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PCs, mobiles and PDAs need 'online' TV licence

Before you tune into the BBC's online World Cup broadcasts, make sure you have a good, old-fashioned TV licence kicking around somewhere, the BBC warns irate readers
Written by Andy McCue, Contributor

The UK's TV Licensing (TVL) authority has responded to criticism from readers of ZDNet UK sister site Silicon.com over its warning that people watching online BBC broadcasts on a PC face stiff fines if they don't have a TV licence.

TVL issued the warning last week on the eve of the World Cup finals in Germany, which the BBC is broadcasting live online as well as on TV.

That provoked a furious response from many Silicon.com readers. One IT consultant, who wished to remain anonymous, said: "If the BBC chooses to broadcast on an international medium, why should the national licence-payer subsidise this?"

Other readers claimed that a pure internet feed not involving a tuner and received by a computer is not covered by TV licensing legislation and therefore does not require a TV licence to watch it.

But TVL told Silicon.com that the definition of a "television receiver" is contained in regulation nine of the Communications (Television Licensing) Regulations 2004 and covers any apparatus used for the purpose of receiving — by wireless telegraphy or otherwise — any TV programme service.

TVL said this means the TV licensing regulations cover internet broadcasts on PCs, PDAs and mobile phones but said this would not be an issue for most people as it is covered by the standard household TV licence.

A TVL spokeswoman said: "A valid licence entitles the licence holder and anyone who lives with them to watch live television on any device at that address, for example on a television set or on a PC, and on any device powered solely by its internal batteries, such as mobile phones or PDAs, away from home."

The same single licence rule also applies to businesses, except hotels, which have different licensing requirements.

The TVL spokeswoman was unable to give a breakdown of prosecutions by device but said it has caught and fined licence-fee evaders using PCs to watch TV in the past.

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