...somehow I don't see this taking off in the US......but you never
know.....rf


Warner to Netherlands ISPs: Content for Names

During a seminar on "online piracy" in the Netherlands last week a
representative of Warner Home Entertainment made it clear that Internet
Service Providers won't get movie content licensed, unless they provide the
indentifying information of their customers on demand.

In a concluding panel discussion at the seminar a representative of one of
the Dutch ISPs said they declined to hand over the IDs of its file-sharing
customers to anti-piracy organisation BREIN to protect their privacy. Warner
Home Video's Ruud Lamers responded that as long a the providers stick to
this opinion they don't have to expect any content from the major players.
That is, Warner does not want to be confronted with "anonymous" IP addresses
in case of copyright enforcement, and puts the delivery of identifying
information as a condition for licensing deals!

This threat came a week before BREIN took five ISPs to court today to obtain
the identities behind the IP addresses of 42 file-shares. The ISPs requested
a procedure on the merits instead of today's normal summary proceeding.
Whatever will be decided, a final outcome is yet unclear, especially since
the ISPs have counter-sued BREIN themselves. In the meantime apparently no
movie content for them till they stop to protect their customers' privacy.

Source 
http://constitutionalcode.blogspot.com/2005/06/warner-to-isps-content-for-na
mes.html



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