The British Phonographic Industry (BPI), the group representing music labels in the UK, has hit out at ISP estimates over the cost of implementing a system to monitor and suspend suspected music pirates.
The BPI says that instead of costing well over £300m per year, the actual cost, based on their own research, will only be £13.85m for the first year and decreasing from then on.
However, BPI's numbers do not correspond with several other reports, including one from the government, which supports the BPI's plans to implement such a system. The government's report indicated that up to 40,000 households will lose the ability to pay for the Internet if this plan is to go ahead and that the total cost could be as high as £500m.
Web giants Facebook, Google, Yahoo and eBay have all come out against the proposed plan, and even the UK intelligence agencies and police have criticized the plan for making surveillance of criminals much more difficult if it forces the average Internet user to encrypt their data transfers. If the average person is using encryption, it makes it much harder to track and detect criminal activity, and it would also make the BPI's proposed system useless at monitoring piracy.
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The BPI says that instead of costing well over £300m per year, the actual cost, based on their own research, will only be £13.85m for the first year and decreasing from then on.
However, BPI's numbers do not correspond with several other reports, including one from the government, which supports the BPI's plans to implement such a system. The government's report indicated that up to 40,000 households will lose the ability to pay for the Internet if this plan is to go ahead and that the total cost could be as high as £500m.
Web giants Facebook, Google, Yahoo and eBay have all come out against the proposed plan, and even the UK intelligence agencies and police have criticized the plan for making surveillance of criminals much more difficult if it forces the average Internet user to encrypt their data transfers. If the average person is using encryption, it makes it much harder to track and detect criminal activity, and it would also make the BPI's proposed system useless at monitoring piracy.
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