European Parliament Votes in Favor of Controversial Copyright Laws (engadget.com) 491
The EU has voted on copyright reform, with members of European Parliament this time voting in favor of the extremely controversial Articles 11 and 13. The 438 to 226 vote, described as "the worst possible outcome" by some quarters, could have significant repercussions on the way we use the internet. From a report: The Copyright Directive, first proposed in 2016, is intended to bring the issue of copyright in line with the digital age. Articles 11 and 13 have caused particular controversy, with many heralding their adoption as the death of the internet. Article 11, also known as the "link tax", would require online platforms such as Google and Facebook to pay media companies to link to their content, while Article 13, the "upload filter", would force them to check all content uploaded to their sites and remove any copyrighted material. How this will affect regular internet users is still subject to debate, but it could seriously limit the variety of content available online -- and it could pretty much spell the end of memes.
Unsurprisingly, these parts of the bill have been met with opposition from digital rights groups, computer scientists, academics, platforms such as Wikipedia and even human rights groups. Supporters, however, say the consequences of the measures are being blown out of proportion, and that the provisions are merely intended to give creators and smaller outlets the opportunity to reclaim the value of their work. More details on Reuters.
Unsurprisingly, these parts of the bill have been met with opposition from digital rights groups, computer scientists, academics, platforms such as Wikipedia and even human rights groups. Supporters, however, say the consequences of the measures are being blown out of proportion, and that the provisions are merely intended to give creators and smaller outlets the opportunity to reclaim the value of their work. More details on Reuters.
Brexit (Score:5, Insightful)
...suddenly doesn't look quite so bad, does it?
Re:Brexit (Score:4, Insightful)
>"...suddenly doesn't look quite so bad, does it?"
That is exactly what I was thinking.
>summary: "with many heralding their adoption as the death of the internet."
Well, no, but it might be the death of the "internet" in the EU. At some point they are going to go too far (this might be it) and companies will just give up and start blocking the EU and it will be like the great firewall of China, except in reverse. Then the EU can live in their own "digital utopia world" with as much censorship, manipulation, taxes, and control over information that they want.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Then the EU can live in their own "digital utopia world" with as much censorship, manipulation, taxes, and control over information that they want.
It's almost as if "be careful what you wish for" is pretty good advice.
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
As a citizen of a EU member country, i hope all rest of the world stop serving EU members with any internet related stuff to show the assholes of these giant turd rules, that they can shove it.
I won't be joining any EU sites and i won't accept these new fasist and impossible EU BS rules. What a bunch of ignorant fools. The god damn filter will never work correctly, that's for damn sure. Who the fuck is going to be updating the copyright filter with up to date contracts between different parties?
I don't fuck
Re:Brexit (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't fucking understand how copyrights now trump everything else
Because the west bases more and more of its economy on intellectual property while the production of physical property is moved to the third world.
Re: (Score:2)
I haven't read any of the law/bill/proposal, but does it also include any services delivered to EU consumers? That would make sense for these socialists, to force this not only on EU publishers, etc, but on ISPs and consumers, so there is no way to permit content to be delivered no matter the source unless it's compliant, and thereby maximize the impact. After all, this is about making the world a better, more just place.
All legislation is someone's morality.
Re: (Score:2)
Well, no, but it might be the death of the "internet" in the EU.
Well, there were many in Europe who don't like the Internet, I guess. Those TCP/IP protocols with no proper respect for the ISO OSI network reference model. Now they can build an OSI protocol-based that fully realizes and respects the OSI model.
They can build in all of the proper government controls and monitoring while they are at it. No more of this free-wheeling, practically anything goes communications. All hail the PTTs!
Re: (Score:2)
my prediction is google, facebook, twitter all get together and ban access for all members of eu parliament and their staff. So many people are so fucking addicted to social media at this point it wont be long till heads start exploding. Lets not forget how wording in legal documents have a way to get fucked up. By clicking 'like' on someone's post or picture, is that also considered 'linking'? Do they explicitly say it doesn't? because some lawyer probably can argue the sky is green and likely be convinci
Re: (Score:2)
and companies will just give up and start blocking the EU
No reason to block the EU, if you don't have a physical presence there. It will, however, motivate internet companies to leave the EU. It will destroy a lot of internet businesses which are currently in the EU, too, and which can't survive a relocation.
Re:Brexit (Score:4, Insightful)
Translation... My fascist view of how the world should be doesn't hold up when debated openly. I am hoping we get censorship en mass so that my viewpoints are not questioned and debated. I am unable to win honest debates and am tired of it being pointed out that I resort to name calling and idiocy once I failed to make any intelligent arguments.
I think that just about sums up the left these days. Thanks for your worthless input and letting us know you are all for a dictatorship and free ideas and democracy should be banned. Please keep your views to the EU and keep on letting the UK know brekexit was a GREAT idea.
Re:Brexit (Score:5, Insightful)
How is this law going to censor the nuts you are talking about? The only effect of this law will be to prevent small companies from opening interactive sites, reducing the internet gradually into television. The nuts will still have their place, because they bring eyeballs.
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
I don't know if you are trolling, human garbage or just the typical deeply ignorant useful idiot. What you fail to understand is its the internationalists that harbor the deep hate, not those right-wing nuts. They might dislike one group or anther for whatever reason but they are NOT the authoritarians this time around.
The Internationalists are! Step back and look objectively at the treatment by the major international bodies EU, UN, WTO etc of anyone who does not subscribe to their current secularist vi
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Freedom's a bitch, ain't it? Being a European, sadly, you're losing your freedoms, such as they were, in the name of, well, what?
Only the British have a significant history of seeking and defending freedom, the Magna Carta being the first great manifestation of that. And that's an indicator of why Brexit is a thing.
Re:Brexit (Score:5, Informative)
Just read the law itself, it's the exact of what the summery states. [juliareda.eu] The link's in that article and it also explains in small words that this is a link tax. It's an exact mirror of the existing German law that does the same thing.
Re: (Score:3)
Why link to a blog post when you can go to the precise details of the vote itself?
Easy answer. You're fundamentally ignorant of what's going on around you, and need someone to hold your hand with an actual opinion of what it says, especially after your previous comment.
It appears to be mis-worded and will likely be corrected in future, stating "individual words" rather than the proposed exemption for snippets
Nope. Because they voted down an amendment that would have changed it. Go on keep reading.
It will still apply to UK (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:It will still apply to UK (Score:5, Informative)
This isn't a law yet. It is a Directive. Each member state must implement it via their own laws into their legal system. Most member states take their time in doing so with directives. I doubt the UK will be in a hurry passing such a law before BREXIT.
Re: (Score:2)
When it comes to Brexit, the UK government is like the car I had back in university: forever stalling.
Re:It will still apply to UK (Score:4, Insightful)
That's not a bad thing when the only roads lead you off a cliff.
Re: It will still apply to UK (Score:2)
Oh I do so hope it's the one that's falling down!
Re: (Score:2)
Until Brexit all laws voted apply to UK. And if you think for a SECOND that the UK government will remove that particular one post-brexit, when they will be lobbied left and right to keep it by content holder, I have a bridge to sell you in London. Cheap.
This.
If you want to see madness coming out of a parliament in Europe, look no further than Whitehall.
My take on this is that it will become yet another EC regulation that isn't at all enforceable because the internet does not operate solely within the EEC. Just a bit of legislation that has been passed at the behest of some special interest group or another that no-one will bother enforcing.
Meanwhile the coming economic disaster that is Brexit will mean that Britons wont have enough money to have t
Re:Brexit (Score:5, Funny)
...suddenly doesn't look quite so bad, does it?
We get blue passports and memes, fucking hell yeah! Brexit is paying out big time :|
Re:Brexit (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3)
Oi, mate. Ave you got a loicense for dat post?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Yes, because the UK without kind-mother-EU to guide them will surely just begin to throw out all their human rights laws.
Of all the arguments for staying in the EU, this has to be the most absurdly ridiculous one yet.
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
The US doesn't follow EU law and they have trade agreements with the EU. What applies to business doing business in the EU does not also apply to separate sovereign nations.
Re:Brexit (Score:4, Insightful)
You had a good comment, and then you just had to throw in that last sentence...
Re:Brexit (Score:4, Interesting)
I think that is a actually a registered Slashdot user. He goes around making these really insightful posts then ending them with an irrelevant anti-Semitic remark. I'm trying to search my post history because I know I've replied to him before. It exactly fits the pattern. I just can't seem to find the post. There is a part of me that wants to make a bot that re-posts his posts but without the last sentence. I bet it would get quite a lot of karma, and bring some of the intelligent points back into the conversation.
Re:Brexit (Score:4)
Just like GDPR, you have to get with the program no matter where you actually are.
I assume that is the comment you are talking about. What is the issue with it? Pleading ignorance here.
Re: (Score:3)
Yes. I found the post after you commented here. But I still don't know what GDPR means.
Re: (Score:3)
If the voting public can't be fucked to show up and vote, it is not valid to include all of them in your statistic.
This is as meaningless as when people whine about "winning the popular vote" in US Presidential elections, but losing the one metric that counts - the electoral college.
Stop moving the goalposts, and just get people to actually give a shit and vote.
About that whole copyright thing (Score:2)
Everything created (at least in the US) unless released under something like creative commons is copyrighted automatically. Everything.
Books, stories, articles, video, music...
Re: (Score:3)
The general approach is that once you have put your idea in material form, you automatically have copyright over "that particular expression" of that idea. No problem there. Creators deserve a chance to exploit their creations.
The stupidity of current practice as lobbied for by large conglomerates however.........
Re: (Score:3)
That is actually a huge problem. In the US, it used to be the case that you only got a copyright if you registered it with the government. That created legal clarity. The crappy system we have now is the result of bad European copyright legislation.
The justification for copyright in th
Re: (Score:2)
GitHub may have problems operating in Europe, but it can certainly operate in the US.
And subversive European developers can connect to it from Europe, at least until Europe follows in the footsteps of China and implements its own Great Firewall.
big deal (Score:2)
I'm not sure what "repercussions" restrictions on European content is supposed to have for "us" in the US; it's not like there is a lot of interesting content coming out of Europe.
A bunch of hypocrites.
Re: (Score:2)
Yes, and how is this a problem? You can't read The Guardian anymore?
Large publishers and government media in Europe won't have a problem, so Europe is going to kill a lot of its small and medium sized online publishers; sites like Facebook and Twitter will experience severe restrictions in
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
They may not have the option of doing so. Often, the way this works in Europe is that fees are collected by national licensing organizations and then apportioned to their members.
Re: (Score:2)
Because the US is not the world.
http://www.worldometers.info/p... [worldometers.info]
Because the European market is more often bigger than the US, depending on what/how you measure it and what you're looking it.
More people than the US, more money than the US, more trade than the US, more production than the US.
You keep forgetting that the US is only a *country*, the EU is a *continent*. You just lost access to an entire *continent* of potential customers. Suppliers. Importers. Financial Services. All because they don't ap
Pay to link? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Pay to link? (Score:4, Interesting)
Exactly. Google et al response will be "we'll pay you for links to your content, here's an invoice for putting your website on the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, or nth page of search results"
Re: (Score:3)
Nope. Because this has already had a "test phase" in Spain. Google news doesn't exist there because of it and has no plans coming back, don't be surprised if they simply fold up shop and don't service EU users on it.
Re:Pay to link? (Score:4, Insightful)
Exactly. Google et al response will be "we'll pay you for links to your content, here's an invoice for putting your website on the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, or nth page of search results"
Actually, Google's (and other search engines, at least) response to this should be, "we're never paying for links. If you ever bother us about paying for links, we'll handle it by removing your base domain from our database completely, and you can languish in obscurity until you die because no one can find you."
Re: (Score:3)
I think Google could do a test run of this by only providing news links to RussiaToday and similar sites. That should be fun in the EU.
Re: (Score:2)
Time to get out. (Score:2)
I don't know why these internet companies still do business in the EU.
If Facebook alone pulled out of the EU (let alone Google or Wikipedia) because they didn't want to deal with this BS, these laws would be rescinded in days.
Of course it would never happen because investors.
Re: (Score:2)
Well it was nice while it lasted (Score:2)
Back to AOL and strictly walled gardens, I guess.
Re: (Score:3)
This is what happens when young people don't vote (Score:3)
I've been saying this for a long time: this is the kind of result one expects to see when most of the people who vote in EU elections are over 50. I mean, voter turnout has been low in EU elections consistently (43 % in the last elections, pathetic really) because people would rather nitpick about the Union than do anything to affect it, but it's especially low among the younger generations. (source. [europa.eu] "Turnout was again highest among the oldest respondents. Some 51% of the 55+ group voted in the European elections, while only 28% did in the 18-24 age group.") Is it any wonder that when most of the people sitting in the parliament have little to no understanding of what the internet actually is, the lobbyists are able to spoonfeed them all kinds of bullshit and we end up with sub-par legislation like this?
Obviously we're still a long way from implementation, from the article:
So whatever impact this will or will not have is still to be seen, and I personally hope the coming debates and negotiations will make it clear just how absurd the law in its current shape is and how hard (if not impossible) actual implementation and enforcement would be and reason will win, but we'll see.
We've got slightly over half a year to next EU elections people. To paraphrase Obama's recent speech to anyone else here in Europe who doesn't like it: 'If this pisses you off, don't hashtag, vote!"
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Another thing that young people support is the idea of "all or nothing", things like "either we can't censor anything at all or "we must censor both pedophiles and copyright violators and close the internet down". In real life, most people believe that there's a place for in-betweens and this is how laws are enacted.
Re: (Score:2)
Why should anybody waste a lot of time trying to oppose this at the level of the EP? People understand full well that their vote is pretty much worthless. As I understand it, the EU can adopt these rules without the EP.
Furthermore, what makes you think that European youth would vote to oppose this?
Re:This is what happens when young people don't vo (Score:5, Interesting)
In the U.S. the joke (from about two decades ago) about younger people voting was that it was the younger college voters in Minnesota that got Jesse Ventura elected. If you're not familiar with him, he's a bit of a conspiracy nut among other things. Probably an okay guy to be friends with, just not what I would consider governor material. I think the youth vote was also up in the 2016 election and we ended up with Trump, so I don't see it making a difference in this case either.
Re:This is what happens when young people don't vo (Score:4, Interesting)
Nah the Trump vote came mainly from grumpy old white people. The youth vote would have gone to Bernie Sanders, but I suspect most of those who would have voted Bernie ended up not voting at all. The ideals of socialism seem to appeal most strongly to the youth, who are still idealistic, with a strong sense of morality (as they see it).
The FPV industry was destroyed in EU already (Score:4, Interesting)
It basically destroyed the emerging UAV & FPV market and the industry in the EU countries. It made existing FPV drones unreliable and dangerous, while the FPV videolink starts to break at about 100 meters.
Re: (Score:2)
Are these modules cosidered line LPD systems os similar unlicensed systems? I remember that to control model aircaft one needed to pay a CB tax because was actually used the CB band to transmit.
Re: (Score:3)
Good. Fuck off with those drones.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
So it should not be this concern which you mention. In my opinion it is kind of liberal self-righteous populism.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Again, what keeps me from using a more powerful transmitter? You think you can shoot my drone down before I shoot your prez?
Re: (Score:3)
Yeah, because someone planning to use a drone as a smart bomb will give half a shit about the transmitting power of his drone.
If someone has a drone that transmits at a gigawatt, do you think that someone could stop it before it slams into its target? Hell, I'd be surprised if anyone even noticed.
So drop the charade, what's the real reason?
Re: (Score:2)
Simply use a phone as FPV Transmitter.
If you attach a phone to a drone, now it's arguably part of the drone.
It will come down to who has more influence, (Score:5, Interesting)
The content owners, or the content indexers?
Content owners like large media companies are still desperately clinging to the past.
Google and other online gatekeepers hold sway over large percentages of the audience.
I eagerly await a final smackdown for Murdoch & friends, when the reality of distributed information finally hits home. Hits home to them of course, the rest of us already know.
Google and others have no obligation to list anything. If they decide that it costs too much to link items to media websites, well... tough. The other media companies will gladly waive costs if it means their content gets listed at the top of page 1 while Murdoch & co are relegated to page 2 or 3.
They are both bad (Score:2)
Easy (Score:2)
Rrrrrrrrrr... (Score:2)
Now EVERYBODY can be a pirate!
Removing Copyrighted Material (Score:2)
And how are these companies supposed to 1) know that a piece of material is copyrighted and 2) know that the uploader doesn't have the right to upload it?
For example, I wrote and published a novel. The novel is protected by copyright. When writing the novel, I used Google Docs. (It's handy for writing initial drafts wherever I am. I later exported that into a more full fledged wo
Re: (Score:2)
Easy, they check the special copyright bit that is magically set on every byte you transmit.
Re: (Score:2)
Just reuse the evil bit [wikipedia.org], it's actually reserved for malware but since copyrighted material should also not be routed, I guess it's ok to reuse it. Anyone not having permission to use content has to set it and that should take care of the whole mess.
I would actually suggest it to the EU, but I secretly fear they'd seriously implement it, considering they just showed how much they really understand about the internet...
Re: (Score:2)
And how are these companies supposed to 1) know that a piece of material is copyrighted and 2) know that the uploader doesn't have the right to upload it?
1) is easy. All material that's not ancient is copyrighted, by default. Everything. Blogs, books, news articles, song recordings - all of it.
2) is the hard part. The US DMCA got that one correct, though: if uploader says they have the right to upload and publish material for distribution, the host is in the clear, and other people that claim copyright over the same material will have to battle it out with the (by then known!) uploader.
Remove *all* copyrighted material? (Score:2)
So in other words, uploads are effectively like copying to /dev/null?
Because even if it doesn't infringe on copyright, it's all copyrighted... or at least probably mostly copyrighted. Hell, the uploader might even own the copyright on it. After all, it's copyrighted, isn't it?
The question to be asking is if the uploaded copyrighted content infringes on copyright law, or if the copyright holder might want to claim copyright infringement (whether or not they actually did do so).
Computers cannot curr
Time for a search add on (Score:2)
-site: and list the EU nations.
Move around the censorship and link to nations that support freedom of speech. Support the ability to link and talk about a link.
here come the trolls (Score:2)
Europe tech scene must be lame. (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Next time say something original.
You're saying that like you didn't know big companies regularly steal content from smaller outlets and then file copyright claims against the original creator
Re: (Score:2)
Your post should also be removed for copyright infringement: https://www.google.com/search?... [google.com]
Re:Not only the death of Internet (Score:4, Interesting)
Are you kidding? The copyright lobby and their insane demands started in Europe. The US managed to avoid their madness for a long time and didn't implement the Berne convention until 1989. One particularly evil aspect of the Berne convention was the removal of the requirement for copyright registration.
Re: (Score:3)
Meanwhile Trump is pushing a bunch of IP bullshit in NAFTA including forcing Canada to take down sites based on the say so of private companies along with extending copyright. Then there is the patent shit that they're mostly hiding to make sure the drug companies continue to have increasing profits.
Re: (Score:3)
Considering that Canada's priorities seem to be womens issues, and payments to natives as a core component of NAFTA? I'm perfectly fine with Trump crashing it so fucking hard that the Liberal Party of Canada won't exist by next year.
Re: (Score:3)
One particularly evil aspect of the Berne convention was the removal of the requirement for copyright registration.
That's not evil at all - that's a very good thing. It allows artists to control their copyrights without needing to spend their time navigating bureaucracy. It's one of the few changes in copyright law that has been beneficial for the people who create at those who would exploit them by removing obstacles to ownership of their material.
If you want to talk about indefinite copyright being a major issue, I'm right there with you. But anything that allows creative people to keep their creations for a rea
Re:Not only the death of Internet (Score:4, Insightful)
The proportional election system in Europe does the opposite: it allows parties to shield politicians from the voters; meaning, powerful party figures who have fallen out of favor with voters are simply moved from a direct mandate to a party position.
Furthermore, the parliamentary system in Europe has resulted in numerous extremists and dictators taking over, foremost Hitler; people like that have no chance under the US system.
And European governments are far more under the control of large corporations than the US government.
Re:Not only the death of Internet (Score:4, Insightful)
Furthermore, the parliamentary system in Europe has resulted in numerous extremists and dictators taking over, foremost Hitler; people like that have no chance under the US system.
ahahahhahahahahahahahahahahahha
Re: (Score:3)
Wealthy people don't elect our president or representatives, the middle class does because only the middle class has the votes. So, we get smaller government when the middle class decides that it is in their interest. For the last half century, the American middle class has been propagandized and manipulated into believing that big
Re: (Score:3)
Wealthy people pick the candidates and finance their campaigns. While in theory you are right about the voters deciding, in practice it doesn't seem to work that way and you end up with billionaire Presidents that pretend to care and a Congress full of millionaires that everyone hates but they keep getting re-elected.
As you say, there is also a lot of propaganda to get people to vote a certain way and to consider only a limited number of choices. Look at how few votes the other parties got last election eve
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
No worries. The people shall write a harshly-worded letter to the EU leadership detailing their grievances! And, if necessary, follow it up with a very harshly-worded letter!
Re: (Score:2)
I'm pretty sure you can point out how having a gun would change anything.
Re: (Score:2)
You will get arrested and imprisoned for sharing works as old as Handel's Messiah or The Ode to Joy.
Re: (Score:2)
You will get arrested and imprisoned for sharing works as old as Handel's Messiah or The Ode to Joy.
Ironic. Ode to Joy is the European Anthem.
lah, la la la la la la la lalalala laa lalaah!
Re: (Score:3)
As an aside, you aren't actually violating copyright for performing or even, with the permission of an artist, playing these works, they are long in the public domain.
However, you are probably violating copyright if you perform or play any of several arrangements, as these are re-arranged regularly to be published anew.
One of the quirks of public domain, if there's no financial reward to publishing it, then it is unlikely to be published. How much is a score for Ode to Joy worth? Such a great question, but
Re: No More Shuffling Around? (Score:4, Insightful)
ode to joy existed before eu and will exist long after the demise of that undemocratic bureaucratic authoritarian state with its out of touch unelected leaders.
Re: (Score:2)
Because graft gets punished less the higher you're up.
Re: (Score:2)
Youtube should essentially redirect all videos to one detailing how to set up a VPN to a server outside the EU when called from an IP address inside the EU, lean back and enjoy the tantrum.
Re: (Score:2)
We're already way ahead of you, Mr. Public.
Re: (Score:2)
The Europeans know that this is bullshit, don't worry. We're no more in control of the goofballs that rule us than you are of the annoying orange.