Belgian ISP Scarlett, formerly part of
Tiscali,
has been ordered by a judge to block all peer-to-peer traffic by its customers
in a landmark ruling that could set a precedent in Europe.
The court in Belgium found that Scarlett had a duty to stop the traffic in
illegal content over its network with a variety of technical means that are
currently on the market, in particular filtering technology developed by
Audible
Magic.
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The case was brought by
Sabam,
the association of authors and composers in Belgium.
IFPI chairman John Kennedy said: "This is an extremely significant ruling
which bears out exactly what we have been saying for the past two years.
"The internet's gatekeepers, the ISPs, have a responsibility to help control
copyright-infringing traffic on their networks.
"The court has confirmed that the ISPs have a legal responsibility and the
technical means to tackle piracy. This is a decision that we hope will set the
mould for government policy and for courts in Europe and around the world."
The IFPI estimates that 20 billion illegal files were shared on P2P networks
in 2006, about 20 times the number of legal music downloads.
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