Picture of Jude Umeh
Umeh: ISPs may be worried about how the three-strikes rule will be implemented

Three-strikes rule for illegal downloaders

View from BCS: the latest proposal to combat online piracy will encounter several hurdles, says Jude Umeh

Written by Jude Umeh

On 12 February, The Times reported that a draft consultation green paper to be released by the government will recommend a three-strikes rule against the illegal download of copyright content such as music or films.

The proposed rule is designed to be enforced by internet service providers (ISPs), and will legally oblige them to suspend and terminate the account of any subscriber repeatedly caught downloading illegal content. This might sound like an excellent idea to some, but will it work as intended?

The proposal regime could require ISPs to take three steps when dealing with illegal content downloading, which are as follows:

1. Send a warning email to the suspected user account;
2. Suspend account if caught downloading illegal content again; and
3. Terminate the user account on the occasion of a third offence.

On the one hand, this move is welcomed by those bodies that represent the interests of industry stakeholders. These organisations, which include the likes of the BPI and IFPI, are rightly concerned with the protection of copyright works that make up the primary revenue source of the creative industry.

But on the other hand, end users or consumers of media, and perhaps even the ISPs themselves, may be justifiably worried about how it will be implemented.

From a practical point of view, the three-strikes rule seems like a perfectly reasonable approach to solving the vexing and costly issue of illegal downloads. Because ISPs are de facto gatekeepers of the internet, they can therefore be seen as the logical and practical choice to police the content that passes through their servers.

There are precedents in countries such as France and the US, which have already adopted a similar rule.

However, early reactions to the proposal have also identified some fairly obvious obstacles. For example, how will ISPs prove an internet account holder is guilty of illegally downloading content?

Implementing the three-strikes protocol will undoubtedly bring some cost implications for ISPs, in addition to the negative PR associated with targeting their own customers and the terminated user can just sign up with another ISP, unless there is some shared register of offenders.

Alternatives include the pre-emptive adoption of a self-regulatory process as defined and agreed by the ISPs; the application of a blanket surcharge on all ISP accounts to enable free-for-all file sharing, as suggested by the Songwriters Association of Canada; or the creation of better-value propositions, such as the BBC iPlayer, which can compete with ‘free’ or illegal content.

Overall, the proposed three-strikes rule may yet be another stepping stone that needs to be tried, tested and perhaps discarded on the never-ending quest for an equitable online future for the commercial, creative and consumer stakeholders groups.

Jude Umeh is author of the BCS DRM blog, which can be found at: www.tinyurl.com/3ark38

  • Have your say
  • Send to a friend
  • Print this
  • Share

Tags:

reader comments

related articles

 

related whitepapers

today's top stories

Face facts: social media is the future

No organisation can afford to ignore the way business communications are changing 18 Mar 2010

Is the data watchdog about to pounce?

Experts believe the Information Commissioner’s Office is itching to use its new power to impose hefty fines for data breaches. Martin Courtney reports 18 Mar 2010

Lloyd’s of London gears up for regulation

CIO Peter Hambling tells Angelica Mari about how the insurance market has updated its IT infrastructure to comply with new regulations 18 Mar 2010

Protests greet new Digital Economy Bill amendment

ISPs, digital rights groups and Liberal Democrat supporters cry foul 05 Mar 2010

IT Leaders' Forum in association with IBM

A unique opportunity to hear from expert speakers and engage in a debate about the future of the CIO job function 29 Jan 2010

Advertisement

Keys to successful Service‐Oriented Architecture implementation

This white paper explores best practices and general design patterns for service oriented architecture (SOA).

The Roadmap to IT Maturity — Matching Strategy to Infrastructure for Business Success

This paper defines a roadmap for matching infrastructure strategy to business success.

Advertisement

Keep up to date with the latest products, services and technologies from the world's leading IT companies; ITHound.com brings you over 6,000 white papers, case studies and analyst reports.

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

More available - click 'submit' to view

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Jobs

Related jobs

Job of the week

Job alerts

Sign up here

Find your next job

IT Salary Checker

Check salary here

Advertisement

Latest poll

NHS centralised data

NHS centralised data

Do you think the NHS can be trusted to safely look after personal data electronically?

View poll results

Latest audio and video articles

Video

HP unveils S Series notebooks

'Prosumer' line overhauled 01 Mar 2010

Web Seminar Listings

Preparing for enterprise-scale Windows 7 migration

The web seminar on 18 Feb will discuss how Windows 7 migration can increase IT efficiency in large enterprises, freeing up budgetary and personnel resources to focus on business innovation. Our panel of experts will examine the strategies, tools and services IT leaders can use to migrate successfully and reap the rewards of increased efficiency. 19 Feb 2010

Latest in-depth articles

Smiths Group CIO Brian JonesAnalysis

Q&A: Brian Jones, CIO, Smiths Group

How should conglomerates be looking at the new IT technologies coming through? Brian Jones explains. 19 Mar 2010

Analysis

What security strategy should enterprises adopt after the recession?

Act now to put your your firm on higher growth path advise CISOs 19 Mar 2010

Primary Navigation