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EU Technology

European Commission Gives Final Seal of Approval To Copyright Law Overhaul (variety.com) 182

The European Commission, the European Union's executive body, has approved a long-gestating major reform to copyright law, which had already been passed by the European Parliament last month. From a report: The overhaul contains two controversial provisions that will make online platforms liable for illegal uploading of copyright-protected content on their sites, as well as force Google, Facebook and other digital companies to pay publishers for press articles they post online. "With today's agreement, we are making copyright rules fit for the digital age. Europe will now have clear rules that guarantee fair remuneration for creators, strong rights for users and responsibility for platforms," said European Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker. According to the French newspaper Le Monde, six countries -- Italy, Finland, Sweden, Luxembourg, Poland and the Netherlands -- voted again the reform.
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European Commission Gives Final Seal of Approval To Copyright Law Overhaul

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  • Block them all (Score:5, Insightful)

    by GrumpySteen ( 1250194 ) on Monday April 15, 2019 @11:27AM (#58440080)

    If the entire EU is blocked from accessing all content on Google, Facebook, YouTube, Twitter and every other social media and news site, they'll get the hint and re-think these ridiculous polices.

    • Re:Block them all (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Joce640k ( 829181 ) on Monday April 15, 2019 @11:51AM (#58440236) Homepage

      Huh?

      Nobody's blocking anything.

      News sites have lobbied for years to get this law passed, hoping Google (et al) will start paying for the privilege of linking to their copy-pasted stories.

      What will happen in reality is:
      a) Google will stop linking to those sites.
      b) The sites will disappear from the Internet.
      c) Karma.

      I can't wait.

    • that is the right answer here information wants to be free. thats the mantra i grew up with
    • If the entire EU is blocked from accessing all content on Google, Facebook, YouTube, Twitter and every other social media and news site, they'll get the hint and re-think these ridiculous polices.

      If the EU is blocked from doing this the company executives will get a very unkind hint from shareholders about activism and cutting off the largest western customer base in the world.

      It pays when you're angry at someone to shot them, not yourself.

    • If the entire EU is blocked from accessing all content on Google, Facebook, YouTube, Twitter and every other social media and news site...

      ...they'd be much better off. People would stop wasting their time on all that garbage.

    • by Tom ( 822 )

      *yawn*

      This stupid troll comes up every single time there is an article about the EU on /. - literally every time. I should have an answer on a shortcut. Don't you guys ever learn anything?

      If Google, FB, Twitter or whatever you have were to leave the EU, or block the EU or whatever, the first thing that's going to happen is that their stocks take such a massive nosedive, you'll think it's the dot-com-crash all over again, just in fast-forward.

      The EU is a larger market than the USA. With more people and more

    • Good riddance.

  • by plague911 ( 1292006 ) on Monday April 15, 2019 @11:31AM (#58440098)

    The whole adjustment to force Google etc to provide compensation for article snippets seems fair. If the companies don't want to agree to a fair price, don't include them.

    However, the whole illegal uploading part seems, well...... extraordinarily draconian.

  • by bobstreo ( 1320787 ) on Monday April 15, 2019 @11:33AM (#58440110)

    to start sending millions of takedown notices to EU government websites for copyright violations.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    ... and everywhere.

    And then rapidly become a basic part of normal browsers, used by default. Not just for end users, but also hosting content.

    Culture flows through free expression. People refer to well-produced works. Places like Youtube are already becoming nearly useless for sharing basic culture because of laws like this - seemingly any reference to a popular work is becoming forbidden - or just random information since anything can be claimed by almost anyone.

    So - the answer isn't to not share cultur

    • by sims 2 ( 994794 )

      One of the biggest issues on this is how compliance is demanded.
      I assume this will be like the DMCA where there isn't any real deterrent for false claims.
      Big companies can afford to hire people to validate the requests to ensure they aren't claiming things that aren't theirs.

      Startup projects will simply honor all requests without validation as they don't have the time or money to do validation.

      Even youtube run by one of the largest companies runs by a honor request then check only if someone disputes policy

      • What YouTube will do is easy to figure out. If you're on their A-List, whatever you say is gospel and will be removed immediately. If you're not, any of your content that was removed stays removed.

        Why do you think they'd change anything?

        • by sims 2 ( 994794 )

          I don't think I insinuated that youtube would change anything. I was using them as an example of the chilling effects seen by abuse of the DMCA and suggesting that other companies would be adopting similar or even more user untrusting policies.

          User untrusting as in anyone makes a claim no matter how baseless and the content is removed automatically by machine trusting the accuser while the person who posted the content must defend themselves and prove they actually own it.

          Like the recent EFF twitter debacle

  • Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Monday April 15, 2019 @11:47AM (#58440214)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Why do you think you get the whole picture that way?

      I'm actually willing to cut them some slack and accept that they honestly believe what they're writing. Never attribute to malice and all that. The devil's in the details, though, because of how companies will (have to) react to it.

      Saying it does not affect end users is very ... let's say naive. Because with platforms like Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and the like, end users ARE content creators that are dependent on those targeted by the directive. Now, the

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • by djinn6 ( 1868030 )

          Copyright legislations are applied everywhere (like it or not) except online.

          That's just wrong. The law might exist everywhere in theory, but in practice nobody bothers to enforce it.

          I've not heard of any pen maker that verifies whether the pen they sold will be used to copy a book. Neither does printer or camera makers. In fact, I even recall a lot of CD, DVD and Video Cassette piracy before BitTorrent became a thing.

          If anything, laws are better enforced now. Copyrighted content on YouTube has a much bigger chance of being taken down than DVDs passed to friends.

        • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
          The laws makes what was once a politically transformative meme, art, a cartoon, a movie review, a link, a comment not legal in the EU.
          Thats what sets the EU apart with the new laws. A link tax. Political reporting and control over content.
          Who can say what and when.
          Who has their "art". "review", "politics" removed by an EU gov for political reasons.

          Who in the EU can report an image, comment, link, news item for removal?
          A side of politics? NATO? A think tank? NGO? University? A worker for some pa
    • by Tom ( 822 )

      Here's the problem with the directive - and almost every legislation related to the Internet of the past 20 years - there are some well-meaning intentions behind it (and some nonsense, and a lot of hidden agenda). But it is all being done by people without a clue who are advised by lobbyists with agendas and companies to serve. Large companies. Small companies can't afford full-time lobbyists and lobster dinners.

      Their intent is to reduce the power of Internet Giants such as Google and Facebook who - let's b

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • by Tom ( 822 )

          I agree with you that it is certainly not a coincidence that so many people reached so many other people so easily using the exact social media platforms that would be affected by this.

          I don't see the need of these filters which you are talking about. Is your site not caring about the copyright of the uploaded material now and do you want to defend that position?!

          The upload filters are introduced indirectly. The word doesn't appear in the directive - but if your reaction time is one hour at any day and time of day, then unless you are an Internet giant with a 24/7 copyright infringement checking office, there is absolutely no way except upload filtering that you can guarantee you will

          • Comment removed based on user account deletion
            • by Tom ( 822 )

              My home country of Germany has this bastard thing called "Abmahnung". Basically, if you violate the (civil) law, any lawyer can send you a cease-and-desist letter and you even have to pay him for his troubles. A certain subset of parasit... er, lawyers, discovered that the Internet is great for rapidly checking details of formal compliance for large numbers of online sites and generating a lot of such letters in a short time with minimal effort - but full bill.

              For decades, the government has done little to

    • by truedfx ( 802492 )

      I am confused by their claim:

      The draft directive does not create any new rights for creatives and journalists. It merely ensures that their existing rights are better enforced. Nor does the draft directive create new obligations for online platforms or news aggregators, but ensures that existing obligations are better respected. What is currently legal and permitted to share will remain legal and permitted to share.

      combined with

      The draft directive intends to oblige giant internet platforms and news aggrega

    • "No new rights or obligations are being created." Then what is the point? The large news aggregators they keep pointing to are already subject to the current laws. Doublespeak.
  • Jean-Claude, are you drunk again?

    If anything this made the whole mess even worse since now nobody knows what to do. Neither do the various EU countries that don't even know how to adapt this in any sensible way into their laws, nor do companies that don't have any idea how to comply with them, nor do the users who are pretty much preparing to simply ignore it by using VPN services.

    • When nobody knows what to do, lawyers make bank. Lawyers run the EU and all modern states.

      If you have servers in reach of the EU, get them out now. Fuck them.

  • by harvey the nerd ( 582806 ) on Monday April 15, 2019 @12:04PM (#58440318)
    Europe seems hellbent to go back to the 7th century, one way or another...
    • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Monday April 15, 2019 @12:49PM (#58440518)

      The world is. Not just Europe. Everyone is scrambling to put the genie back into the bottle because the very last thing governments want is people being able to talk to each other and organize unsupervised.

    • This is the same highly mature and sophisticated culture that resulted in regular wars at about 20-30 year intervals like a bunch of squabbling children, halted only when they were tightly controlled from the outside and their toys were taken away. So expecting reasonable decision-making is asking too much.

         

  • Presumably (Score:5, Insightful)

    by UdoKeir ( 239957 ) on Monday April 15, 2019 @12:24PM (#58440416)
    Presumably this goes both ways. So those "news" outlets whose only content is made up of republishing Twitter (or Reddit) comments and pretending they did some work are now liable for paying those Twitter users for their content.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Ha... ...haha... ...hahaha... ...hahahahaaaaaa!

    • Or should the news outlets be paying Google etc... for driving clicks from links?
  • My blog is indexed in Google. My stuff is copyrighted. Where's my money?

    • by Hodr ( 219920 )

      The payment is based on number of times the link to your content was accessed. Google will cut you a check once you get enough clicks that they can round the owed value up to one cent.

  • So does this mean that sites like Twitter or even Slashdot would have to pay news sites when users link to them in posts? It seems like a big article being linked with a few thousand retweets could be a crazy expensive hit. Perhaps links will no longer be allowed.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday April 15, 2019 @01:55PM (#58440884)

    Two countries, Germany and Spain, already tried to pull this stunt before. Germany was first, and Google retaliated by making companies sign a thing stating that if Google was to host those snippets they would do it licence free. Spain didn't like that so they made sure Google couldn't do that in their country. Google was like fine, guess what, we aren't hosting your news snippets at all. Spain complained, tried to take Google to court and told the judges that Google wasn't being fair, because them not hosting such content was hurting tons of business. Courts told Spain Google don't have to do business with anyone they don't want to do business with. In the end news companies in Spain were losing far far more money by not having their content hosted because Google wouldn't pay for license vs going license free.

  • Google -- and any other online site -- cannot possibly know the upload contains "illegal" content until the upload is completed. So much babbling here about "Upload Filters" is even more perplexing, as though filter software will need to be installed on your computer before uploads are even allowed!!!!

    The EU politicians are idiots, of course, and YouTube has long since had copyright detection where your video will be blocked from viewing if YT's algorithms think your video has protected content.

    As far as ne
  • by anarcobra ( 1551067 ) on Monday April 15, 2019 @03:18PM (#58441318)
    Is not bought and paid for by the old media trying to destroy the internet.
  • Italy, Finland, Sweden, Luxembourg, Poland and the Netherlands voted no. This law needs to be written into the laws of each EU country. What if those six countries simply didn't write laws implementing that, or did write laws implementing those two sections but half-assed it by making the burden of proof high and/or the punishment low?
    • Italy, Finland, Sweden, Luxembourg, Poland and the Netherlands voted no. This law needs to be written into the laws of each EU country. What if those six countries simply didn't write laws implementing that, or did write laws implementing those two sections but half-assed it by making the burden of proof high and/or the punishment low?

      EU member states pushing back against idiocy out of Brussels is exactly why the EU wants their own standing military. The EU is rapidly becoming a Western version of the old USSR.

      If they remain on this path, it's not out of the realm of possibility that at some point the EU and the rest of the West may end up in a 'cold war'-esque standoff, possibly even resulting in non-EU Western thermonuclear-tipped ICBMs being additionally targeted at the EU as well as Russia, N. Korea, and China.

      Strat

  • six countries -- Italy, Finland, Sweden, Luxembourg, Poland and the Netherlands -- voted again the reform.

    It would appear msmash is drunk again.

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