“We will no longer suspend a customer’s service unless we receive a court order from a copyright owner taking legal action. As a result it is the responsibility of the legal system, not Karoo, to ensure the accuracy of the information provided by the copyright owners.”
I predict that this will happen increasingly, as ISPs realise the implications of what the content industries are demanding with their "three strikes and you're out" insanity. They would clearly be on very dodgy legal ground if they carried out this threat based on mere accusations. Yahoo for Karoo.
Follow me @glynmoody on Twitter and identi.ca.
Were they also haemorrhaging customers perchance?
ReplyDeleteOr did they look deep into their moral conscience and realise that perhaps the individual's liberty comes before the corporation's monopoly?
I don't think they were losing customers, because they have a literal monopoly on Hull: no rival ISPs to turn to. More likely their lawyers started thinking...
ReplyDeleteYup, ISPs as monopoly providers will get away with anything. Unfortunately, that tends to prompt calls for regulation (qv net neutrality) instead of competition.
ReplyDeleteIt is possible it wasn't even Karoo's lawyers, but the cartel's, realising that perhaps they should be careful what they wish for - in case some naive ISP grants those wishes instead of haggling to the expected compromise.
I wouldn't be terribly surprised if this caused the end of their monopoly eventually.
ReplyDeleteBT own the cables in the rest of the UK but it didn't stop competition, once a mechanism had been figured out.
Yes, maybe it's that thought that prompted them to backtrack.
ReplyDelete