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BPI Petitions ISPs Over p2p

Posted by: Ed on Jul 11, 2006 - 10:28 AM
News
The recorded music industry's trade group has invited internet service providers (ISPs) to "enforce their own terms of use" and freeze the accounts of customers who illegally fileshare.

The British Phonographic Industry (BPI) has written to Tiscali and Cable & Wireless asking them to suspend 59 accounts for "illegal filesharing".

Until now, the BPI has focused on individuals, rather than other firms.

The ISPs should now "put their houses in order and pull the plug on these people", said the BPI.

The internet has made it far easier for people to share music files and thus to breach copyright.

'Unequivocal Evidence'
The BPI says this latest move will enable the record industry "to deal with a greater volume of cases more quickly and efficiently".

BPI has identified 17 Tiscali IP addresses and 42 Cable & Wireless IP addresses which were used to upload "significant quantities of music owned by BPI members".

While the BPI can identify which service providers have customers breaking filesharing rules, only the ISPs themselves can identify the exact customers.

It was unacceptable for ISPs to turn a "blind eye to industrial-scale copyright infringement", said BPI chairman Peter Jamieson.

"We are providing unequivocal evidence of copyright infringement via their services," he said.

"It is now up to them to put their house in order and pull the plug on these people."

Both Tiscali and Cable & Wireless had terms of use which banned copyright infringement, the BPI said.

C&W acknowledged it had an "acceptable use policy" for itself and its ISP, Bulldog, which covered illegal filesharing.

"This would normally mean that any accounts used for illegal filesharing are closed. We will take whatever steps are necessary to put the matter right," the firm said in a statement.

Tiscali, meanwhile, said it does not freeze customer accounts automatically when asked to, but can do so following an investigation, Reuters reported.

The firm did not respond to phone calls.

BPI has taken legal action in 139 filesharing cases. The four that have gone to court have produced verdicts in BPI's favour, while 111 individuals have settled out of court.

Story source: bbc.co.uk.




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