Firms that let staff watch the World Cup on broadband could be fined £1,000 if they do not hold a TV licence. The BBC is streaming more than 50 hours of World Cup football to UK internet users. England's next two games will only be available in audio online. A TV Licensing spokesperson said: "We know exactly which unlicensed business premises to target." More than five million UK workers are thought to have high-speed internet access at their desks. A TV licence is required for any device that is "installed or used" for receiving television broadcasts. "It doesn't matter how you're watching, if you are watching a live match you will need a licence," said a TV Licensing spokesperson. The Federation of Small Businesses' Stephen Alambritis said: "We would urge all our members and other businesses to act on this advance warning and check they are correctly licensed." The BBC can only show live video from matches broadcast on its television channels, which means England's next two games will only be available in audio online. TV coverage for those games is being provided by ITV. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/5074406.stm It'll be interesting to see a test case on that - if it's a TV card in a PC then I can see that you need a licence but bot for internet streaming.
RE: No. TV licence required for public viewing. This applies to everything then.....when I've been watching streaming of games from the US for instance that requires me to have a licence as well?! Minor point as I have a TV licence, but how would they prove this unless they actually somehow caught you watching the video? This would be interesting as well http://hardware.silicon.com/servers/0,39024647,39128359,00.htm So you have a charge for your PC instead!
I have to pay for a French TV licence . . . . . . despite the fact my TV can't receive French TV signals (as it's PAL not SECAM).