Is cutting people off from the net the only controversial aspect of the bill?
No. There are also concerns about how the file-sharing measures could affect public wi-fi services. Specifically, people are concerned that the owner of a connection could be held liable even if they are not personally responsible for downloading pirated material.
So, for instance, if someone used wireless connectivity in a cafe to download free content, the cafe owner would be held responsible. Universities and libraries are also concerned about this aspect.
Opponents are also concerned about laws to force internet service providers to block websites that host copyright free material.
The part of the bill that refers to this, Clause 18, was dropped by the government during the wash-up period. But a new amendment was inserted elsewhere, giving the government similar powers.
Originally the clause was intended to future-proof the legislation against other methods of copyright theft not yet thought about.
While it still allows copyright owners to force service providers to block access to certain sites, the process will now be subject to further debate and would need approval before being implemented.
Why are these measures being brought in?
The government says it wants to protect the UK's creative industries, which it says is under threat from piracy.
It is difficult to measure how much illegal file-sharing is going on. It is reported that more than half of all the traffic on the net in the UK is content being shared illegally but service providers say they cannot measure it exactly.
The creative industries estimate that six million people in the UK regularly file-share copyright content without permission, costing the industries revenue that they cannot recoup.
A recent industry study, by economics firm TERA Consultants, estimated that the UK's creative industries experienced losses of £1.2bn in 2008 due to piracy.
But campaign groups contest these figures and argue that the music industry has been slow to adapt to the internet age. They say that the legislation has been brought into appease big business, whilst penalising individuals.
Adam Stephenson G325
Wednesday 30 March 2011
Tuesday 1 March 2011
Mark Zuckerberg
(born May 14, 1984) he is an American computer scientist and software developer best known for creating the social networking site Facebook, of which he is CEO and president. It was co-founded as a private company in 2004 by Zuckerberg and classmates Dustin Moskovitz, Eduardo Saverin, and Chris Hughes while they were students at Harvard University. In 2010, Zuckerberg was named Time magazine's. He became the worlds youngest billionaire by 2008 and now owns 24% in shares of Facebook with its net worth $12.5 billion.
Tuesday 15 February 2011
Long Tail Theory
Chris Anderson's Long Tail Theory in 2006 is that people buy more of less and less of more. This means that niche products that were released years ago can effectively make a greater profit than the new big hits due to them been re-released. An example of this is Journey-Dont Stop Believing which came back around from TV shows such as Family Guy and the X-factor and now even more so by the Glee craze. Its not available in the shops but is online from such sites as iTunes.
Thursday 10 February 2011
History of Web
August 6th 1991-Tim Berners Lee created the Web
1992–1995: Growth of the WWW
1996–1998: Commercialization of the WWW
1999–2001: "Dot-com" boom and bust
2002: Web 2.0
Wednesday 9 February 2011
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