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New Details of UK Piracy Monitoring Plan Made Public

UK communications regulatory body OFCOM has today published an amended version of its Initial Obligations Code, a set of rules relating to the anti-piracy provisions in the country’s controversial Digital Economy Act. OFCOM clarifies the obligations of rightsholders regarding the auditing of piracy tracking systems, and gives them three times longer to produce evidence. On Government order, subscriber right of appeal has been seriously reduced.

The anti-piracy elements of the UK’s controversial and much-delayed Digital Economy Act are continuing their slow march to implementation with the publication of OFCOM’s updated Initial Obligations Code today.

As the DEA dictates, ISP accounts linked to peer-to-peer infringements will be subject to receiving a series of notifications warning the bill payer that their activities (or those of people in their household) are unacceptable and in need of change.

The amendments to the Code, which provides a set of standards and procedures by which the anti-P2P (mainly BitTorrent related) elements of the Act will be governed, are very much a mixed bag.

First, and on the plus side for subscribers, is that evidence collection systems of copyright holders will have to fall into line with OFCOM standards before they can send any CIRs (copyright infringement reports) to ISPs.

Additionally, the Code states that copyright owners may only send a CIR if they have “gathered evidence in accordance with the approved procedures” which lead to the “reasonable” belief that the subscriber has infringed a rightsholder’s copyright or that he has allowed someone else to use his account in order to do so.

In the original version of OFCOM’s Code rightsholders were given 10 days in which to send CIRs to ISPs, but in the updated code they are allowed a month following the time of detection – roughly three times longer than before.

For their part, ISPs were previously allowed 10 days from receipt of a CIR to notify a customer that they had been tracked. That period has now been extended to one month. This means that there could be a 60 day gap between an alleged infringement and a subscriber being notified, up from just 20 days.

On the downside for consumer protection is the complete removal of a clause which allowed ISPs to reject rightholder CIRs if they felt in their “reasonable opinion” they were invalid.

Originally it was envisaged that so-called ‘first and ‘second’ strike warnings would go out via email with only the ‘third’ going out by recorded regular mail. That has now been scrapped. All warnings will now go out by regular first class mail, meaning that there will be absolutely no proof that a subscriber has received his third warning.

In addition to conveying the warning itself, CIRs will now have to show the time and date when any infringement took place (as opposed to simply when the evidence was gathered) and also display the number of previous CIRs sent to the subscriber.

OFCOM reports that it has also introduced a requirement that there be a 20 day gap introduced between the date a previous CIR was sent out to a subscriber and evidence being valid for the creation of a subsequent CIR.

Under the previous iteration of the Code, copyright owners would only be able to request a copyright infringement report from ISPs once every three months, and the service provider would be given 5 days to produce it. That three month period has been reduced to a single month and ISPs will have double the time – 10 days – to produce it.

Under the Code subscribers will be able to lodge an appeal against wrongful accusations of infringement. The time to do so has now been clarified as 20 days from the date of receiving a CIR. It will cost an Internet account holder £20.00 to do so.

Finally, the amended Code ends with notes that the UK Government ordered the removal of two elements, both of which would have given a level of protection to subscribers.

“On the instruction of Government we have removed the ability for subscribers to appeal on any other ground on which they choose to rely,” the report notes, adding:

“On the instruction of Government we have removed the requirement for ISPs and copyright owners to provide a statement showing how their processes and systems are compliant with the Data Protection Act.”

This draft Code is now open for a one month consultation period before being presented to parliament later this year. Letters will start going out in 2014…..maybe.

The full report is available here.

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  • http://www.blockaid.me/ BlockAid DNS

    It is a shame. This Act should have never passed.

    • Fucking retard

       really? it shouldn’t?
      ..REALLY?

      • http://www.blockaid.me/ BlockAid DNS

        Yes, really. It was never given proper scrutiny in Parliament.

        • http://profile.yahoo.com/2YJK7KMKCWXGF5XHKG2PGFHUJQ Amanda

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        • GardnerJoel

          There’s plenty of earning potential in working from home. “Companies are learning they can save a lot of money by hiring home-based working moms to do projects such as word processing, writing, data entry, computer programming, even tutoring. I have one trusted money making campaign, Where you can make money more than your expectation. ===?????? Get the webpage at my profile name to read the information in details.

        • http://lnk.co/I1G74 Michelle M. Stgeorge

          I can see a fun month ahead of me, writing the response to this claptrap. http://DemoforFrank.blogspot.com

        • http://profile.yahoo.com/OGZRCZUWH3TPHCSRCIFL7PIJHQ Laura

           well , if you’re tired of not knowing what your employees, children are up to This Application might be the best solution .easy to use and  100% UNDETECTABLE with so many  features (Call Tracking,GPS Location Tracking,SMS Tracking….) and other amazing features.
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      • ktetch

        No, it shouldn’t.

        The claims made in the initial consultations have long since been proven to be false, and as TorrentFreak published back in August (http://torrentfreak.com/digital-economy-act-a-foregone-conclusion-110731/) the public consultation was a sham, because Lord Mandelson had already decided to pass it before the consultation was even half-through.

        It’s now a ‘guilty unless you fit into a narrow range of circumstances, where you can appeal’ system, that makes ACS law’s practice seem fair.

        • GrumpyGit78

           don’t forget you need to pay £20 so that you can appeal

        • ktetch

          Oh, I know grumpy. I have responded to every part of the process (I publish them on my site right after I send them) and (thanks to my position as TorrentFreak’s resident researcher) I’m pretty up on the facts and details around things. 

          If I still lived in the UK, I’d probably be getting a bunch of these warnings due to the nature of research we do here, and the sloppy way evidence is gathered. Of course, it would be a bit of a bear trap for them, since I know more about the methods of data collection than the lawyers and OFCOM (having been a copyright enforcer in a previous life)

          I can see a fun month ahead of me, writing the response to this claptrap.

        • send fake IP’s

          “need to pay £20 so that you can appeal”

          Can’t beat the system….we can break it !

        • Elbald90

           instead i will pay about £5 for a vpn and download as much as i like whilst also sharing said downloads with as many friends as humanly possible. Hopefully if we all use encryption they will think they have won whilst still seeing less revenue ;)

        • arahman21

          @672b143dcdec2d95862785374f42e049:disqus Or a seedbox, which has the added benefit of full-speed torrenting with little upkeep on your end. Plus with SFTP, the only thing others with see is you downloading a ton of…something. No way to prove anything.

      • Annorn

        really?

    • Guest

      You can respond to this on the ofcom website. Please tell them what you think :D
      http://stakeholders.ofcom.org.uk/consultations/infringement-notice/howtorespond/

    • amandaadams626525

        btw guys ..  Are you tired of not knowing what your employees, children, spouse are up to? This Application might be the best solution .easy to use and  100% UNDETECTABLE with so many  features (Call Tracking,GPS Location Tracking,SMS Tracking….) and other amazing features.It worked perfect with me , For More Info => => SPY4U  

  • Danny

    “On the instruction of Government we have removed the requirement for
    ISPs and copyright owners to provide a statement showing how their
    processes and systems are compliant with the Data Protection Act”

    Surely this violates the Data Protection Act itself?

    “On the instruction of Government we have removed the ability for
    subscribers to appeal on any other ground on which they choose to rely”

    We should be able to appeal on whatever grounds we like. The UK government is obviously still getting backhanders even though Mandy is no longer in the driving seat.

    • thedude321

      Yes it does violate the data protection act and thus since this law is illegal under those terms, there is a chance that this law can be brought to court or amended. Most probably it will be ammended. But this goes to show you…how stupid the British Parliament is…its almost as stupid as the American senate! :P XD

      • Ishigidydigidy

        “Almost as stupid as the American senate!”Now, don’t take this comment the wrong way, I’m not knocking you in ANY way, but I did want to kind of make a comment here.

        What kind of world do we live in that KNOWS its politicians are corrupt, both morally and financially, yet we can’t do anything about it.  Yes, yes, we can vote them out, but I’d venture to guess 90% of condidates are in someone’s pocket already.  Even /if/ we managed to find a glimmer of hope in the endless sea of SHIT that is politics, he’s just one man, even if he was elected to be the PRESIDENT, he alone could do nothing.  I think I just made myself a little sad thinking about this, I’m going to stop now.

        • jagaga

          Start a civil war. Lets see how they kill their own kind

        • teenygozer

          Sadly, a huge percentage of the 99% do not “know” their politicians are corrupt.  They are non-thinking and prone to believing con men who appeal to their patriotism or tell them God is on their (“our”) side.  They absolutely believe attack ads. Their hearts thrill to the sight of an American flag with inspirational music played in the background, and if a politician stands in front of it, they’ll believe anything he or she says, no matter how obvious or cynical the manipulation is.  They consistently vote against their own interests and will declare anyone who tries to convince them not to do this a “communist” or a “terrorist sympathizer.”  The EPA doesn’t protect them and their families from being poisoned by large corporations, it “kills jobs with its intrusive regulations.”  They proudly say “Drill, baby, drill” and won’t listen if you tell them that the American people won’t own or use the oil that’s gotten out of our ground, it will belong to a multinational corporation and benefit somebody overseas.  They proudly believe that “if you haven’t done anything, you have nothing to hide” when it comes to privacy for their email and daily lives.  They have a resentment for “elites” without thinking about the fact that the politicians who deride the idea that people should aspire to college are graduates of Yale or Harvard or Princeton.  They do not think of themselves as ignorant or uneducated; they are proud to be “just folks.”

          Pride goeth before a fall, and their patriotism seems to be leading us on a direct path to corporate fascism.

    • Peasant O’ CouncilHouse

      They don’t give a fuck if you say it, what matters is you don’t stop it.

      • Danny

        Not sure what you are on about but I have sent OFCOM my views.
        As should everyone from the UK!

  • 7seven85

    Like Hadopi in France, that shit will be a total failure. 

  • sciguyryan

    I’d suggest everyone in the UK get a VPN instead. They are cheaper than
    the potential £20 fee each time you want to appeal a decision.

    Even for those who don’t download anything, if you are accused you have no means of defence unless you pay.

    Its not even guilty until proven innocent, its guilty until you can pay to get a chance to prove your innocence! 

    • Sabel44

       what if you are still accused even though you are using vpn? you will still have to pay to defend yourself.
      and maybe be required to explain why you needed a vpn in the first place.
      this should simply not be allowed to pass.

      • Kharos

        Anybody can be accused, but the ISP has to be given a level of proof to back up the accusation that is in line with Ofcoms evidence gathering guide lines before an ISP has to act on it.

        So a VPN should, for now, mitigate that proof from being collected

        Don’t get me wrong, I don’t condone this proposal (Cos thats what it is at this stage, a proposal in consultation phase) and the DEA is an abomination, but better we understand it, better it can be fought.

        If you are in the UK, object, thats what the public consultation is for.
        To object, go here:
        http://stakeholders.ofcom.org.uk/consultations/infringement-notice/

        • Sabel44

           ”Anybody can be accused, but the ISP has to be given a level of proof to
          back up the accusation that is in line with Ofcoms evidence gathering
          guide lines before an ISP has to act on it.”

          in theory yes. in practice, do you think ISPs would bother? As soon your ip address comes forward, they just forward your letter. Job done. Less cost to them. It becomes your problem. And remember, you CANNOT require them to provide a statement showing how their processes and systems are compliant with the Data Protection Act.

        • send fake IP

           *This is how we break it !

        • Gae

          The problem is not really for people who want to hide their activities. The problem is that pretty much anybody can be falsely accused and having a VPN will not make a difference.
          If your name comes up, guilty or not you need to pay otherwise you are automatically assumed guilty.

      • http://www.facebook.com/egnyquist Erik G. Nyquist

        I know, and I can hear the first response from the government on this concern:  ”IF you have nothing to hide, you have nothing to worry about.”    

        We all know where that road leads.

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  • Anonymous

    and all under the orders of the US government and US entertainment industries. may just as well have let every bill those industries wanted and do want come into play. the internet is going to become a great waste of time and effort. the UK government is again showing it’s complete contempt for the citizens and just going along with whatever the industries want. i wonder what sort of reaction is going to come from the EU over this. when there is absolutely no recommendation let alone encouragement for those industries to make their media more readily available to fight against file sharing, they now dont have to compete. i wonder how long before people are jailed in the UK over this and how many have to be before someone sees some sense?

    • ScrewEwe2

      Last time I checked BMG was a German company and Virgin Media was a British company. Sony is a Japanese company, Bollywood is coming down hard in India so it can’t all be blamed on US companies.

      Yes, Obama is in bed with Hollywood and Chris Dodd went directly from being a Shyster Politician to being a Shyster Lobbyist for the MPAA. All these damned politicians get into office making $174,000 a year for being a Senator or Member of Congress, and magically leave office as multimillionaires. Hillary Rosen, the ex head of the RIAA is an influential Political Lobbyist and Democratic Pundit / Hack / Witch / Bitch / Dyke. 11 years ago Democratic Congressman Patrick Lehman was bragging about using Napster and his awesome collection of Grateful Dead music, and now he is totally against P2P. I guess once he had acquired every “Dicks Picks” album of Dead music he turned into a Dick.

      All I’m sayin’, is that Entertainment and Software companies worldwide are driving this Witch Hunt. It’s up to them to try and catch us, and it’s up to us to not get caught. If you’re going to fuck Adobe, Sony, Virgin, Microshit etc., use protection.  

      • Fanden

        Well said.

        • ScrewEwe2

          Thank You Sir. :-)

      • ScrewEwe2

        Sorry, I should have said Senator Patrick Leahy of Vermont, not Congressman Patrick Lehman of who knows where.

        Either I’m a geezer and going senile or I’m a geezer with short & long term memory loss from hittin’ the Bong.

      • CUNT

        yeah its great i can afford a VPN people with no jobs can get caught hahaha

    • Ryan
      • ReviveMe

         Gotta keep the Yanks sweet.

        • Ryan

          This may just be the spark needed to reform the commission or at least get him his pink slip / P45

  • Guest

    no wonder Europe is going bankrupt, they waste such an enormous amount of money on copyright protection. If I was voting I would be asking for real cost benefit reports and not the bullsh!t industry reports. ie we intercepted x amount of urls, however x users still got around it saving x loss on piracy further losing x currency out of Europe and into the american economy.

    • Violated0

      The Digital Economy Act 2010 will cost the tax paying public £5.8 million up to the end of 2013 and even before they send the first warning letter. This is not to mention the operating costs.

      The interesting part is that the public will want their money back and the rights holders have to pay them through a fee set to send out these warning letters. The more used the cheaper the charge but due to the cost the less used the higher the fee seems likely.

      The ironic part is that even most rights holders see the DEA as misplaced in being the wrong answer. Let me put it this way when DMCA take-down notices cost them zero or very little, even entire site blocking cant be more than a few thousand in lawyer costs, but there is the DEA soon running up into tens and hundreds of thousands,

      So the DEA is simply a tool that some have been arguing for but what most will be unwilling to pay for. It is just priced outside of the market for most rights holders leaving the whole DEA to one or two big studios.

    • Twat

       shut up

  • http://torrentfreak.com/ Rob8urcakes

    This proposal by OfCom and their Government Masters is an outright shambles and clearly in breach of the rules of natural justice simply on grounds that the ISP subscribers & customers are ALL presumed guilty until you can prove yourself innocent – and you can only get access to do that by paying a fee of £20 up-front simply to lodge your appeal.

    That is NOT justice.  It’s extortion.

    And if you’re on low pay, unemployed, sick or elderly and your only income is from State benefits then you’re fucked, coz you’re denied access to “justice” simply because you can’t afford the 20-quid to lodge your appeal ffs!!

    The UK stinks and so do these Tory sociopaths in government.  So I urge you – in whatever Country you reside – to please respond to this public consultation after reading our comments, and complain to your local MP too. 
    http://stakeholders.ofcom.org.uk/consultations/infringement-notice/
    Closing date is 26 July 2012. 

  • bantomang

    Well now that makes a lot of sene dude.
    Privacy-dot.tk

  • Steve Donaghy

    Hello Encryption!

  • http://profiles.google.com/sol.europa Bill C

    2014 can’t come soon enough in my book!!!

    So I can vote for Independence and get Westminster out of my Internet connection!!

    ^_^ at most I’ll just need to be lucky for 18 months after 2014 law goes into effect think i can afford a Great VPN for that length… ^_^

  • Guest

    It’s all about the money and… censorship.

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  • http://twitter.com/Anime4PSP Anime 4 PSP

    “On Government order, subscriber right of appeal has been seriously reduced.”
    Government? Ha, don’t make me laugh. Say it straight “with order from greedy bitches” …
    Poor UK. UK ppl should fight against this shit.

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

      Oh, I’m pretty sure that they will and as soon as this law itself (if it passes) is challenged in court, the courts will throw it out.

  • Ruin_uruloki

    “Additionally, the Code states that copyright owners may only send a CIR
    if they have “gathered evidence in accordance with the approved
    procedures” which lead to the “reasonable” belief that the subscriber
    has infringed a rightsholder’s copyright or that he has allowed someone
    else to use his account in order to do so.”

    Does this mean they have to prove who the person that infringed the copyright is before they can send a CIR?

    I’m moving back to WEP

    • Rabbit80

      Better still, if your router supports VLANs, set up a new VLAN and a second wifi network using it. Leave it open.

    • MadAsASnake

       Absolutely. This bar is so high that if honoured, not one single DIR can be sent. It is already a matter of case law that IP is insufficient to identify the infringer.

      • Violated0

        The battleground will be with the average public.

        There is no way they can stop our infringement and they know that when we are always one step (at least) ahead of the game. So this is all about them attacking the general public and us informing these innocents on how to defend themselves from these claims.

        My main concern with the DEA is their £20 charge when for some single mother living on benefits that can be too much. So I sure hope they allow a hardship exception or these single mothers can’t protest that she sold her computer months ago and is only now locked into a 12-month ISP contract.

        I have always hated how copyright abuses the market and here they are in 2014 due to shit spray the entire population.

  • Andrew me

    Really , they think that this is going to stop people sharing content online? If anything this will just encourage innovators to come up with a way to hide torrent traffic more. Be it through encryption or vpn style software solutions. Why can a bit of software not generate an ip address and hide the original ip address. Yes there would have to be millions of ip addresses to go around(v6ip protocols) but i am sure people would be prepared to pay a small fee if there details are safe from the intruding eyes of the Monopolistic entertainment industry.

    When a  law is passed that is seen as going against the public interest it will be ignored, I am just waiting until the government comes to pass this and is stopped because it is not legal.

  • Anon

    Everyone – really everyone – must get a VPN. I don’t think VPNs can be banned – especially in Outer Mongolia or Whatever-stan. Ultimately it will be a battle of the VPN providers – whichever of them is most resistant to government bullying will make big bucks.

  • Nospam

    VPN on go fuck yourself I will do what the fuck I want online try stopping me! I will continue until I die to upload and download and sail my pirate ship on the high seas of the Internet. So pointless little laws from pointless little men. Go fuck yourself.

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  • Anon

    Guilty? Lose your internet. Innocent? Pay a fine, and then maybe still lose your internet.
    All on the basis of corporate “evidence” produced by undisclosed methods and closed software.

    How did this ever get passed? Seriously, what the actual fuck??

    It would be interesting to see if successful appeals got a refund.

    • MadAsASnake

       I wouldn’t pay £20 for the appeal. A single letter denying responsibility and see them in court if they dare.

      • Violated0

        It is in Court where most people should find justice. There is clearly a large gap between what the Courts have already ruled and what the DEA is writing. That gap will one day need to be closed.

        A strong offence is the best defence. Maybe you can even make your case such a problem for them that they give up.

  • Anonymous

    before the Tories came into government, they were against this. now they are in power, they have introduced this and the surveillance act. ed vaisey must be one of the most contemptuous members of government ever. nothing in the Hargreaves report has been adopted. people are penalised on accusation. they have no recourse other than what the government says. all accused are guilty unless they can afford to go to court and prove innocence. i sincerely hope that the EUCHR jump all over this. the US government and US entertainment industries must be thinking that all Xmases have arrived at once. there is nothing in this bill that will benefit the UK at all as it is based on total lies and bullshit dreamed up by members of the BPI. i hope there is now a complete ban on buying anything remotely connected to music and movies. i heard that China and Iran want to know how the UK managed to get this into being as even their citizens would have rebelled against it. what a disgrace this country has become in 2 short years of Cameron’s rule!!

  • Gae

    This is fucking stupid. £20 just so you can appeal a false allegation?

    Oh and nice how they just happened to remove the bit that requires copyright holders to show any kind of proof.

    I think some protests are needed as this is unacceptable.

    • Violated0

      This will be the seed of the Government’s downfall. Annoying millions of the voting public is not a plan that will end well.

      • http://www.facebook.com/egnyquist Erik G. Nyquist

        It’s ended well for them every other time they did it.  The voters don’t matter half as much as the people who pay for the campaigns, the people who own the papers, the media companies… Who were those again…oh right, the same people trying to get this law passed. 

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  • Guv

    So what if I have an open wireless network. Is that still legal in the UK?
    If someone across the street was utilizing my open wireless network, surely that doesn’t make ME the guilty party?

    • ReviveMe

       If you haven’t taken necessary steps to secure your network, then you have allowed infringement to take place.

      You can claim the infringing content was not downloaded and the notice is an error… but they have the EVIDENCE!

      Time – Place – IP.

      Must have been you. Don’t try and get out of this.

      • Norm

         i leave my WIFI connection open continuously and i have not allowed infringement to take place.

  • JAMES DROID

      Are you tired of not knowing what your employees, children, spouse are up to? This Application might be the best solution .
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  • Me

    If you leave your wireless open, is like a bank manager leaving their safe open. Shut up pirating scum, you are all thieves!!!

    • http://www.facebook.com/people/Gear-Mentation/100003097514663 Gear Mentation

       And proud of it.  I STEAL CULTURE AND I LET OTHER PEOPLE STEAL CULTURE!!!

    • Violated0

      I guess you missed that the Olympics are soon to be hosted here and providers are certainly offering open free WIFI for people to keep in touch. It is not too hard to see how this can be misused,

      Thieves are they? Reckless bank managers? The Olympics?

      Then this is all overlooking that British Telecom are offering a free WIFI network across the entire country with their BT Open Zone. Home users only need to enable this on their wireless router and then who cares what others do?

    • TURD

       no its like a open internet connection, what a shit analogy

    • Irony

      You, sir, are a thief of the free market so go fuck yourself, keyword: hypocrite.

  • http://profile.yahoo.com/KSWWXJ4VJJUR2WPMOU2BSKHO7Y Singleton

    as Julie said I can’t believe that anybody able to get paid $5408 in four weeks on the internet. have you read this web page  (Click on menu Home more information)    http://goo.gl/Th041   

  • hellblazer

    “The tacit contract between a government and the people governed is that
    the government will trust the people and the people will trust the
    government. But once the government begins to mistrust the people it is
    governing, it loses its mandate to rule because it is no longer acting
    as a spokesman for the people, but is acting as an agent of
    persecution.”

    Welcome to UK Corporation Police state. Some said the NWO would never happen, didn’t take longer before everyone openly started talking about the United States of Europe.

    I only hope to god people realise before they don’t have any rights to fight back with.

  • ReviveMe

    It’s alright guys, it’s gonna be ok!

    In 2010 the Lib Dems voted to REPEAL the DEA!

    Come of Clegg, you spinless cunt!

    • Anonymous

      I want to know the retards that voted for him in the first place. Go figure.

      • ReviveMe

        Well, they all live in Sheffield Hallam…

        We vote for our local representatives, not the leader or the party. Even if the leader is an utter idiot, the local MP might be a cause worth fighting for.

  • http://twitter.com/SingletonArline SingletonArline

    just as Amanda answered I am taken by surprise that a mom able to make $7690 in four weeks on the computer. did you see this website  (Click on menu Home more information)   http://goo.gl/xybbY  

  • ACTA_FOOL

    Canadian Copyright Bill C-11 passes House of Commons and Senate

    http://www.barrysookman.com/2012/06/26/copyright-bill-c-11-passes-third-reading-in-house-of-commons/“Earlier this evening, June 26, 2012, the Bill was passed by the Senate.
    The Senate went in camera to discuss its report which may include
    observations. Before coming into force, the Bill will go through an order-in-council process.”

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  • Jimbo

    not seen anything about any public representative bodies, eg ORG, organising any protests or even stating anything about the invasion of privacy, removal of human rights, anything as yet, let alone how it violates EU policy. is the UK going to become the worst of the so-called democratic countries and crap on it’s citizens in favour of corporate interests? are all the citizens going to become criminals, receiving accusations, fines and jail time over plastic discs? what an unbelievable government the coalition has turned out to be. the Lib Dems just sitting there letting Cameron do exactly as he pleases, with no fight at all!

  • onefromthecrowd

    I assume that next logical step should make providers to introduce VPN free internet access plans. Something like if more than 50% of your traffic will be encrypted you will get throttled. And the best reason behind that of course is the fight against terrorism and pedophiles. 

    From another side it would happen only if “they” really wanted to protect their materials, but looks like the actual reason behind it is that they just want to get easy buck with this incredible annoying “Big Brother” system.  

    Also i don’t like the idea of “everyone using VPN”, because this way we really start to look like criminals hiding, and guys from MAFIAA try to hunt us down. I believe that after some time there can come the moment when US will start to introduce financial sanctions against all this third world countries who offer a decent VPN access. 

  • http://twitter.com/TylerReyna TylerReyna

    just as Theodore implied I didnt know that any one can get paid $7309 in 1 month on the internet. did you look at this website (Click on menu Home more information)  http://goo.gl/TQLHA   

  • Guv

     Ok, but that still doesn’t answer my question. Is it legal for me here in the UK to run an open wireless network?
    And how would the ISP/Government be able to identify ME as someone who downloaded something they shouldn’t have as opposed to someone that took advantage of the way I want my network set up?

    • stacysimpsondd

         by the way ..Are you tired of not knowing what your employees, children, spouse are up to? This Application might be the best solution .easy to use and  100% UNDETECTABLE with so many  features (Call Tracking,GPS Location Tracking,SMS Tracking….) and other amazing features.It worked perfect with me , For More Info => => SPY4U  
       

      • Guest

        Flagged 4 Spam

  • mc007

    why are torrents still in use at ll ? I am just wondering why the heck beside of usenet and vpn’s is nothing better around yet ?

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