No more illegal downloads?


By Steven Patrick

The free-and-easy days of illegal downloading of music and movies may soon be over. A new law will enable Internet Service Providers (ISP) to suspend or terminate the Internet accounts of P2P (peer-to-peer) users.

This new law called the ISP Liability act, will be tabled in Parliament next month, according to Recording Industry Association of Malaysia (RIM) chairman Norman Halim.

RIM has been lobbying the Government for an ISP Liability act for the past five years as illegal online downloads have been cannibalising the legitimate sales of music, worldwide.

"The act makes the ISPs responsible for curbing online piracy. The ISPs will be fined if they don't take action against illegal downloaders. The ISPs have the technology to track P2P users," said Norman.

However, he said that the fine amount was yet to be determined.  

ISPs will send two warning letters to illegal downloaders. Should the downloaders still  persist, the Internet access will be suspended or even terminated.

"Other countries that have such an act, have seen its respective music industries recover. One good example would be South Korea," he said.

Published Nov 26 2010

Comments (0)

Write comment
Your Contact Details:
Comment:
Security
Click on image to reload a new one
Please input the anti-spam code that you can read in the image.