Virgin Media and BPI join forces to attack illegal filesharing
Virgin Media will launch a campaign against illegal downloading next week, when it’ll begin firing off warning letters to to subscribers that the BPI believes are sharing copyright music files.
The move is being billed by the cable firm as an “education campaign”. At this stage there will be no “three strikes” process; customers who continue to fileshare illegally will not be disconnected.
Accounts identified as being used for illegal music sharing by the record industry will receive two letters: one from Virgin Media and one from the BPI. Investigators will monitor copyright-infringing BitTorrent swarms and log Virgin Media IP addresses, which will be passed on to the ISP to identify the customers.
Virgin Media will distribute both letters, and no personally identifiable information will be disclosed to the BPI.
The letters will include advice on “how to prevent account misuse”, “avoid the risk of legal action”, and warn customers that peer to peer networks carry “increased threats from viruses and spyware”, a Virgin Media statement said. You can read the Virgin Media letter here and the BPI letter here (PDFs).
The campaign will run as a trial for a flexible period of about two months. Its effect on behaviour will then be reviewed. Virgin Media claims a lot of account holders may not be aware their kids or others are using their line to download music illegally, for example via an usecured Wi-Fi network.
The BPI has been pushing for enforcement alongside education, but Virgin Media said it was unwilling to disconnect customers who don’t stop accessing illegal music. A spokesman said today: “It’s a bit of a judgement call for us to be making threats of disconnection or account suspension. We weren’t willing to do that.”
“There are now so many lawful cheap and free music services out there that we believe an education campaign in partnership with the BPI is the best way forward.”
The ISP industry is under enormous government pressure to cut a deal with the record industry following a successful lobbying campaign by the BPI. Ministers have vowed to introduce anti-filesharing legislation if a self-regulatory solution is not found.
The BPI has recently begun threatening ISPs with court injunctions if they do not agree to act against illegal filesharers. One such threat sent to Carphone Warehouse received short shrift from the firm’s bosses, who said they would never disconnect their customers and that they didn’t believe legislation will be brought forward.
Virgin Media appears to have taken a less confrontational approach to its dealings with the record industry. Although the “education campaign” is toothless in this first trial phase, getting a major ISP to publicly adopt a role in battling illegal downloading is a big win for the BPI.
Its chief executive Geoff Taylor said in a statement: “Education is absolutely key to reducing the extent of illegal downloading… this joint campaign with Virgin Media is the first step towards achieving that goal.” A survey commissioned by the record industry earlier this year claimed most illegal downloaders would stop if warned.
The BPI struck a deal with Tiscali to implement a full three strikes last year. Four out of 21 warned account holders ended up disconnected from the internet. The deal fell apart however in a row over who should pay for the process. ®
2 Pings to “Virgin Media and BPI cracks down on torrent abusers”
4 Responses to “Virgin Media and BPI cracks down on torrent abusers”
-
1. Plisky Says:
July 6th, 2008 at 4:07 pmSo , this is only with music i take it and possibly film.
Would any one think this would also apply with torrenting pictures, because if this does apply to pictures it is stuf as people canjust google what they want and right click.. -
2. SM Says:
July 10th, 2008 at 2:15 pm“Investigators will monitor copyright-infringing BitTorrent swarms and log Virgin Media IP addresses”
In about 20 minutes anyone can learn how to get onto a local WI-FI and use that? Will they be monitoring what media is actually being exchanged or will anyone on a Bit Torrent swarm be strung out and shot?
-
3. james sanderno Says:
June 16th, 2009 at 11:59 amI’ve had the same letter, what a ballache. How they work is they can track torrents and take registers of the IP
addresses connected to a torrent or other fileshare (gnutella etc.). They then send their list of IP addresses to
the ISP’s, who then are forced by law to send you a letter. If you carry on, they can prosecute, stop your internet
etc. Virgin are the worst for it in my experience, but most of the big isp’s do it now.
I tried all sorts of stuff, Peer Guardian etc. doesnt work. i’m under contract to my ISP, but the proxy sites that
are free basically dont support filesharing or anything else thats fun. Eventually i found a program which sorts it
out. It runs in the background and hides your isp through their servers. Its not free, but i don’t think any real
proxy service is. Works great, just under 20 quid.
-
4. website video Says:
January 25th, 2010 at 9:55 pmI have needed this information for so long. Where have you been!!! Thanks



October 5th, 2010 at 10:57 am
Thank you……
What I get from your blog is, you are an excellent writer and you know what the readers want. I wish you all the good luck in your future posts….
March 12th, 2011 at 12:02 pm
Star2Pros – Get off the lower ladders…
[...This trackback notifies you of the usage of...]…