Watch BBC channels for free and avoid paying your license fee

Due to the amazing popularity of the BBC’s iPlayer, its licence fees are coming under threat.
UK viewers of the BBC’s TV stations have to pay a yearly fee to watch programs but only when they are transmitted to your TV set, it doesnt apply to catch up TV.
Due to a legal loophole, viewers can watch their favorite BBC programs totally free and legitimately exclude paying for a yearly license. There are a growing band of iPlayer viewers who legitimately avoid the licence fee by watching shows online after they have been broadcast live on BBC’s channels.
Since the iPlayer service began last Christmas, more than 220m requests have been made for programmes online. The service, backed by Mark Thompson, the director-general, as moving the BBC into a new medium, could, many say, destroy the BBC entirely.
Viewers watching catchup TV are beyond the reach of Television Licensing (TVL), which enforces the licensing law.
During the summer, it ran an advertising campaign warning office workers tempted to watch the Olympics on computers at work that their employers risked breaching the law.
But TVL is less eager to point out that shows watched after their first transmission are free. This is not stated on the licence or on warning letters. Asked why the BBC did not make this clearer, a spokesman said: “Our issue is not to inform people of when they don’t need a licence. It’s to inform them when they need a licence.â€
Despite the lack of publicity, awareness of the exemption is growing. Since August more than 185,000 people have joined a group on Facebook, the social networking site, calling for abolition of the licence fee on the grounds that it is a “legally enforced extortion racketâ€.
Many of the members, who range from students to families and pensioners, are using the iPlayer service to avoid paying the fee.
Liam Hancock, a 19-year-old student at Sheffield Hallam University, is typical. “The TV licence has got to go,†he wrote earlier this month. “You can’t have people watching it on TV and paying for it when you can wait and watch it for free.â€
Some viewers are determined to enjoy a free service without abandoning a larger screen. Suellen Peskett and her husband Matt, from Dorking, Surrey, tried replacing their television with a 28in computer monitor in July. Suellen, a 29-year-old graphic designer, said: “It’s a great way of saving money.â€
Although the couple abandoned the experiment after finding download speeds were too slow, they intend to try again as technology improves.
Whilst live shows do require a licence, broadband suppliers and politicians have warned that the corporation will not be able to catch evaders.
John Whittingdale, chairman of the Commons media select committee, said: “In the past they have tackled evasion by sending threatening letters. But now they can’t just come in and say that’s your television, where’s your licence? How will they know what you’ve used your computer for?â€
The broadband companies who deliver the content say the technology does not enable the BBC to identify who is watching the shows, making enforcement virtually impossible.
When a viewer uses the iPlayer, the BBC receives the users unique IP address. To get a person’s name and address it would need access to the databases held by broadband suppliers, but they are obliged to protect customers’ privacy.
A spokeswoman for Tiscali, a major broadband company, said: “The BBC would have no evidence of TV licence nonpayment and therefore would be asking us to pass over all customer data. It would be legally and morally unacceptable.â€
A spokesman for BT said: “We don’t give customer information out. We don’t do it for file sharing and music piracy, and we wouldn’t do it for the BBC. They have to come to us with a court order and an IP address. Then and only then would we divulge an individual’s details.â€
A BBC spokesman said only a “very small†number of people had opted to cancel their licences and use the iPlayer instead.
So just ditch your TV set and watch TV online and watch it for free.
worldtvpc.com
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The headline of this story is misleading.
If you are watching a BBC Channel live on any device then you do have to pay a TV Licence.
See this blog post:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/bbcinternet/2008/01/iplayer_does_not_require_a_tv_1.html
The BBC license fee is – of course – without moral merit. Forcing the citizens of a free nation to pay a tax to be allowed to watch television (ANY television). I have always refused to buy a license. And yes, I do own and watch a TV, and in doing so am breaking this unjust law. If everyone stuck to their morals and refused to pay, the BBC in its current arrogant bloated quasi-commercial form would be dead, almost overnight. Remember: they can send as many threatening letters as they like, they can knowck on your door as much as they like – but they have NO right of entry into your home. There is no onus on the citizen to prove that he/she does not own a TV set. The onus is on the BBC. And there is no magical equipment that can detect if you are watching a TV. That’s just scaremongering rubbish. If they could detect homes with TVs, there would be no need for the constant threats. Remember the old saying: the louder the bark, the weaker the bite. This is so true of the BBC – and I refuse to fund even a fraction of one episode of bloody EastEnders.