October 23rd, 2007 Add Your Comments Bookmark and Share

Saturday the 20th of October 2007, that is a date you should put in your diary with a little note, “the day a large part of the internet died”. In a move that has to be the first of its type anywhere in the world, UK authorities took down the website tv-links.co.uk and arrested the owner. What crime had been committed here you may ask, that of linking! The tv-links.co.uk website did nothing more than provide links to content hosted elsewhere and openly linked to by hundreds of other websites from all over the world. Some of this content may have been dubious in terms of copyright but once again I’ll emphasise that they only linked to content hosted on other websites (Google owned YouTube as one example no less). The actual offence relates to “the facilitation of copyright infringement on the internet”, the keyword here being facilitation. By linking to a website that contains illegal content he was apparently facilitating copyright infringement, sorry but what a complete load of bullsh*t. The people facilitating the copyright infringement are the website owners who allow the illegal content to be served from their servers, in this case one example being Google. What he was actually guilty of was finding and cataloguing content. Isn’t it funny how the UK authorities including F.A.C.T. (Federation against copyright theft) decided not to even try and have the actual CONTENT taken down, why, because they’d be taking on somebody their own size rather than some poor 26 year old lad running a hobby website.

I wonder what they possibly think they have gained by taking tv-links.co.uk out of the equation, within a month another dozen copycat sites hosted away from the UK will have popped up all just as accessible to UK consumers as TV Links ever was. The actual content is still available online and can be easily found by doing nothing more than a Google search. The only thing they have succeeded in doing is removing the liberties of UK citizens to discuss and share online. They didn’t even ask him to remove the content (probably as it wasn’t his content that was the problem) but instead decided to raid his house. It’s a joke. But is it really that serious? Well it is if you have ever embedded a YouTube clip on your blog that you don’t have expressed permission to use, or if you use MySpace/Bebo/FaceBook to share Music and Movie preferences or if you operate a website that has outbound links (that’ll be all of them then) . As we are now responsible for the content on the websites we link to does it mean that I have to spend each and every day making sure that every website I link to is not doing anything illegal? What about the sites they link to, or the sites after that, what about what they link to? It’s crap, nonsense and not just a little bit offensive. Linking is what makes the World Wide Web work, without it the greatest information resource ever invented becomes nothing more than a glorified billboard. How much worse do things have to get, I remember when the worst thing an outbound link could do was break and lower the quality of your website, now it appears as though it can see you on the wrong end of a police raid! I only hope the bloke involved sees this through ok, with any luck they’re just scaring him and don’t have a leg to stand on or at least that’s what common sense would say. Then again with the nanny state the UK has become that can see community officers stand by and watch a child drown in the name of health and safety common sense doesn’t have a place.

On a personal level I’m annoyed as well, not least because I spent a lot of money on the onlinetv.im domain which I wanted as a resource to live streaming online tv. I wanted a blog format for things I found interesting online (like ITV’s Tycoon series for example) but I’m abandoning it. As somebody who makes their entire living online it’s very important I do a risk assessment before starting anything new, with the news in the UK it’s just not worth it. On the other hand if you live outside the UK and want to do something similar then just let me know via the contact form, I’m now prepared to sell the onlinetv.im domain name.

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