Anyone been watching IPTV Sport without a VPN? - well your ISP will know all about it now....

You wouldn't because nothing is going to happen if you ignore them.
They're just trying to scare people into paying up.
It only takes one in fifty to fall for it and if the 'fine' is about 500 wingwangs that's a grand per 100 emails.
Which is why they do it, if all 100 ignored them they'd soon get pi$$ed off with it and pack it in.
Why do you think a solicitor has offered to work for nothing? He's not doing his White Knight act from the goodness of his heart, he's a solicitor, he doesn't have one - he's doing it because he knows he'll never have to actually do anything
 
You wouldn't because nothing is going to happen if you ignore them.
They're just trying to scare people into paying up.
It only takes one in fifty to fall for it and if the 'fine' is about 500 wingwangs that's a grand per 100 emails.
Which is why they do it, if all 100 ignored them they'd soon get pi$$ed off with it and pack it in.
Why do you think a solicitor has offered to work for nothing? He's not doing his White Knight act from the goodness of his heart, he's a solicitor, he doesn't have one - he's doing it because he knows he'll never have to actually do anything
What if the law firms had proof you had downloaded copyrighted material, presented it to your ISP provider and forced them to divulge your name and address?
 
That's what they've been doing according to that link you posted otherwise they wouldn't be able to write to you in the first place.
Then they send a letter
Then you throw it in the bin
Then that's the end of it

Pablo they will be knocking on your door soon demanding you pay up how will you respond then :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO:
 
But how likely is that scenario?

Also would ISP risk losing customers on top of all this.

In the UK we are safe for now. Copyright trolls (GEIL) asked Virmin media for tens of thousands of customer records and addresses it had evidence of downloading porn films. It used accurate data from FileWatchBT. Our hero Richard Branson had a court battle with them to protect his customers. His barristers asked GEIL to produce a Norwich Pharmacal Order (NPO) which they could not do without breaching customers personal data protection laws. Game over.


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All hail the devil branson emoji_clap:ROFLMAO:
:LOL:

It's an odd situation. Virmin's customer defence can be used against them. They have defended their own customers who have downloaded hard core porn. :unsure:
If they had proof that one of their customers was watching a Virmin channel for free they know they can't take the matter further without an NPO.

 
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