Sir Elton John, Pete Townshend, Robert Plant, Simon Cowell, Tinie Tempeh and more have signed a letter to British Prime Minister David Cameron published by The Guardian
in hopes that Internet providers, advertisers and search engines –
Google in particular – will help crack down on piracy. The authors also
urge the British government to implement the antipiracy-focused Digital
Economy Act 2010. Full text of the letter follows.
SIR - As the world's focus turns to Britain, there is an
opportunity to stimulate growth in sectors where Britain has a
competitive edge. Our creative industries represent one such sector,
which creates jobs at twice the speed of the rest of the economy.
Britain's share of the global music market is higher than ever
with British artists, led by Adele, breaking through to global stardom.
As a digitally advanced nation whose language is spoken around the
world, Britain is well-positioned to increase its exports in the digital
age. Competition in the creative sector is in talent and innovation,
not labour costs or raw materials.
We can only realise this potential if we have a strong domestic
copyright framework, so that British creative industries can earn a fair
return on their huge investments creating original content. Illegal
activity online must be pushed to the margins. This will benefit
consumers, giving confidence they are buying safely online from legal
websites.
The simplest way to ensure this would be to implement the
long-overdue measures in the Digital Economy Act 2010; and to ensure
broadband providers, search engines and online advertisers play their
part in protecting consumers and creators from illegal sites.
We are proud of our cultural heritage and believe that we, and
our sector, can play a much bigger role in supporting British growth. To
continue to create world beating creative content, we need a little bit
of help from our friends.
Simon Cowell
Roger Daltrey
Professor Green
Sir Elton John
Lord Lloyd-Webber
Dr. Brian May
Robert Plant
Roger Taylor
Tinie Tempah
Pete Townshend
Roger Daltrey
Professor Green
Sir Elton John
Lord Lloyd-Webber
Dr. Brian May
Robert Plant
Roger Taylor
Tinie Tempah
Pete Townshend
Source
Posted 07/2012