- Phorm on Channel 5
- Posted by John Livingston on May 26th, 2008
For info / update - posted also on BT.Beta groups -
Media sighting - The Gadget Show - Channel 5 on 26 May
The Gadget Show have just done a long item on Webwise. The usual tone of
the show is jokey and lightweight, but the piece on Webwise was
introduced by the presenter in a rather more serious and sombre note.
The initial pitch was on the expectation that ISPs should preserve their
customers' privacy, and that snooping on browsing would be unacceptable.
Phorm and its relationship with BT, Virgin and CPW was explained,
followed by a piece to camera from Kent Ertugrul. This was totally
unconvincing, and he appeared to put little effort into sounding upbeat
or credible. The claims he made were all those we have come to expect
("Totally anonymous" etc etc). Nothing new at all.
Next one on was Emma Sanderson who sounded every bit as unconvincing as
on her previous TV appearances. Again - nothing new, the same old
platitudes. Usual stuff about "Due diligence" and "legal advice". She
stated that "BT has signed an agreement with Phorm", so there clearly is
a contract of some sort. No surprise there.
The editor of a legal journal (didn't catch his name) was next on -
explaining that Webwise as presented would probably be illegal
under the provisions of the RIP act.
In all, a balanced and alarming report which will raise the awareness of
many of those customers who have missed the significance of the debate
so far. The presenters deliberately took a neutral stance, but finished
the piece by reiterating the expectation that ISPs should have an
obligation to defend their customers' privacy. The parting shot was -
"We are keeping an eye on this, and will keep you posted".
If the trial is imminent, then this programme couldn't have come at a
worse time for BT.
I may have missed some of the finer nuances of the report - there was
quite a lot in it - did anyone else see this ?
John
- Posted by Carl Waring on May 27th, 2008
John Livingston wrote:
A fair reporting of the ,erm, report there John.
You'll notice, though, that anyone mentioning this always qualifies it will
"probably" or "may be". Either it is or it isn't. If it is, they don't have
a leg to stand on and if it isn't why don't they stand by their convictions
and categorically say so.
--
Carl Waring
DigiGuide:
Full: http://getdigiguide.com/?p=1&r=1495
Freeview (free): http://getdigiguide.com/?p=4&r=1495
Web-based: http://getdigiguide.com/?p=3&r=1495
- Posted by Richard Tobin on May 27th, 2008
In article <4GP_j.17267$x55.8408@newsfe17.ams2>,
Carl Waring <email@carlDASHwaring.co.uk> wrote:
They don't have "convictions". They have an interpretation of a law
that hasn't been tested. It would be wrong of them to pretend to be
certain when they aren't.
You might as well ask an astronomer to stand by his convictions
and state categorically whether or not there has ever been life
on Mars.
-- Richard
--
In the selection of the two characters immediately succeeding the numeral 9,
consideration shall be given to their replacement by the graphics 10 and 11 to
facilitate the adoption of the code in the sterling monetary area. (X3.4-1963)
- Posted by Invalid on May 27th, 2008
In message <4GP_j.17267$x55.8408@newsfe17.ams2>, Carl Waring
<email@carlDASHwaring.co.uk> writes
are a judge (and jury?) during a formal court case. As an extreme
example think of the self-defence argument in a murder case!.
You will never get a lawyer to say that anything is categorically
illegal. If there is an established body of case law that shows a
particular activity in a particular set of circumstances has been found
illegal in the past, then you might get a more definitive answer. Given
the state of case law on the Internet I suspect "probably" is as strong
as you will get.
http://www.fipr.org/080423phormlegal.pdf
is a good read on the topic by a real lawyer.
--
Peter R Cook
- Posted by John Livingston on May 27th, 2008
Invalid wrote:
Pertinent to a dogfight that has been raging on bt.broadband support.
This has been stirred up by a pair of trolls who are unwilling to
acknowledge the very points you have made on probably v definitely.
Nicholas Bohm's paper doesn't leave much doubt in my mind. I wonder what
BT Legal (or the Home Office) makes of it ?
John
- Posted by Invalid on May 27th, 2008
In message <Uaadnc-V9oA8b6bVnZ2dnUVZ8vudnZ2d@bt.com>, John Livingston
<null@nospam.com> writes
previous piece of advice springs to mind
)
I suspect BT's are between a rock and a hard place (and seriously pissed
off by operational and business managers who didn't check with them
first?). If they agree with Nicholas' position then their trial of the
technology last year could prove to have very painful consequences.
OTOH if Nicholas is wrong, and E-mail spam filtering does provide a
model that the courts would buy, then their "common carrier" defence
against the film & music industries leaks like a sieve.
Ho hum!!
--
Peter R Cook
- Posted by Clive Savage on May 27th, 2008
On Mon, 26 May 2008 21:44:09 +0100, John Livingston <null@nospam.com>
wrote:
Yep, always watch the gadget show, even now that the studio video is
in compressed Film-o-vision...
Bye for now.
Clive.