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Eircom to proceed with cutting off internet access to illegal music downloaders

Article from the Irish times:

An important High Court decision today allowing Eircom proceed with cutting off internet access to illegal music downloaders, mainly peer-to-peer music sharing groups, has major implications for all other internet service providers.

Legal sources predict the judgment by Mr Justice Peter Charleton may compel other internet service providers to cut off services to illegal downloaders who fail to heed warnings to desist what the judge described as “theft”.

The judgment arose from a settlement last year of proceedings by four major record companies – EMI, Sony, Universal and Warner -against Eircom over the use by others of its services for illegal downloading. Other cases are pending.

Under the settlement, Eircom agreed to implement measures aimed at stopping illegal downloading, including disclosing to the companies the uploaders and downloaders’ identities through their IP addresses, and ultimately cutting them off if illegal downloading persisted.

Mr Justice Charleton today ruled concerns raised by the Data Protection Commissioner about those measures, including about the rights of access to the internet, did not prevent the measures being implemented. The measures were lawful and compatible with the data protection legislation, he found.

There was nothing in the criminal or civil law which legalises that which is otherwise illegal simply because the transaction takes place over the internet, he said.

The internet “is only a means of communication, it has not rewritten the legal rules of each nation through which it passes.”

Since the early days of the internet, copyright material was placed on the world wide web by those with no entitlement to share it and downloaded by others who would normally have expected to pay for it, he said.

Younger people were now so much in the habit of downloading copyright material they appeared to believe they were entitled to have for free what is not theirs, he added.

While the removal of internet access over illegal downloading was a serious sanction, there was “no freedom to break the law”.

There was “a fundamental right” to copyright in Irish law existing since the time of Saint Colmcille who was often quoted for his aphorism: “to each cow its calf and to every book its copy”, he said.

“The right to be identified with and to reasonably exploit one’s own original creative endeavour I regard as a human right.”

The courts were required to supply, even in the absence of legislative intervention, appropriate remedies for the undermining of rights within the scheme of fundamental law the Constitution represents and were obliged to protect the rights of copyright owners from unjust attack.

The owners of copyright have the exclusive right to undertake or authorise others to make that work available to the public but that legal entitlement was being “flagrantly violated” by peer to peer illegal downloading.

In the circumstances, it was completely within the legitimate interests of Eircom to act as a body which upholds the law.

There was nothing disproportionate about cutting off internet access because of three infringements of copyright as proposed by Eircom and the music companies. There were also adequate personal safeguards in the protocol agreed by the parties.

The companies and Eircom propose a “three strikes and you’re out” protocol for dealing with illegal downloaders under which Eircom will first give notice to the downloaders their activity is illegal and should be stopped. If it continues, they will be warned they risk having their broadband slowed down. If infringement continued, Eircom would send a third warning their internet access would be cut off altogether and they would be cut off.

The Data Protection Commissioner had expressed the view the Data Protection Act was an obstacle to implementation of the measures as these involved the release of “sensitive personal” information. The Commissioner’s concerns related not to the actual termination of the broadband service but whether the process leading up to termination amounted to an interference with subscribers’ personal rights.

The sides asked the High Court to rule on those issues. The Commissioner did not participate in the case due to concerns over legal costs.

Mr Justice Charleton ruled that IP addresses of suspected illegal downloaders in the possession of the record companies who intend to give them to Eircom are not “personal data” or sensitive personal data such as required the companies to comply with data protection issues.

None of the companies have any interest in personally identifying any living persons infringing their copyright and the entire purpose of the litigation was to uphold the law on copyright, he said.

He ruled the processing by Eircom of data of suspected illegal downloaders, as proposed under the settlement, did not amount to “unwarranted” processing on grounds it prejudiced the fundamental rights and freedoms or legitimate interests of the subscriber.

Neither the companies nor Eircom, as owners or assignees of valuable copyright, were in any way interested in prosecuting downloaders for criminal offences under copyright laws, he said. Noting in the protocol agreed would ever involve the disposal of criminal proceedings or any court sentence.

In all the circumstances, the graduated response process which could result in a subscriber being cut off was lawful and the sides could lawfully proceed to implement their settlement.

Free Wifi for Irish Rail Users

From the Irish Independent

Independent.ie – Tuesday April 06 2010

Tuesday April 06 2010

Free wi-fi for rail users

Rail users can make use of free wi-fi internet access on selected Dublin to Cork services, Iarnrod Eireann has said.

An initial trial of the service will last six months while rail chiefs assess the uptake.

Iarnrod Eireann said coverage was strong on the Dublin to Cork line, with access to mobile broadband networks from O2, Vodafone and 3.

If successful, the service will be rolled out to other routes including Intercity, DART and Commuter services.

“Many customers are already travelling with us because rail travel offers the scope to use travel time productively,” said an Iarnrod Eireann spokesman.

“Wi-fi obviously broadens such scope dramatically.”

Tests have shown that passengers should be able to get download speeds of up to 3.5 megabytes.

Press Association

Ferrets key to bridging the broadband divide between cities and rural areas

According to the Daily Telegraph:

The animals have been used by Virgin Media for over a year to help lay cables for its broadband service, the company has disclosed.

The ferrets wear jackets fitted with a microchip which is able to analyse any breaks or damage in the underground network.

The development could help increase broadband in current Internet “dead zones”, giving access to inaccessible places, and and helping bridge the ‘digital divide’.

Currently most broadband technologies are limited to short distances from central switching offices so most companies focus on cities to keep costs down.

The government has set a target of universal broadband access of 2Mbps by 2012. Analysts estimate that the cost of running fibre optic cables to all parts of the country could cost anywhere between £10 billion and £25 billion. A 50p levy of every phone line in the country has been proposed to cover costs.

Currently around two million homes, one in 10 households, are without broadband.

Jon James, director of broadband for Virgin Media, said: “For hundreds of years, ferrets have helped humans in various jobs. Our decision to use them is due to their strong nesting instinct, their long, lean build and inquisitive nature, and for their ability to get down holes. We initially kept the trial low-key as we wanted to assess how well the ferrets fitted into our operations before revealing this enterprising scheme.”

Eircom Broadband Offer Slammed

According to Ireland Offline, this morning’s announcement of the roll-out of “Next Generation Broadband from Eircom is nothing of the sort and is merely “window dressing” for a hike in charges

“What is not in the headlines is the subtle but important change from a speed based model to a usage based model of charging,” Ireland Offline said.

“Let us be clear on this announcement, this is neither Next Generation anything nor will 8 MB be delivered to the vast majority of hapless consumers.While IrelandOffline welcome the attention to the important issue of contention we feel this announcement is nothing more than window dressing.”

“This is yet another attack on the hard pressed telecommunications consumers of Ireland. Not only do they have to endure the highest line-rental on the planet they now have to endure a E2 charge for each Gigabyte they go over their paltry caps. For instance the “Broadband Basic” has a minuscule 10GB cap barely enough for the average “tech savy” family. In reality this package will cost E50 for all but the lightest users. That’s E50 + line rental making the total E75.36 per month. This is hardly a giant leap forward it’s more like a gigantic leap into the dark past and into your wallet.”

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