EU Poised to Attack P2P File-Sharers 49
Robin Gross of IP Justice writes "The EU is about to vote on a controversial piece of legislation that targets P2P file-sharing and other non-commercial infringements.
The EU Intellectual Property Rights Directive creates a 'nuclear weapons' of
law enforcement tools for intellectual property holders. It
combines the most extreme enforcement provisions
found throughout Europe and imposes them collectively onto all of
Europe, for example England's Anton
Pillar orders that permit recording industry executives to
raid and ransack the homes of alleged users of file-sharing software or
it's Mareva injunctions that
freeze a defendant's bank accounts without a
hearing. The vote in the EU plenary will likely be March 11, 2004
- watch the CODE site for
developments."
America the beautiful (Score:5, Funny)
for example England's Anton Pillar orders that permit recording industry executives to raid and ransack the homes of alleged users of file-sharing software or it's Mareva injunctions that freeze a defendant's bank accounts without a hearing.
Whew, thank goodness I live in America, LAND OF THE FREE, where our mighty Constitution and Bill of Rights protects us from this kind of unchecked government abuse and corporate favoritism! Silly Europeans!
(No seriously, we did have a constitution, I saw it once.)
Shred gtk-gnutella before 01 May 2004? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:America the beautiful (Score:3, Funny)
Its still around, though you have to go hunting through sewage after John and George used it to wipe their collective asses.
Re:Shred gtk-gnutella before 01 May 2004? (Score:2, Funny)
Naw just don't use it after your country becomes EUified...Switch to FreeNet, well until using encryption becomes illegal...
Re:Innocent (Score:2, Funny)
You live here [nasa.gov]? Yeah, I'd probably flee too, before the RIAJ caught me...