TV Links

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TV Links
URL http://www.tv-links.co.uk
Slogan Better Than a Remote Control
Commercial? No
Type of site Video link index
Owner David Rock
Created by David Rock
Revenue Donations and Image Ads
Current status Offline (Site comment: Something here Soon)

TV Links was a website containing a directory of links to television programming and movies from around the world and user-created movies. No actual content was hosted on TV Links, all content was hosted on external websites and the servers were physically located in the Netherlands.[1] It had been described as "teetering on the edge of illegality",[2] and on 18 October 2007, the site's owner, David Rock,[3] was arrested, although was released without being charged with a crime (see references). As of June 2008, the site simply displays the text "Something here Soon".

Contents

[edit] Historical context and significance

Beginning with the original Napster program that allowed internet users to search for and download MP3 files, with the majority being copyrighted works, the internet has a long history of facilitating the illegal distribution of copyrighted materials. After Napster was shut down, other networks and protocols sprang up, one of the most successful being the BitTorrent protocol. With the advent of video streaming sites like YouTube and Google Video, users can now upload TV shows and movies. As copyrighted materials violate the terms of their hosting services, they are routinely deleted and so there was a desire to create a regularly updated index facilitating the location of available content. TV Links was one of the most popular of this breed of indices. It was the 26th most popular internet site in the UK (beating Sky.com) and 43rd in the US (beating Netflix.com) before its shutdown, and 0.4% of global internet users were accessing the site.

[edit] Legality

[edit] General

The legality of this site could be compared to BitTorrent indexing sites like The Pirate Bay or the original Napster program, in that the site did not actually host the files, but only provided links to the files which are hosted on external sites.

The legal page of the site contained the following disclaimer:

TV Links is not responsible for any content linked to or referred to from these pages.

TV Links does not host any content on our Servers

All video links point to content hosted on third party websites. Users who upload to these websites agree not to upload illegal content when creating their user accounts. TV Links does not accept responsibility for content hosted on third party websites.[4]

[edit] Shutdown by UK government

On 18 October 2007, the owner of TV-Links was arrested by the Gloucestershire Police in cooperation with the Federation Against Copyright Theft (FACT). The site was also shut down.[5][6][7].

[edit] Arrest, release, and lack of charges

Whilst arrested under Section 92 of the Trade Marks Act 1994, he has now been released 'pending further investigation' with no charges filed against him as of 25th October, 2007.[8] Section 92 has been used to prosecute illegal copiers of CDs and DVDs, but never in the absence of a physical storage medium. It is unclear whether the operation of TV Links was actually a crime under UK law.[9]

[edit] Broader implications

The forced closure of this site (and others like it) raises a difficult legal question as outlined in the following quote from an article in the Guardian Unlimited, TV Links shut down for linking:[10]

If linking is illegal, we might as well shut down the Internet, because there is no practical way anybody can guarantee the legality of what's on the end of any link. Even if you could guarantee it at the time of linking, there's no guarantee it would still be legal less than a second later, or for the rest of time.

[edit] Claims by FACT

FACT made a claim that the 26 year old man from Cheltenham was arrested in connection with offences relating to the facilitation of copyright infringement on the Internet whereas the arrest was over a matter of possible trademark infringement. [11][8]

[edit] References

[edit] See also

  • Alluc - a similar service