Internet service providers (ISPs) have reacted with anger to new proposals on how to tackle internet piracy.
The government is proposing a tougher stance which would include cutting off repeat offenders from the net.
UK ISP Talk Talk said the recommendations were likely to “breach fundamental rights” and would not work.
Virgin said that “persuasion not coercion” was key in the fight to crack down on the estimated six million file-sharers in the UK.
TalkTalk’s director of regulation Andrew Heaney told the BBC News the ISP was as keen as anyone to clamp down on illegal file-sharers.
“This is best done by making sure there are legal alternatives and educating people, writing letters to alleged file-sharers and, if necessary, taking them to court.”
But introducing measures to simply cut people off will not work, he said.
“Disconnecting alleged offenders will be futile given that it is relatively easy for determined file-sharers to mask their identity or their activity to avoid detection,” he added.
There are also concerns that the method of identifying offenders using the IP address of a specific machine may punish those who share a web connection.
A spokeswoman for Virgin Media was concerned that a “heavy-handed, punitive regime will simply alienate consumers”.
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