Maybe during premiere league games, large number of users should download large amounts of Linux ISOs through VPN services, and abruptly stop them at the end of the match...You'll keep the "investigators" busy chasing dead leads.
It is not obvious from the summary, but would be known to it’s UK users that SKY is a major subscription TV provider (satellite, cable and IP) as well as an having become an ISP. So they have a major vested interest in preventing unlicensed streaming.
It is not obvious from the summary, but would be known to it’s UK users that SKY is a major subscription TV provider (satellite, cable and IP) as well as an having become an ISP. So they have a major vested interest in preventing unlicensed streaming.
Yes, they have the same problem as Bell in Canada. A content provider actively working against the freedom of their ISP customers because the content part gets corporate priority over the delivery part. If regulators are looking for a reason to break things up, the obvious conflict of interest here should be a good start.
Sky are of course the largest seller of licensed Premier League match streams in the UK, both via their Satellite TV service, and their NowTV streaming service.
It is not obvious from the summary, but would be known to it’s UK users that SKY is a major subscription TV provider (satellite, cable and IP) as well as an having become an ISP. So they have a major vested interest in preventing unlicensed streaming.
It is not obvious from the summary, but would be known to it’s UK users that SKY is a major subscription TV provider (satellite, cable and IP) as well as an having become an ISP. So they have a major vested interest in preventing unlicensed streaming.
Yes, they have the same problem as Bell in Canada. A content provider actively working against the freedom of their ISP customers because the content part gets corporate priority over the delivery part. If regulators are looking for a reason to break things up, the obvious conflict of interest here should be a good start.
If regulators are looking for a reason to break things up, the obvious conflict of interest here should be a good start.
It isn't clear that preventing companies from taking steps to combat piracy would be a convincing reason for regulators to break things up.
Sky are of course the largest seller of licensed Premier League match streams in the UK, both via their Satellite TV service, and their NowTV streaming service.