Another ISP Company is forced to tell the recording industry that criminal law applies to them just as well a the rest of the UK population.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/7329801.stmThe head of one of Britain's biggest internet providers has criticised the music industry for demanding that he act against pirates.
The trade body for UK music, the BPI, asked internet service providers to disconnect people who ignore requests to stop sharing music.
But Charles Dunstone of Carphone Warehouse, which runs the TalkTalk broadband service, is refusing.
He said it is not his job to be an internet policeman.
Mr Dunstone, whose TalkTalk broadband is Britain's third biggest internet provider, said the demands are unreasonable and unworkable.
He also said his firm will refuse to cooperate with the BPI, despite threats of legal action.
Criminal law trumps Civil law in this case, there is no legal right to look in detail at anyones online traffic without a court order, The BPI and the RIAA may dream that there is but the reality is anyone suffering from the unlawful collusion of an ISP with a record company or recording industry trade group need simply contact the police and make a formal complaint to see arrrests being made and charges pressed, go ahead BPI, make the consumers day