AfterDawn: Tech news

Piracy sites targeted by London police

Written by James Delahunty @ 04 Jun 2013 9:22 User comments (3)

Piracy sites targeted by London police Police in London have written to the operators of two websites it alleges are profiting by breaking copyright laws.
The City of London Police, working with the National Fraud Intelligence Bureau, targeted the sites for sharing links to music, movies and games without permission from the copyright holders. They have until June 14 to contact police or risk facing further actions.

"These websites are able to operate and profit from advertising on their sites without having licenses or paying the creators and owners of the films, TV programmes, music and publications," a statement reads.

"Intellectual property crime is a serious offence that is costing the UK economy hundreds of millions of pounds each year."

The two websites were not named, but apparently are known to be located and operating beyond the UK's borders.

Tags: UK
Previous Next  

3 user comments

15.6.2013 00:50

ok lets see here your going to go after a site which could just close shop and move to another city over night so you didn't stop jack

25.6.2013 08:47
zxe
Inactive

Yes seems like, lets look like we make an effort, but who is paying for this, as if its not in the UK, what they gonna do, keep trying to block

39.6.2013 01:46

How on earth can the British police have any jurisdiction over a company located in another country ?? Thats absolutely ridiculous.
Its bit like the australian federation against copyright theft taking my ISP all the way to the High Court of Australia and the judges decided that the ISP is not responsible for the content that its subscribers download. They are only providing the connection to the internet .. which is the way it should be.
Look at this another way .. would you sue BT the telephone line provider because I was making obscene phone calls ..of course you wouldnt. BT are not responsible and ISPs are exactly the same. Good on the Aussie legal system

This message has been edited since its posting. Latest edit was made on 09 Jun 2013 @ 3:12

Comments have been disabled for this article.

Latest news

Sony suspends memory card sales because memory chips are simply not available Sony suspends memory card sales because memory chips are simply not available (28 Mar 2026 6:49)
Sony has announced that it is temporarily suspending the sale of memory cards used in mobile phones and digital cameras, among other things. The company states that the reason is problems with the availability of memory chips.
Austria plans to ban social media for under 14 year olds Austria plans to ban social media for under 14 year olds (28 Mar 2026 6:17)
Austria is planning to ban social media for children under 14. The reform aims to protect children from harmful effects and addictions, but at the same time, it is problematic from a privacy perspective.
TP-Link urges users to update their routers - several vulnerabilities patched TP-Link urges users to update their routers - several vulnerabilities patched (26 Mar 2026 1:56)
Serious security vulnerabilities have been discovered in several TP-Link router models, for which patches were released at the end of March 2026. The company urges users to update their router software immediately.
Google: The feared Q-Day is now expected to happen in 2029 Google: The feared Q-Day is now expected to happen in 2029 (25 Mar 2026 4:32)
Google has advanced its estimate of when current forms of encryption will become insecure. The moment is called Q-Day, or Quantum Day, when the computational power of quantum computers will be sufficient to break currently used encryptions.
OpenAI shuts down its AI video service Sora OpenAI shuts down its AI video service Sora (24 Mar 2026 6:28)
OpenAI has decided to shut down Sora, its AI video creator, just months after its release. The decision is due to issues such as copyright problems and the deepfake phenomenon.

News archive