Miscellaneous -
Television Licence
PC users who've been
watching for free on their PCs via the BBC's
website need to buy themselves a TV licence,
according to the licensing authority. The advent
of broadband xDSL and cable modem services means
more and more people will be tuning in on their
computer screens instead of watching on their
TVs. And, it seems, the licensing authorities
have already thought about this one and are
advising anyone who asks that yes, you do need to
buy a full TV licence if you're tuning in on your
PC.
"...a television licence is required if you
use television receiving equipment to record
and/or receive certain television programme
services," says Anthony Hardwell, Policy
Manager of the Post Office Policy Group.
"This means a licence is needed to receive
BBC, ITV, Channels 4 and 5, digital television,
other terrestrial services, satellite television
(from a place in the United Kingdom) and cable
television."
So far, so reasonable - if you have a TV, you
need a licence. However, Mr Hardwell goes on,
"With this in mind it does not matter how
the service is received but whether or not it
is." The Post Office's Michael Collins of
their Customer Services department said, "If
your computer is capable of receiving live
broadcasts, whether on-line, through an aerial or
satellite dish, then it is classed as television
receiving equipment..." And, just in case
you were wondering how on earth they'll know
you're watching the news online, Mr Hardwell
adds, "Finally our detection equipment is
capable of picking up television reception via
computer."
The Television Licensing Authority seems to be
admitting defeat in the quest to winkle out
viewers illegally watching TV programs on their
computers in the UK. The TVLA has issued a
statement saying: "A licence is required to
install and use any equipment capable of
receiving TV signals - including PC-TVs. If an
address already has a licence this would cover
the watching of television programme services via
a PC on the premises. Our ability to use both
detector vans and hand-held equipments forms part
of our enforcement activity. We have a
comprehensive database detailing the licence
status of 26 million addresses nationwide. This
database includes information from dealers who
are legally required to inform TV Licensing of
sales and rentals of equipment capable of
receiving TV signals, including PCs with TV
cards. We are able to cross reference the
information supplied by dealers with that on our
database. Where we suspect someone is watching TV
without a licence an enquiry officer can visit
the property. Anyone caught without a licence
faces a visit to a magistrates court and a £1000
fine."
Of course, their problem then is proving that
you're actually watching something from, for
example, the BBC website on your PC. At the
moment their system works by cross-referencing
addresses with the database of those who've
bought a licence and/or a TV (or video or a DVD
player which Tesco insist is the same as a VCR
for licensing purposes) then sending round the
lads in anoraks with the fake aerials on their
van roof to see if you're watching Coronation
Street on your unlicensed receiver. They simply
can't do this because unless they have some
unknown technology their detection equipment
won't pick up what's on your PC screen. Or are
those guys out in the front garden using some
special kind of x-ray specs to see through your
curtains?
The TVLA have said that they'll only be chasing
people watching those programs in the UK.
Foreigners and ex-pats can carry on doing so for
free, but any UK PC owners doing so who don't
already have a TV licence need to run, not walk,
down to the Post Office and shell out for a
licence. The licence, for those of a foreign
persuasion, is collected by a British Government
agency and used to fund the BBC - it pays for all
their TV and radio programming. You have to have
a licence even if you never watch the BBC - even
if you only ever watch independent TV (which
funds itself via advertising) you have to have
one. Until now, anti-licence campaigners like
Advocacy for Licence Fee Abolition and the
Campaign to Abolish the TV Licence say the
licensing authority has based its prosecutions on
the 1949 Wireless Telegraphy Act, and that people
were being prosecuted for owning sets without a
licence. Now, however, the TVLA say the Act
contains no definition of what's a telly at all,
and that they can collect from anyone who's
watching any UK-broadcast programs while living
in the country.
"The Wireless Telegraphy Act 1949 (as
amended) is the primary legislation," says
Anthony Hardwell, Policy Manager of the Post
Office Policy Group. "Within this the
licence fee is permission to receive or record
television programme services using television
receiving equipment, there is no definition of
receiving equipment and...it doesn't matter how
you receive the signal, it's whether or not you
do. A simple statement in writing from a customer
stating that they do not wish to receive or
record television programme services is
sufficient for our records, the simple fact of
owning a television set does not and never has
required licence cover. It is true that certain
people may wish to try and 'cheat' the system
however our regular checks of properties using
detection equipment reveal who is breaking the
law. The use of equipment for viewing
pre-recorded videos or for that matter as a
monitor for a game playing computer does not and
never has required television licence
cover."
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