|
Register | FAQ | The Twelve Commandments | Members List | Calendar | Arcade | Find the Best VPN | Today's Posts | Search |
Download/Upload Problems Problems with downloading or uploading files through the Gnutella network. * Please specify whether the file problem is a Gnutella network shared file OR a Torrent file. * |
| LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
| |||
The Policing Powers of the Record & Film Industry indreamsiwwu I agree with your sentiment when you say: Quote:
I feel especially aggrieved because the BPI has deliberately been rationing music in the UK for years, right up to the point where the Internet became a popular means of communication. What is worse, they’re still looking for ways to keep music CD prices high for the UK customer, for example in the US you can get six tracks on a CD single but in the UK you can only get three – that six track US single would be split into two three track UK singles. Therefore, in the UK, to get the same amount of music as you can get in the US, you would have to pay twice. In the past, the BPI has tried and failed in trying to get UK governments to put a levy on blank tapes, both video and cassette, and ran advertising campaigns saying that it was illegal to tape (backup) your own vinyl records (so you should buy your records twice). Plus, DJ friends of mine were constantly telling me that the BPI were trying to close them down, mainly because they were playing imported records from the US and not approved UK releases. As far as I am concerned, the BPI is there to encourage music rationing so that CD and album prices remain high, to that end they will go after new recording technologies in the public domain so that they can either control and/or abolish it, e.g. P2P usage. Now in the UK, this new Digital Economy bill has handed the BPI (British Phonographic Industry - the UK version of the RIAA) policing powers, which I believe has happened with the RIAA in the US as well. So, the Digital Economy bill and Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act have curtailed UK citizens’ Internet freedoms, which effectively translate down to any jumped up petty official, i.e. anyone in authority, can demand from your ISP your Internet records without having to obtain a judicial warrant. UK Bob |
| |||
the g word uk bob, I could go on and on discussing the philosophy of internet freedom, or freedom in general, for that matter, but it still all comes down to one major component of today's world: GREED It's the be-all and end-all of the "c" word. And that's all I can say before the NSA starts wire-tapping me... Must...censor....myself.... |
| |