Australian A-G resumes anti-piracy fight
October 28, 2013
By Colin Mann
Australia’s new conservative government is seeking to restart anti-piracy initiatives that stalled following a failure of ISPs and content owners to agree a common approach, leading to the withdrawal of leading ISP iiNet from an online copyright infringement notice trial in December 2012.
It is understood that the Attorney-General’s Department has sent letters to the nation’s top telcos and content creators seeking their participation in a series of industry round tables to resolve the online piracy issue as a matter of urgency. New Attorney-General George Brandis is understood to have made copyright piracy a priority.
Leading daily newspaper The Australian suggests that the government is exploring tough new measures to curb the illegal downloading of copyright material, including a new scheme that may allow movie studios to seek injunctions to block websites distributing pirated material.
There would be a renewed focus on the supply side of piracy, with the intention that online piracy could be affected by disabling access to websites that facilitate illegal downloads.
The Communications Alliance, a lobby group representing Australia’s top telcos, has expressed a willingness to recommence talks, but has warned that the costs of implementing a solution needed to be addressed.
“It’s mystifying that if your industry is losing a billion a year because of piracy, as the film studios say, then why wouldn’t you make a small investment to protect that,” noted Communications Alliance CEO John Stanton, who added that in the past, proposals had been put on the table that hadn’t been taken up.
Other posts by :
- SpaceX fearful of AST SpaceMobile’s potential?
- Equatys wants 2,800 new satellites
- FCC eyes freeing up Weird Space Stuff spectrum
- SES happy with releasing 160MHz of spectrum for 5G
- Inmarsat “likely to win appeal” over Ligado/AST action
- FCC seeks fair play over foreign satellite access
- Bank raises RocketLab target price
- Ukraine wants its own LEO system
