Revenge is a dish best served HOT! Ariana Madix looks incredible in sheer dress as she reveals where she stands with cheater Tom Sandoval now on WWHL 'I don't buy that at all': Ariana Madix reveals she doesn't believe Tom Sandoval and Raquel Leviss have split after finding love letters from her sent just days agoįour runners tell us why taking part in Race for Life means the world to them. Sylvester Stallone teaches Al Pacino how to take a selfie and threatens to go 'full-on Rambo' after daughter's pregnancy prank in season premiere of The Family Stallone Melissa McCarthy is ultra stylish as she steps out in London in a silky floral dress and bright yellow platforms ahead of The Little Mermaid release The changes to force viewers to 'verify' they are licence fee payers will be brought in 'later this year', the spokesman added. However, there will be a certain degree to which some people decide to pay up because it is easier.'ĭr Enrico Bonadio, senior lecturer in intellectual property at the City Law School, said the introduction of a verification process for BBC iPlayer can be seen as part of a wider trend in which publishers try to protect and make consumers pay for their content in the internet age.Ī spokesman for the DCMS said a statutory instrument to bring in the change will be laid before Parliament 'in the coming weeks'. 'Those who are less technologically literate will pay over the odds. 'I would say probably half the population could pretty easily get access to it without paying. 'You will have a lot of people who have technological friends who will be able to circumvent these rules relatively easily, and those who are not so technologically savvy will have to pay whack. He said: 'The practicalities are going to be quite hard to enforce consistently. He said just as many British internet users now use proxy servers to access material only available in the US, the iPlayer proposals can also be 'circumvented'. 'The BBC will have to look at how to try to stop that.'ĭr George Buchanan, director of the Centre for Human-Computer Interaction Design at City University, said anyone 'technologically savvy' will easily be able to get around the charge. 'What's to say I wouldn't be able to share my user name and password with my mum and dad who may not wish to pay the television licence but still want to watch Match Of The Day because Leicester FC are doing well? You might have a household of two people with 30 people trying to register under the licence. 'You will inevitably get people who will try to subvert the system. He said: 'Obviously there would need to be many different user names per television licence because households will potentially have many family members in them. Technology reporter David McClelland, a regular on BBC's Watchdog, warned the system could be open to abuse and it would need policing to be properly enforced. Giving a free ride to those who enjoy Sherlock or Bake Off an hour, a day or a week after they are broadcast was never intended and is wrong.' He said: 'The BBC works on the basis that all who watch it pay for it. Last month Mr Whittingdale pledged to rush forward legislation to close the iPlayer loophole. The corporation has been considering adding password controls to allow viewers to personalise the service.īut bosses are concerned that a future government could charge people a separate fee for iPlayer as well as their TV licence. John Whittingdale, who has been under huge pressure over BBC reforms, and finally set out Government policy today
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