ChatterBank2 mins ago
Tv Licence
Just tried to access a programme on BBC iplayer and got a pop up informing me that the law has changed and you now need a licence to view catch up.
1) How would they know if you were viewing?
2) If tv licencing were to pay a visit to your home, would they have a right to take your laptop to analyse if you had been viewing iplayer?
Thanks.
1) How would they know if you were viewing?
2) If tv licencing were to pay a visit to your home, would they have a right to take your laptop to analyse if you had been viewing iplayer?
Thanks.
Answers
Best Answer
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Ok, so if I did not have a TV licence and I decided to log onto iPlayer I would take my laptop into my local Weatherspoons and use their free wifi to log on to iPlayer
Then tick the box saying I did have a TV licence as all Weatherspoons pubs have free WiFi and a TV licence. If it was asked I would just say that I only use iPlayer when I was in a premises with a TV licence.
Then tick the box saying I did have a TV licence as all Weatherspoons pubs have free WiFi and a TV licence. If it was asked I would just say that I only use iPlayer when I was in a premises with a TV licence.
A friend of mine has no TV (so no licence) but he does watch iplayer so I presume he lies about not having a licence. He seems to get away with it so they obviously don`t check up. If you use a VPN to watch it from abroad you can also get iplayer for free. Meanwhile, the authorities send threatening letters to the properties of the deceased which they did at my late Mum's address. I threatened to sue them and I never heard any more from them again. I'm not fond of their bullying tactics.
It does seem a very inefficient tax to me- too easy to evade, the honest subsidise the dishonest/the chancers/ those who object in principle, it is difficult to police and it can lead to innocent people being hounded while the serial evaders know how to make life awkward for the enforcers. It also takes no account of ability to pay (other than the free licence for over 75s which seems a pretty poor proxy for ability to pay).
The BBC were forced into this by the Government. The BBC want as many people as possible to watch on catch-up, but the Government aren't bothered about more viewers.
So while iTVHub, 4on Demand, FivePlayer, STV and UKTV are all hassle free to watch, the BBC has this badly implemented paywall.
I have not watched via iPlayer since the law change, but I can stream BBC programmes using Kodi.
So while iTVHub, 4on Demand, FivePlayer, STV and UKTV are all hassle free to watch, the BBC has this badly implemented paywall.
I have not watched via iPlayer since the law change, but I can stream BBC programmes using Kodi.
Just a though, if an over 75 gets a free licence and lives with an under 75 year old , then dies a short time later is the free licence cancelled so the other resident has to pay?
This happened to a neighbor, her husband was 75 and got the licence free but she was only 68. He died just days after getting a new licence, so should she have bought a new licence? As far as I know she did not get a new licence until the next year when the free one ran out.
This happened to a neighbor, her husband was 75 and got the licence free but she was only 68. He died just days after getting a new licence, so should she have bought a new licence? As far as I know she did not get a new licence until the next year when the free one ran out.