Skip to main content

Stop posting goals on Vine, says English Premier League

stop posting goals vine says english premier league rooney
Image used with permission by copyright holder
The soccer World Cup was a huge success for Twitter and its video offshoot Vine, but Premier League chiefs in the UK are promising a crackdown on users who attempt to share goals and highlights on social media. Broadcasting rights to the competition currently command billions of dollars but those figures will drop if fans can get their sporting fix for free on the Web.

“You can understand that fans see something, they can capture it, they can share it, but ultimately it is against the law,” Premier League director of communications Dan Johnson told the BBC ahead of the new season, which kicks off this weekend. “It’s a breach of copyright and we would discourage fans from doing it. We’re developing technologies like GIF crawlers, Vine crawlers, working with Twitter to look to curtail this kind of activity.”

Related: In Major League Soccer’s social media HQ for all-star week, fans and stars mingle digitally

“I know it sounds as if we’re killjoys but we have to protect our intellectual property,” added Johnson. In the most recent television deal brokered by the top tier of England’s soccer competition, Sky Sports and BT Sport paid a total of £3 billion (around $5 billion) for exclusive rights to broadcast live Premier League action in the UK. Online rights are owned by the Sun and Times newspapers, with clips of goals uploaded for subscribers less than two minutes after they’re scored.

“It’s important to underline that it’s illegal to do this,” said the Sun’s Dean Scoggins. “We’ve obviously signed a very big deal with the Premier League to be a rights holder and to show it, we’ve got legal teams talking with them about what we can do.”

Whether or not Twitter and the rights holders will be able to police this kind of activity remains to be seen. The BBC spoke to one prolific uploader who regularly posts goals on his Vine account: “If you just search on Twitter, if Gareth Bale scores and you just search within seconds of the goals going in there’ll be four, five up,” he said. “If I’m not doing it someone else is.”

[Header image: Premier League]

Editors' Recommendations

Topics
David Nield
Dave is a freelance journalist from Manchester in the north-west of England. He's been writing about technology since the…
We just learned a lot more about Motorola’s next folding phone
A video playing on the Motorola Razr 40's half open screen.

Italian retailer Deal N Tech has leaked new information about the upcoming Motorola Razr 50 Ultra foldable phone — including color and storage options, as well as pricing details in Europe. The phone, a successor to the Motorola Razr 40 Ultra/Motorola Razr Plus, has no release date yet, but is expected very soon.

According to the report by Deal N Tech, the new phone will be priced at 1,200 euros (approximately $1,292) in Europe for a 512GB storage variant with 12GB of RAM. It is worth noting that the previous model was launched in 2023 at the same price, but it had a 256GB storage capacity and 8GB of RAM. A previous rumor also noted that the new phone would be available with 512GB of storage and 12GB of RAM.

Read more
Apple apologizes for its controversial iPad Pro ad
Apple's ad for its refreshed iPad Pro tablet.

It may have seemed like a good idea at the time, but an ad by Apple for its thinnest-ever iPad has turned into a massive headache for the company.

The 68-second “Crush!” ad for the iPad Pro debuted with the unveiling of the new tablet on Tuesday. It shows a large number of objects such as musical instruments, books, and cans of paint being crushed by a hydraulic press in an apparent effort to demonstrate how it's packed a huge amount of creative potential into an ultra-slim digital device.

Read more
Apple finally fixed my biggest issue with the iPad Pro
iPad Pro.

The iPad Pro 2022 Joe Maring / Digital Trends

After a year of no new iPad models, Apple finally gave us what we were hoping for (and then some) during its Let Loose event on May 7. Apple revealed a new 13-inch size for the iPad Air (in addition to the standard 11-inch model), plus brand new iPad Pros.

Read more