On 04/05/2011 12:19 PM, Christopher Woods (CustomMade) wrote:


-----Original Message-----
From: get_iplayer-boun...@lists.infradead.org
[mailto:get_iplayer-boun...@lists.infradead.org] On Behalf Of Ben Webb
Sent: 05 April 2011 11:32
To: get_iplayer@lists.infradead.org
Subject: Re: legality

On 5 April 2011 11:11, Ian Stirling
<get_ipla...@mauve.plus.com>  wrote:
You _do_not_ need a license to watch any other content.
Foreign TV you
can pick up with a really big antenna, or content a licenced
broadcaster provides in non-realtime ways.

As far as I am aware you are correct about non-realtime
content (you can watch iPlayer on demand content without a tv
license for example), however, I was under the impression
thta watching foreign live content, whether using a big
antenna/satellite or streamed over the internet required a TV license.

This was initially thought to be the case but Article 49 of the Treaty of
Rome (as amended) which enshrines free provision of intra-EU state services,
including telly. BBCRefuseniks[1] has this to say:


The previous legislation which I chased up - the wireless telegraphy act of 1949 (as amended) - specifically defines a 'television programme service', as one that is licenced under the 'television broadcasters act' (not the real title), so that makes it all crystal clear that foreign stations can never be covered.
The 'recent' - 2003 - I looked this up in 2004 and it may not have been
in the sources I was using - legislation does not specifically cite that
act, it just defines a TV as receiving a television programme service.

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