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Football by Satellite and the Law
British pub owners to get their day in European court
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<blockquote data-quote="craggers82" data-source="post: 529789" data-attributes="member: 278271"><p>I believe that the move to the EU Courts is positive for the defendants because disregarding stupid territorial copyright agreements, there are directives and treaties which suggests such territorial restriction should not be bound. I do believe though like rolf stated that the EU Court may rule that licensees may have to pay commercial rates for the cards but as far as domestic viewing is concerned, we should all have the right to subscribe to whatever broadcaster we want. I believe as far as copyright is concerned, the broadcasters agreements are unfair because we are paying for the copyright to view it no matter where the broadcasts are and as far as movie companies are concerned, as long as you pay for it, they haven't got a problem with cross border satellite transmissions. I am hoping that the ruling allows satellite suppliers to continue selling cards to viewers outside territories. If it is ruled illegal, well make way for the hacking industry to continue and peer to peer streaming technology to develop which can distribute channels globally at low cost.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="craggers82, post: 529789, member: 278271"] I believe that the move to the EU Courts is positive for the defendants because disregarding stupid territorial copyright agreements, there are directives and treaties which suggests such territorial restriction should not be bound. I do believe though like rolf stated that the EU Court may rule that licensees may have to pay commercial rates for the cards but as far as domestic viewing is concerned, we should all have the right to subscribe to whatever broadcaster we want. I believe as far as copyright is concerned, the broadcasters agreements are unfair because we are paying for the copyright to view it no matter where the broadcasts are and as far as movie companies are concerned, as long as you pay for it, they haven't got a problem with cross border satellite transmissions. I am hoping that the ruling allows satellite suppliers to continue selling cards to viewers outside territories. If it is ruled illegal, well make way for the hacking industry to continue and peer to peer streaming technology to develop which can distribute channels globally at low cost. [/QUOTE]
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Football by Satellite and the Law
British pub owners to get their day in European court
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