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      Sky Crackdown On Pubs Showing Illegal Football Broadcasts

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      HUYTON RED
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      Sky Crackdown On Pubs Showing Illegal Football Broadcasts
      Feb 16, 2012 02:18:55 pm
      Pub landlords face jail in new Sky crackdown on TV football

      Thousands of pub landlords face heavy fines or jail as the Premier League and BSkyB begin a campaign of prosecutions against pubs that illegally broadcast English football matches.

      The hardline approach follows a court judgment earlier this month in which the Premier League won a copyright ruling against British pubs that use non-UK decoder cards to show games.

      The Premier League and BSkyB will signal their intent in warnings placed in adverts running in the drinks trade press today.

      It follows a case brought by the League against satellite TV company QC Leisure. In a High Court ruling this month, Judge David Kitchin found that pubs violate League copyright when customers can view footage of previous games, logos, pre-recorded video sequences and anthems that are not authorised for use across borders.

      As a warning of what is to come, an Essex landlord was this month ordered to pay more than £19,000 in fines and costs after being convicted of showing Premier League and international matches via Sky Sports without a commercial viewing agreement.

      Frederick Young, licensee of the Rose Inn in Shenfield, was convicted on 6 February at Basildon Magistrates' Court and fined £2,500 for each of six offences of dishonest reception of a television transmission.

      Young, prosecuted under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act of 1988, was also told to pay £4,522 in costs.

      In a further development, one of Britain's main distributors of foreign boxes and cards, Euroview, has ceased trading.

      In a notice posted on its website this month, it said the latest High Court judgment found the Premier League was "entitled to copyright protection of certain artistic works and graphics that formed part of the relevant broadcasts of football matches in these proceedings".

      It warned: "There is now the prospect that companies providing a service that allows the 'communication to the public' of any such artistic works could cause their customers to be liable for copyright infringement." The company told customers that their accounts with it would cease on 10 February.

      Next week in the High Court, a Portsmouth landlady, Karen Murphy, who was convicted after using a Greek decoder to show matches, will seek to have the case against her overturned.

      Ms Murphy was paying £118 a month to show games in her pub, The Red, White & Blue, as opposed to the Sky subscription of £480.

      She has taken the case to the European Court of Justice, which delivered a complicated ruling that should see her prosecution and £8,000 fine overturned in the High Court but still upheld the League's right to copyright.

      Since that ruling, Premier League content has been developed to include more logos and symbols that uphold its ownership of the material, meaning landlords cannot flout the rules by turning the television on and off at key times.

      Despite next week's hearing, the League and BSkyB believe the QC Leisure ruling is the more significant.

      The thousands of landlords potentially under investigation would include those suspected of breaching League copyright by using illicit foreign feeds to show games as well as pubs that screened Sky's matches bought with a domestic subscription and not featuring the "pint glass" on-screen symbol showing the subscription had been purchased for commercial use.

      Today's campaign of warning adverts is likely to trigger fresh activity in the courts as officials from the Federation Against Copyright Theft and other investigators step up visits to pubs suspected of showing matches unlawfully.



      http://www.independent.co.uk/news/media/tv-radio/pub-landlords-face-jail-in-new-sky-crackdown-on-tv-football-6953021.html
      RedLFCBlood
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      Re: Sky Crackdown On Pubs Showing Illegal Football Broadcasts
      Reply #1: Feb 16, 2012 02:22:13 pm
      Load of bollocks that I don't know how they can rule for sky to be honest.

      Its against human rights and is forcing people to buy their product when there is cheaper alternatives available.

      It would be like Ariel taking Mrs Jones to court for buying Best Buy washing powder.
      gareth g
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      Re: Sky Crackdown On Pubs Showing Illegal Football Broadcasts
      Reply #2: Feb 16, 2012 02:49:31 pm
      Load of bollocks that I don't know how they can rule for sky to be honest.

      Its against human rights and is forcing people to buy their product when there is cheaper alternatives available.

      It would be like Ariel taking Mrs Jones to court for buying Best Buy washing powder.
      So is Daz the best washing powder?  ;)
      HUYTON RED
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      Re: Sky Crackdown On Pubs Showing Illegal Football Broadcasts
      Reply #3: Feb 24, 2012 03:46:59 pm
      Pub landlady Karen Murphy wins TV football court case

      A pub landlady has won her court fight with the English Premier League over using a Greek TV decoder to screen games.

      Karen Murphy has paid nearly £8,000 in fines and costs for using the cheaper decoder in her Portsmouth pub to bypass controls over match screening.

      But she took her case to the European Court of Justice (ECJ).

      It found partly in her favour, and now the High Court in London has also found in her favour.

      The case has been closely watched as it could trigger a major shake-up in the way football TV rights are sold, and potentially pave the way to cheaper viewing of foreign broadcasts for fans of top-flight English games.

      Ms Murphy has spent six years fighting a prosecution for showing live football at the Red White and Blue pub without a Sky subscription.

      Instead of using Sky, on which it costs £700 a month to see Premier League matches, she used the Greek TV station Nova, which has the rights to screen the games in Greece, and which cost her £800 a year.

      She took her fight for the right to use the cheaper provider to the European Court of Justice (ECJ) which ruled in October 2011 that having an exclusive system was "contrary to EU law".

      The High Court in London on Friday ruled that Karen Murphy's appeal over using the decoder to bypass controls over match screening must be allowed.

      But a judge made clear that the other complex issues regarding the wider legality of screening matches would have to be decided "at a later date".

      Ms Murphy told BBC Radio Solent before the hearing that it had been a long, hard fight: "It's been very stressful, it's been a rollercoaster and to be honest now I'm absolutely fed up to the back teeth of it.

      "I hope at some time in the not too distant future the market will be opened up to a reasonable choice of product to buy.

      "As I've said before, you can have any other product and you have a choice of buying any other product, and that's the way it should be."

      She told the reporter she would be celebrating the win with a bottle of Sambuca.

      The High Court had originally sent the case to the European courts for advice on numerous points of law.

      The ECJ said last autumn that national laws that prohibit the import, sale or use of foreign decoder cards were contrary to the freedom to provide services.

      The European judges also said the Premier League could not claim copyright over Premier League matches as they could not be considered to be an author's own "intellectual creation" and, therefore, to be "works" for the purposes of EU copyright law.

      But it did offer some comfort for the Premier League, which receives vast sums through its exclusive broadcasting deals with Sky and ESPN.

      The European court said that while live matches were not protected by copyright, any surrounding media, such as any opening video sequence, the Premier League anthem, pre-recorded films showing highlights of recent Premier League matches and various graphics, were "works" protected by copyright.

      To use any of these extra parts associated for a broadcast, a pub would need the permission of the Premier League.


      http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-17150054
      Billy1
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      Re: Sky Crackdown On Pubs Showing Illegal Football Broadcasts
      Reply #4: Feb 24, 2012 07:20:10 pm
      I am so pissed off with Sky,the basta*ds are not showing the Carling Cup Final live in New Zealand,so no wonder people go to alternative and cheaper means to watch matches.It looks like I will be glued to the computer while the match is being played.
      tezmac
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      • F**k the Sun F**k Murdoch F**k the press
      Re: Sky Crackdown On Pubs Showing Illegal Football Broadcasts
      Reply #5: Feb 24, 2012 09:16:39 pm
      F**k Sky F**k the Sun and F**k Murdoch
      Billy1
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      Re: Sky Crackdown On Pubs Showing Illegal Football Broadcasts
      Reply #6: Feb 25, 2012 07:01:12 pm
      I am so pissed off with Sky,the basta*ds are not showing the Carling Cup Final live in New Zealand,so no wonder people go to alternative and cheaper means to watch matches.It looks like I will be glued to the computer while the match is being played.
      Well the good news is the match is live on Sky here so I will see it after all,still pissed off with Sky though as there is only 1 game live in March and the rest are delayed coverage.Oh for the good old  days when all the kickoffs were 3 pm on a Saturday afternoon.
      RedPuppy
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      • Parum Rutilus Canis: Illegitimi non carborundum
      Re: Sky Crackdown On Pubs Showing Illegal Football Broadcasts
      Reply #7: Feb 25, 2012 07:34:06 pm
      Well the good news is the match is live on Sky here so I will see it after all,still pissed off with Sky though as there is only 1 game live in March and the rest are delayed coverage.Oh for the good old  days when all the kickoffs were 3 pm on a Saturday afternoon.

      F**k Sly. On BBC1HD, and The Radio for me.

      But this was going to happen sooner or later.

      1984 and all that. It's here and we don't even know it.

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