Noticed that number right away. I recon there could be ten times that. If more (Filelockers/Streaming/Ripping from youtube/Emule/usenet.. etc

        • Scary_Devil_Monastery

          Statistics from China alone estimate that over 60% of their online community fileshares. Said community being a few hundred million strong.

          Add to that the 20% estimates of filesharing in the western world’s online communities and you end up with a lot more than just 30 million. Even assuming only one in ten filesharers uses bittorrent.

      • Scary_Devil_Monastery

        Oh, leave poor “anon” alone. Baghdad Bob has finally aquired a job once again and is now hanging around TF on behalf of his new boss (remarkably similar to the old one, I must say).

        Leave the poor man to earn his 50 cents.

    • IHaveNoBalls

      Haha you wait till everything you love is blocked. Although i bet you’re one of those facebook/twitter/apple fools so i’m sure you’ll be fine…

    • Scary_Devil_Monastery

      No, this is like the government noticing that people routinely drive 5 mph over the limit on the highway and as a response implement traffic cops intercepting ALL vehicles traveling through a certain sets of road.

      In this case, to drive the metaphor further, the problem is compounded in that only legitimate drivers will be pulled over since everyone actually speeding in the first place automatically avoids the roadblocks.

      There is NO real world comparison to site blocking which is correct and fails to look completely ridiculous in practice. No matter how much you try to skew it.

      But then again, Baghdad Bob, you must be complimented for not once dropping above the standards you set for accurate reporting during the second gulf war.

      So, tell me, along with a few hundred million filesharers simply ceasing and desisting in the near future, will Saddam conquer the US and the western world, having run the coalition out of iraq?

  • http://twitter.com/iamkeithmason Keith Mason

    Isn’t there something we can do to fight this?

    • Anyone

      keep calm and seed on

      and vote Pirate whenever you have the chance

      • ken147

        I’m going to make that. what color should it be?

        • Hut The Jabber

          It should be in the PP turquoise ;)

      • http://twitter.com/DuckTheNWO NewWorldStoner ?

        This.

    • IHaveNoBalls

      Write to as many MP’s as you can for a start.

      http://www.writetothem.com/

    • Czhfurtk

      Stop voting for them?

  • TempleNewsam

    Please go to http://www.torproject.org/ and download the package. Become a TOR relay today. Only costs a little bandwidth.

    • Jeff Bekcer

      and in addition to tor, try out i2p’s anonymous torrent system, http://www.i2p2.de/

      • TempleNewsam

        How many are there! can we standardize on one!

        • Jeff Bekcer

          I2P is probably the best bet for anonymous p2p IMO.

      • Andrew me

        ANd how do you get an invite to any of the circles or even to a group that has the same interests as you ? i looked into this but the amount of time spent trying to gain access to torrents would far outweigh the usefulness

    • http://twitter.com/DuckTheNWO NewWorldStoner ?

      How long before they block Tor at ISP level? How long before the blacklist proxy sites at ISP level?

      This is a very real possibility. You could argue that Tor and proxy sites have legitimate uses and therefore can’t be blocked, but TPB and other torrent sites have legitimate uses also, that hasn’t stopped from them being blocked.

      • ThumbsUpThumbsDown

        Depends on what type of public outrage they get. They’ll slip more things by in some jurisdictions than in others; but, their impositions on public patience are cumulative.

        With every new abuse, they have to ask, “What if we’re wrong?”
        What if these people’s patience really isn’t infinite?” “What if their sleep isn’t permanent?” “What if they get really, really angry; and, decide to come after us, two or three billion strong?”

        When the consensus of opinion starts to feel toxic; starts to feel as unpalatable as month old dog vomit, it can change in the blink of an eye. It is then that the “powers that be” hear the new voices of their replacements.

        • http://twitter.com/DuckTheNWO NewWorldStoner ?

          Never a truer word more aptly spoken. Thanks for your reply dude.

          “What if we’re wrong?” – the moment they realize that their power only exists by virtue of the people, not the corporations they endeavour to serve and that serving the interests of corporations instead of the interests of the people is a sure route to self destruction.

  • SorlSee

    The BPI? rotfl, are you kidding me? Thats hilarious dude.
    Privacy-Wonders.tk

    • i_hate_spammers!!!

      ^^^ everybody plz flag this dbag spammer ^^^

  • ThumbsUpThumbsDown

    Imagine that you went to your doctor and he said, “You have a Cancer.”

    Your first reaction might be a long humane instant of denial; yet, soon, from that long meandering instant, your most relevant questions would emerge: What type of Cancer? What stage am I in? What damage has it done? What damage will it do? Can I do anything to fight it? How long will I live? Will my quality of life be worth it?

    This is the exact same thought process that British, American, French, Spanish, Swedish, Italian, Greek, Portuguese, citizens are undergoing every day in respect to the western Democracies that they call home.

    These citizens do NOT choose willfully or willingly to subject themselves to the unforgiving stress of these unforgiving questions.

    What drives them to these questions is their pained contemporary personal experience with the crushing dysfunctions of the democratic governance that has hitherto given them safe; perhaps comfortable; perhaps meaningful; perhaps free, lives under the empowering genius of a practicing democratic universal rule of law.

    These citizens suffer the painful anxiety of awakening to emerging undemocratic realities: They can see that monopoly Corporate power is metastatic in what used to be their legislatures. They’ve been told all too clearly that the can have “no expectation” of Privacy in public spaces by the same judicial and legislative powers that have told them that they have only diminished expectations of Privacy in private spaces. They understand that, increasingly, Due Process applies differently to the rich and powerful; and, that the universal rule of law is less universal than it used to be. They go to the ballot box; but, they see more clearly each day that the entrenched power of their elites is immune to any ballot box. They become angry and desperate; but, their anger and despair is each day less relevant.

    So their voices gather to express one frightened understanding: “We have a kind of Cancer…..in our democracies!”

    Of course, their first reaction is a long meandering instant of denial; but, from that pained long instant, their most relevant questions emerge: What kind of Tyranny? How does it Rule? What maintains it? Who does it benefit? How entrenched is it? What funds it? Can we fight it? Can it be submitted to democratic control? Will our children live as free Human Beings?

    Make no mistake; hearing the diagnosis of this political Cancer is every bit as final; and, every bit as horrifying, as living through the reality of physical cancer. Why?

    Because the real problem for any terminal Cancer victim is NOT that he will soon die; but, that he might NOT die soon enough.

    You see, in respect to both Tyranny and Cancer; once present, they represent interminable and unmitigatable agony from which one cannot awake; and, from which one can NOT escape.

  • The_Strawbear

    With Apologies to William Blake…

    And were those sites in modern times,
    All blocked by England’s ISPs?
    And will it alter much at all,
    On England’s pirate torrent scene?
    And did the companies rapine,
    Make more than they did last term?
    But was every freedom lost right here,
    Caused by those dark satanic firms?

    • ThumbsUpThumbsDown

      Great job! William Blake will learn to live without apologies….

  • Jamie

    Firefox + Anonymous Proxies = win

  • Clap Trap

    OMG LMAO WTF LOL!!

  • Pingback: Reino Unido: las discográficas piden el bloqueo de los principales sitios torrent

  • http://twitter.com/DuckTheNWO NewWorldStoner ?

    Can anyone honestly say they didn’t expect this to happen? We all know it will happen, the question is only when.

    How long before the same laws that propagate this censorship are used to censor sites like WikiLeaks and other information the government deems detrimental to their agenda?

    It is clear we are heading towards complete totalitarian government control over information. Worst of all, there’s nothing we can do to prevent it unless we rise up and overthrow the corrupt governments and politicians that create laws which are bought and paid for by multinational corporations and manipulated to serve their interests as opposed to the interests of the people.

  • a torrent site owner

    VPN anyone? been using airvpn for months now and had no problems and downloads are good :D

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  • Asashii

    first rule of fight club, keep it underground, case closed problem solved, private all the way!!!

    • Andrew me

      I just wish i could find some of the sites that have good seeders that are not that well known or are under the radar, the bpi know about them all and it is difficult for the general user to get access but the bpi will be determined and eventually get access through making friends with others in forums etc.

      • IHaveNoBalls

        Hi andrew you worry too much, Just get a VPN and download from public torrent sites. I’m in the Uk, i don’t even both hiding my identity as its not needed yet..

  • BlockBPI

    1. Search for IWF website.
    2. Enter complaint section
    3. Paste this address into the box http://www.bpi.co.uk/
    4. BPI blocked for several days.

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  • unusedcrayon

    OH NO GUYS, THEY WANT TO BLOCK WEBSITES AGAIN.
    THIS IS TOTALLY GOING TO STOP ME DOING THINGS THE MEDIA GROUPS DISAPPROVE OF.

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  • The best guest

    How do people that download spend more on music? Why buy it if it’s already been downloaded?

    • Anyone

      to support the artist

      of course, buying the album is the wrong way to do that, because the MAFIAA siphons 90% of the money from that

    • MadAsASnake

      downloaders tend to watch / listen to more media and actively seek it out in whatever form it is available. Non-downloaders tend to be less interested. BTW, my wife constantly buys things she likes based on a download… especially books

  • Jimbo

    ‘The ISPs have refused to do so voluntarily but will all do so should a court order a blockade. That will happen, it’s just a question of when’

    of course it will happen simply because the government and the court refuses to take notice of anyone other than the entertainment industries and refuse to take notice of any figures and statistics from independent analysts. if they were to drag the industries, even kicking and screaming, into the digital era, they would see how those industries have been responsible for holding back so many technological advancements in the past. i wonder how governments and politicians in general would cope with having to spend weeks traveling around the country in a horse and buggy instead of a car. or spend days on a ship going from country to country instead of a few hours in a plane? what about waiting for days to get a message to someone or get a reply from that person? changes are made for reasons. to progress not stand still as these bloody fools wont everyone to do!

    • IHaveNoBalls

      “see how those industries have been responsible for holding back so many technological advancements in the past”. — Good point mate, that’s a point that rarely gets brought up

  • StrangelyStrange

    All this does is make me want to download more form those sites out of pure rage.

    Isn’t it nice of the BPI to start caring about the income of artists now after not giving 1 per cent of jack shit for the previous sixty-odd years?

  • Pingback: UK: the record companies ask blocking major torrent sites | Tech Crash

  • xpmule

    i don’t think people should be proactively punished for a crime they didn’t have the chance to do yet.. makes me think of Google and Youtube, why do they get to stay online when file hosting services are taken to court and convicted of crimes ? that makes me wonder if torrent sites had a report button for copyright material would they still be targeted like now ? ya i have no doubt. and that i think is the damning difference that makes torrent sites look bad. the way they run with no means for people to report a copyright violation and have a torrent removed etc.

    The people will have what they want one way or the other eventually.
    And i can’t wait to see the anti-piracy advocates dragged into the street and Kadafi’d.
    The government is there to serve us not imprison us.
    And they need to tread carefully or risk pissing off the population
    Its not like there is any conceivable chance in hell that any antipiracy efforts will make any difference in any way.. Far too many people want what they want and because of this they will get what they want.. Freedom.
    And don’t fuck with peoples freedom !

    We need to keep an eye out for who to vote for when possible.
    Politicians should be looking after OUR interests and not the interests of corrupt deceitful MAFIA style’d groups intent on forcing their own made up rules on us to justify their dying business model.
    Kinda funny how i can’t have the local grocery store put in jail and fined because they are putting my road side fruit stand out of business.
    And yet these lying copyright goons extort money from us and harass us and inpose on our way of life while proclaiming their are the good guys.. history tells us they are the lowest form of scum on the net and have been caught doing every conceivable morally corrupt action possible on the net all in the name to stop piracy. BPI and other douches are nothing more than a gang using extortion and other methods.. they are essentially Terrorists.
    And i don’t know about anyone else but i don’t appreciate terrorists encroaching my freedoms.. keep it up and see how far i will go to defend myself ;)

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  • sabika

    Scan to PDF (Scan Multi-page documents to PDF)

    Description
    Scan, Print, Fax, Download and Store Microsoft Office, PDF and Text Documents and images. ??This app turns your iPhone or iPad into a Handy Scanner, Fax, File Storage or an Air Printer in your pocket. It lets you scan high quality multi-page documents, print it to any AirPrint capable printer in your wifi network, email it or save it to a document folder on your device, post it to Google Docs or fax it to any fax number, directly from your iPhone, iPad or iPod Touch. ??A highly useful app designed for individual or businesses use.
    Downloading link: https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/scan-to-pdf-scan-multi-page/id549095412?ls=1&mt=8

  • Worldatwar2150

    All the music our days are commercial whatever they still have a lots of money …

  • Stylvens

    Downloading media content online is a crime punishable whereas arm traffic are encouraged by government.

    I love piracy and the unlimited opportunity it offers to everyone, with all the tax we are paying internet has become our robin hood.

    It’s all about money and control… one site down hundreds more rise.
    This thought comfort me.

  • BTGuard - BitTorrent Anonymously

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