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MTyrrell
(
341
)
Male
London
UK
Member Since:
Oct 23 2007 11:08:31 AM
Last modified date:
Nov 15 2007 7:30:16 PM
Last visited date:
Nov 27 2007 8:16:21 PM
Hit counts:
630
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Score Breakdown
45 points for posting 9 questions
36 points for you yoosking other people's questions
260 points for people yoosking your questions
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Answered Questions
MTyrrell
asked
Matt Phillips
:
"Would you like to see more creators of peer-to-peer and music sharing program authors going to court? Do you think individual users uploading and sharing copy-protected works online should face more p..."
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"Would you like to see more creators of peer-to-peer and music sharing program authors going to court? Do you think individual users uploading and sharing copy-protected works online should face more punishment?"
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Matt Phillips
answers:
"It’s not a question of taking people who invent technology to court, this isn’t a war against technology. Technological change will always happen. Where the BPI focuses it attentions is on people who ..."
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" It’s not a question of taking people who invent technology to court, this isn’t a war against technology. Technological change will always happen. Where the BPI focuses it attentions is on people who are wilfully damaging our industry, who are generating significant amounts of money through the theft of music. We’re not against technology; we’re against the people who abuse it. With regard to individual users I think that you’ve got to be measured. Do people buy television licenses because they feel that it is the right thing to do or because they fear prosecution? I wouldn’t propose that we took everyone to court who ever downloaded a song; but I think that you have to implement deterrents to make people do the right thing. So the approach that we have taken thus far has been to take the major up-loaders who have been distributing the most files to court. Copyright law is pretty black and white, so we’ve not lost a case. "
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| Topic:
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Dec 27 2007 10:30:53 AM
MTyrrell
asked
Steve Bennedik
:
"The McCann's children were left unsupervised in their hotel room. If the parents were from a different socio-economic background would the media be asking the questions that many are asking and not trying..."
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"The McCann's children were left unsupervised in their hotel room. If the parents were from a different socio-economic background would the media be asking the questions that many are asking and not trying to normalise this issue?"
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Steve Bennedik
answers:
"This argument has some justification. In the early days of the investigation, part of the pull of this story, for us and the public, was the fact that these were doctors, a supposedly ideal family unit...."
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" This argument has some justification. In the early days of the investigation, part of the pull of this story, for us and the public, was the fact that these were doctors, a supposedly ideal family unit. But I think by now all the questions have been asked, and the parents actions on the night Madeleine went missing have been properly scrutinised. "
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3
1
0 comment
| Topic:
Media
|
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Dec 26 2007 8:35:30 AM
MTyrrell
asked
Aleks Krotoski
: "Do you think the image of games suffers because they are called 'games'? Does this mean serious but violent games suffer criticsm compared to serious but violent books and films? "
Aleks Krotoski
answers:
"The word "game" is problematic there are too many associations in the public's mind with what a game is - something that's done only for pleasure, something that's not serious something that doesn't teach..."
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" The word "game" is problematic there are too many associations in the public's mind with what a game is - something that's done only for pleasure, something that's not serious something that doesn't teach something that has no consequence. I don't beleive games falls into that category. They CAN fall into it, but they don't have to and before they're truly accepted by the mainstream not just the current population (and media slant) the name will have to change or the public perception will have to go. Whichever comes first! "
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| Topic:
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Dec 21 2007 1:44:55 PM
MTyrrell
asked
Philip Ingham
: "Is the current infrastructure for bicycles in London up to the task of supporting this kind of scheme? "
Philip Ingham
answers:
"Provision for Cycling in London is improving all the time. It's always a challenge to provide safe cycling in the traffic heavy and restrictive environment of a big city, but London seems to be increasingly..."
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" Provision for Cycling in London is improving all the time. It's always a challenge to provide safe cycling in the traffic heavy and restrictive environment of a big city, but London seems to be increasingly aware of the importance of the bicycle as a form of transport. With events like the 2007 Tour de France and the 2012 Olympics coming to the city, and the wider movement towards more sustainable and integrated transport systems, London looks to be putting the cyclist's needs a lot further up the priority list. So, if it's not ready yet, it probably soon will be. Plus, can you see London wanting to be out-done by Paris? "
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| Topic:
Politics
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Nov 28 2007 7:06:07 PM
MTyrrell
asked
Sir Alan Haselhurst MP
:
"Stansted Airport is a gateway to international trading centres for east of England businesses and a major business in its own right providing many trading opportunities for local firms. Economic growth..."
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"Stansted Airport is a gateway to international trading centres for east of England businesses and a major business in its own right providing many trading opportunities for local firms. Economic growth is vital to maintaining the UK as a premier world financial centre and to the competitiveness of the east of England with 80 per cent of the top 500 companies having offices located in the airport’s catchment area. Is Stansted Airport and its expansion critical to the region’s economic development? "
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Sir Alan Haselhurst MP
answers:
"Well part of that question is answered by what I’ve just said. I don’t believe that business is the principle beneficiary of Stansted. Obviously Stansted is an economic driver because it has created..."
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" Well part of that question is answered by what I’ve just said. I don’t believe that business is the principle beneficiary of Stansted. Obviously Stansted is an economic driver because it has created 10,000 or more jobs. I don’t deny that and we are in the fortunate position that we don’t have unemployment in my constituency nor in the immediate area around. When Stansted has passed a certain level of activity, people are having to be brought in from further and further a field adding to burden of inadequate road and rail network and causing more people to say well now I’m working here can I buy somewhere to live nearer and these are creating pressures which are not being relieved by investment in the local infrastructure. This is a real problem. But yes the economic growth to which the airport has contributed, as some of the service industries, such as hotels and so on, all of that fine its created work for local people but the more it expands now its creating work for non-local people and I am not sure that this is on balance serving the interests of the country as a whole or the East of England in particular. "
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| Topic:
Business
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Nov 27 2007 7:38:16 PM
MORE ANSWERS!
Popular Questions
MTyrrell
is asking
David Miliband MP
:
"Citizens should have statutory rights to enforce their human rights in the UK courts. We will by statute incorporate the European Convention on Human Rights into UK law to bring these rights home and ..."
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"Citizens should have statutory rights to enforce their human rights in the UK courts. We will by statute incorporate the European Convention on Human Rights into UK law to bring these rights home and allow our people access to them in their national courts. The incorporation of the European Convention will establish a floor, not a ceiling, for human rights. 1997 Labour Party’s General Election Manifesto Should legal obstacles arise we will legislate further, including, if necessary, amending the Human Rights Act in respect of the interpretation of the European Convention on Human Rights. Prime Minister Tony Blair, 5 August 2005 Do these statements constitute a 'broken promise' regarding human rights?"
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43
0 comment
| Topic:
World Affairs
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Oct 30 2007 11:17:07 PM
MTyrrell
is asking
Becky Slater
:
"This is a quote from the British Plastics Foundation: "The BPF believes there would be little logic in taxing plastic carrier bags, as they are not a significant litter problem and they do not represent..."
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"This is a quote from the British Plastics Foundation: "The BPF believes there would be little logic in taxing plastic carrier bags, as they are not a significant litter problem and they do not represent a significant environmental impact. Just 4% of crude oil consumption is used for all plastics, and only 2% for all films, of which plastic bags is a very small proportion. 85% of oil is burned as fuel or heating. Plastic bags are extraordinarily energy-efficient in manufacture, and more so than paper bags. Not only do they prevent waste of goods carried, but the embodied energy can be recovered either by recycling or via energy-from-waste systems." With plastic bag usage are we concentrating on the wrong issue? Or is this quote an example of reluctance to accept accountability? "
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28
0 comment
| Topic:
Politics
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Oct 30 2007 10:28:13 PM
MTyrrell
is asking
Matt Verran
: "With bigger budgets and larger teams, does the degree of financial risk stifle creativity? "
25
0 comment
| Topic:
Arts and entertainment
|
Email to friends
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Nov 11 2007 11:44:54 AM
MTyrrell
is asking
John Beaulieu
:
"Could you argue that the vidoe game industry has catered for 'gamers' almost exclusively for many years? And that the Nintendo Wii's success is built on its lack of gaming 'clique' and simplicity? Does..."
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"Could you argue that the vidoe game industry has catered for 'gamers' almost exclusively for many years? And that the Nintendo Wii's success is built on its lack of gaming 'clique' and simplicity? Does this mean two distinct markets, and therefore distinct products for the future - games for gamers and games for everbody else? "
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24
0 comment
| Topic:
Arts and entertainment
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Email to friends
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Nov 11 2007 11:41:55 AM
MORE QUESTIONS!
Recent Questions
MTyrrell
is asking
Matt Verran
: "With bigger budgets and larger teams, does the degree of financial risk stifle creativity? "
25
0 comment
| Topic:
Arts and entertainment
|
Email to friends
|
Nov 11 2007 11:44:54 AM
MTyrrell
is asking
John Beaulieu
:
"Could you argue that the vidoe game industry has catered for 'gamers' almost exclusively for many years? And that the Nintendo Wii's success is built on its lack of gaming 'clique' and simplicity? Does..."
Show more »
"Could you argue that the vidoe game industry has catered for 'gamers' almost exclusively for many years? And that the Nintendo Wii's success is built on its lack of gaming 'clique' and simplicity? Does this mean two distinct markets, and therefore distinct products for the future - games for gamers and games for everbody else? "
Show less »
24
0 comment
| Topic:
Arts and entertainment
|
Email to friends
|
Nov 11 2007 11:41:55 AM
MTyrrell
is asking
David Miliband MP
:
"Citizens should have statutory rights to enforce their human rights in the UK courts. We will by statute incorporate the European Convention on Human Rights into UK law to bring these rights home and ..."
Show more »
"Citizens should have statutory rights to enforce their human rights in the UK courts. We will by statute incorporate the European Convention on Human Rights into UK law to bring these rights home and allow our people access to them in their national courts. The incorporation of the European Convention will establish a floor, not a ceiling, for human rights. 1997 Labour Party’s General Election Manifesto Should legal obstacles arise we will legislate further, including, if necessary, amending the Human Rights Act in respect of the interpretation of the European Convention on Human Rights. Prime Minister Tony Blair, 5 August 2005 Do these statements constitute a 'broken promise' regarding human rights?"
Show less »
43
0 comment
| Topic:
World Affairs
|
Email to friends
|
Oct 30 2007 11:17:07 PM
MTyrrell
is asking
Becky Slater
:
"This is a quote from the British Plastics Foundation: "The BPF believes there would be little logic in taxing plastic carrier bags, as they are not a significant litter problem and they do not represent..."
Show more »
"This is a quote from the British Plastics Foundation: "The BPF believes there would be little logic in taxing plastic carrier bags, as they are not a significant litter problem and they do not represent a significant environmental impact. Just 4% of crude oil consumption is used for all plastics, and only 2% for all films, of which plastic bags is a very small proportion. 85% of oil is burned as fuel or heating. Plastic bags are extraordinarily energy-efficient in manufacture, and more so than paper bags. Not only do they prevent waste of goods carried, but the embodied energy can be recovered either by recycling or via energy-from-waste systems." With plastic bag usage are we concentrating on the wrong issue? Or is this quote an example of reluctance to accept accountability? "
Show less »
28
0 comment
| Topic:
Politics
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Oct 30 2007 10:28:13 PM
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