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Fulham 2-1 Chelsea


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4 minutes ago, Vegetable said:

Dunno how GB law works, but in most jurisdictions streaming as in broadcasting is the problem, no one will bother with looking for a guys who watched some shady footy with Serbian commentary 

Yeah, exactly this. It's not illegal to watch the content, only to distribute. 

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1 hour ago, We Hate Scouse said:

Yeah, exactly this. It's not illegal to watch the content, only to distribute. 

Police visit 1,000 homes of people watching online streams in piracy crackdown

Operation signals switch in focus to those not just sharing pirated streams but also watching them

https://www.independent.co.uk/tech/piracy-free-online-streams-uk-laws-b2259510.html

Police in the UK claim to have identified more than 1,000 people accessing illegal online streams following a raid on a major piracy operation.

Officers with West Mercia Police plan to visit homes in order to serve notices to the accused individuals, ordering them to cease illegal streaming activity. It forms part of a broader crackdown on piracy in partnership with the Federation Against Copyright Theft (FACT).

“This operation has involved months of collaborative hard work and the warning notices issued are an excellent example of adopting a multi-agency approach between FACT and the police,” said Jason Grove, who works for the Government Agency Intelligence Network (GAIN).

FACT chief executive Kieron Sharp added that the operation aimed to “ensure that the public are made aware of the dangers of using illegal streaming services and, more importantly, that they understand that there is the risk of criminal prosecution”.

It is illegal to watch pirated streams in the UK, though law enforcement have historically focussed only on those operating the websites and services rather than those watching them.

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5 minutes ago, Vesper said:

Police visit 1,000 homes of people watching online streams in piracy crackdown

Operation signals switch in focus to those not just sharing pirated streams but also watching them

https://www.independent.co.uk/tech/piracy-free-online-streams-uk-laws-b2259510.html

Police in the UK claim to have identified more than 1,000 people accessing illegal online streams following a raid on a major piracy operation.

Officers with West Mercia Police plan to visit homes in order to serve notices to the accused individuals, ordering them to cease illegal streaming activity. It forms part of a broader crackdown on piracy in partnership with the Federation Against Copyright Theft (FACT).

“This operation has involved months of collaborative hard work and the warning notices issued are an excellent example of adopting a multi-agency approach between FACT and the police,” said Jason Grove, who works for the Government Agency Intelligence Network (GAIN).

FACT chief executive Kieron Sharp added that the operation aimed to “ensure that the public are made aware of the dangers of using illegal streaming services and, more importantly, that they understand that there is the risk of criminal prosecution”.

It is illegal to watch pirated streams in the UK, though law enforcement have historically focussed only on those operating the websites and services rather than those watching them.

There's no UK laws preventing the watching of pirated material, only distributing. It does however break international copyright law, of which, no one has ever been prosecuted against. 

Scaremongering, they should focus their time, effort and funding on reducing and preventing real crime. Cretins. 

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4 minutes ago, We Hate Scouse said:

There's no UK laws preventing the watching of pirated material, only distributing. It does however break international copyright law, of which, no one has ever been prosecuted against. 

Scaremongering, they should focus their time, effort and funding on reducing and preventing real crime. Cretins. 

I have here in Finland when I was about 15 years old. 😂

Went to court and was forced to pay a few thousand euros to the copyright holders. Let's just say my folks weren't too happy about that.

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See what you can achieve when you try, Saints beating Shitty 2-0 HT, ok they might not end up winning but at least they're giving it a go.

Something our team team of jokers don't do, they instead stand around looking completely disinterested, and a manager who is clueless and who's out of his league here.

I have no faith whatsoever in any of them, apart from Thiago, the rest are fucking abysmal, I really don't know how we're going to finish up this season, but I guarantee it's going to be painful.

I can quite easily see us getting mullered by Fulham. 

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2 minutes ago, bigbluewillie said:

See what you can achieve when you try, Saints beating Shitty 2-0 HT, ok they might not end up winning but at least they're giving it a go.

Something our team team of jokers don't do, they instead stand around looking completely disinterested, and a manager who is clueless and who's out of his league here.

I have no faith whatsoever in any of them, apart from Thiago, the rest are fucking abysmal, I really don't know how we're going to finish up this season, but I guarantee it's going to be painful.

I can quite easily see us getting mullered by Fulham. 

12th...  maybe they'll make some sort of effort...I doubt it

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West London hierarchy turned upside down as beleaguered Chelsea face confident Fulham

https://www.thenationalnews.com/sport/football/2023/01/12/premier-league-london-Chelsea-fulham/

Fulham vs Chelsea: Predicted lineup, injury news, head-to-head

 

The story goes that when Roman Abramovich, the Russian-born billionaire who was to transform English football, was ready to finalise his purchase of Chelsea just under 20 years ago, he had a late moment of alarm. His plane was coming into London and he glimpsed a stadium beneath the flight path, not far from Heathrow airport.

It looked old and unglamorous. And rather small. He apparently worried for a moment this might be an unflattering aerial view of his prospective new property.

Abramovich was assured that, no, the worn, tired arena was not Stamford Bridge, where he would go on to be serenaded by fans for the next two decades. It remains unclear whether it was Fulham’s Craven Cottage, or Brentford’s Griffin Park that the former Chelsea owner had peered down on, unimpressed with its size and old-fashioned appearance.

That seems a long time ago now. For the new owners of Chelsea, who took over the club last year after UK government sanctions against Russia-linked businesses and individuals obliged the club’s sale, the view from above and indeed within West London is very different.

Brentford, who 20 seasons ago were in the third-tier of English football, are now an ambitious Premier League club enjoying a smart new stadium, a kilometre – and light years in terms of facilities – from Griffin Park.

Fulham, in the top division after three years of back and forth in and out of the Championship, are still at Craven Cottage but its quaint, picturesque charms are now supplemented by a brand new grandstand rising up next to the River Thames.

Viewed from nearby Stamford Bridge, there are aspects of both venues that would provoke envy. Although Chelsea’s stadium is a good deal bigger that Brentford’s or Fulham’s, the club’s owners past and present long for a capacity far greater than the current 40,000-odd, but face a number of practical difficulties in expanding or relocating.

More urgently, Chelsea find themselves in the uncomfortable, unfamiliar position of looking not at Fulham and Brentford from above, but beneath, in the hierarchy of the league table. Chelsea, the 2021 European champions, sit 10th in the Premier League, a spot below Brentford, and three places and three points behind a confident Fulham, who host their next-door rivals on Thursday.

Chelsea are horribly out of form. At the weekend, they tumbled out of the FA Cup, beaten 4-0 by Manchester City, who had also eliminated Chelsea from the League Cup at the earliest point of elite clubs’ entry to that knockout tournament.

Chelsea, who sacked Thomas Tuchel as manager in September and poached Graham Potter from Brighton as his replacement, have won just once in the last six league outings. At 10 points off the top four, they are beginning to regard their best chance of being involved in next season’s Champions League as qualifying as holders. That looks a very long shot. They meet Borussia Dortmund in the last 16 next month for a place in a last eight that will be well stocked with squads in better health than theirs.

In this gathering crisis, would-be saviours are sought. Potter has been assured his position is safe, and that by the end of the transfer window an unbalanced, injury-hit but still expensive squad will be significantly strengthened.

Joao Felix, 23 and not too long ago football’s second-most costly teenager ever, confirmed his arrival as a Chelsea player on Wednesday, the fourth signing of the winter transfer window.

Chelsea have taken the Portuguese on loan from Atletico Madrid until May for a fee of over €10 million, and will cover his salary but without an option to buy. Atletico, keen for Felix to extend his contract with the Spanish club by a year to 2027, want to retain what they see as a highly saleable asset, a player they invested €111 million in when he moved from Benfica in 2019.

But Felix has pushed for this January exit, however temporary, with his relationship with Atletico head coach Diego Simeone - and specifically Simeone’s safety-first tactics - more and more strained.

Whether Potter, an imaginative, progressive coach, can stimulate the creativity in Felix and the player have the quick impact required by Chelsea remains to be seen. “He can make a difference,” said Potter, “a quality player that gives everyone a lift, someone who can impose himself on a game. He’s a nice addition and I’m looking forward to working with him.”

But Potter also warned: “It’s not just one person who solves your problems. You have to fix the team, attack better, create more chances.”

As he looked across West London at tonight’s hosts, on four wins out of four since the break for the World Cup, he saw a Fulham “who play with courage and personality” while his side “are not in a top, top moment, hurting.”

Edited by Vesper
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