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Private File Sharing To Remain/Become legal In EU
Posted by
Zonk
on Fri Mar 30, 2007 02:14 PM
from the nice-change-of-pace dept.
from the nice-change-of-pace dept.
orzetto writes "Italian newspapers are reporting that the European parliament's Commitee for Legal Affairs approved an amendment presented by EMP Nicola Zingaretti (PSE, IT), that makes piracy a felony—but only if a monetary profit is made. As in the EU parliament's press release: 'Members of the Legal Affairs' committee [...] decided that criminal sanctions should only apply to those infringements deliberately carried out to obtain a commercial advantage. Piracy committed by private users for personal, non-profit purposes are therefore also excluded.' The complete proposal was passed with 23 votes in favour, 3 against and 3 abstained, and is intended to be applied to copyright, trademark, design and other IP fields, but not patent right which is explicitly excluded. The proposal has still to pass the vote of the parliament before becoming law in all EU countries, some of which (like Italy) do have criminal laws in place for non-profit file sharing. A note: Most EU countries use civil law, not common law. Translation of legal terms may be misleading."
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Like U.S. Copyright used to be? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Like U.S. Copyright used to be? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Like U.S. Copyright used to be? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Like U.S. Copyright used to be? (Score:4, Insightful)
Blaming copyright because you bought a locked phone and a rip protected CD (which I assume to be the case, otherwise you'd just load the ringtone like a normal person) kind of misplaced blame a bit.
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You don't. You pay Verizon $5 for the convenience of being able to download a ring tone without any complications on your part, using a subsidized phone that doesn't include some of the nicer features that'd make it easy too.
If you bought an unsubsidize
Re:Like U.S. Copyright used to be? (Score:4, Informative)
Verizon charges you for the Service of providing you to download the ringtone. If you have the CD you can upload it http://www.mixxer.com/ [mixxer.com] and download it to your phone for free.
I'm not sure about Verizon yet I'm able to do with Sprint
People still download obnoxious jingles? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Like U.S. Copyright used to be? (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, we've been at that point for a while now. And yet I see there's no shortage of wealthy artists... even if their music sucks.
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Re:Like U.S. Copyright used to be? (Score:5, Interesting)
Therefore it's unlikely I would seek and download their music. Therefore piracy is not the cause of their lack of wealth, is it?
In fact if you were to, say, send me a link where I could download some of their stuff, and I liked it, chances are good that I would probably buy one of their CD's. Repeat a million times with the power of the internet, and suddenly the "RIAA" and the gangsters they represent are made fairly obsolete - especially if I can buy the CD direct from the band.
This is exactly what they are afraid of, and the reason they are grasping at the final straws before disappearing down the hall into oblivion.
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The question is why. There may b
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Funny you should say that, because people spend more money on culture today than they did just 5 years ago. How is that? CD sales are dropping like a stone, yet people spend more money. See, the problem as that the money stream now bypass the record comp
Re:Like U.S. Copyright used to be? (Score:5, Interesting)
So it doesn't bother me that the artists get squat out of the deal. They got famous and that's what they wanted from the labels. If all they wanted to do was make music, they're welcome to crank it out in their home studio and sell it out of the back of a van, just like my musician friends do.
Those guys don't have any music industry to blame their lack of sales on. They sell to what customers they can reach, but without a music industry to promote them, their reach is limited. And I haven't seen the customers going too far out of their way to buy the music from CDBaby or eMusic for bands they've never heard of.
I think that there's plenty of blame to go around.
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Tha
Actually, From What I Understand... (Score:3, Informative)
What that means is that, it is NOT saying that "if you pirate a CD for personal, non-profit use, you didn't commit a
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Just because a company says something is illegal, that doesn't mean that it is. They use bullying and advertising to make you think something is interpreted differently because that's what they want you to believe.
Look at the ads. They
Seems sensible. (Score:2)
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There can be no question that it's not worth spending $500-$800 on Photoshop if your only purpose is to resize images. Thank you for pointing that out. For the
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I will never pay for a cable TV service. Therefore, there is no harm in me splicing some coaxial able into my neighbor's cable and then sitting back in my livin
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So if you are
Typo in the headline (Score:2, Insightful)
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Ah, thanks, that clears it up. I'd imagine that very few shared files are actually about Pirates.
To the person who modded Parent 'troll': you are a clueless git. Read it again, it's a slam on bad headline writing, it's not anti- or pro-piracy.
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In the meantime, I'll use "pirate" ironically when referring to file sh
Ah, yes, the contagiousness of crime (Score:2)
I'm a strong proponent of copyrights -- just the 1790 [wikipedia.org] version of 14+14 years.
I'm sure a lot of people share your schoolyard mentality, though, and will use the lawle
Still liable for damages in civil suit? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Still liable for damages in civil suit? (Score:5, Informative)
My real question here then would be.... (Score:2)
I can already see the RIAA being very unhappy. Tides not going well for them lately.
Wow - score one for the good guys - "thats us" (Score:3)
To Remain/Become legal? (Score:5, Informative)
What I got from it was that a new directive, aimed at harsher Europe-wide criminal punishments for piracy, will be applied only to commercial piracy. Noncommercial piracy is not covered by the new directive. However, if it was illegal in a member state before, then it remains so.
Please correct me if I am wrong.
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What you're describing has been known as "fair use" for a very long time.
I don't know about European Copyright law, but here in Canada (and I believe the US), I've been explicitly allowed to make a c
No? (Score:2, Interesting)
Not legal! (Score:5, Informative)
They are criminalising commercial copyright infringement. Non-commercial copyright infringement is still illegal. This means that you get sued and pay damages instead of getting arrested and going to jail.
Where does it say non commercial use is fair use? (Score:2)
But seriously. (Score:2, Insightful)
monetary profit. 1. Spending less money than you earn.
2. To avoid spending money by cond
Civil law vs Common law (Score:2, Informative)
http://fountainoflaw [fountainoflaw.com]
Complex Issue (Score:3, Insightful)
The difference bet
Do not jump to conclusions! (Score:4, Informative)
The war between the users and the RIAA (Score:3, Insightful)
The interesting thing is... it seems nobody really cares about the artists that AREN'T wealthy.
I'm a classical musician. It's hard to make a living in music when you're purely musical, and not a celebrity figure like most "artists" these days tend to be.
So, the interesting thing about this little feud, to me, is that none of it really deals with the artists themselves. It seems that the RIAA is now seen as Microsoft is often seen (whether or not that's a valid vision of it or not I leave up to your discretion)... we fight it purely out of principle.
But does fighting the RIAA or opening up file sharing and making copyrights pretty much useless actually help the artists at all? I'm a composer... if there were no copyrights whatsoever, and if somebody malicious wanted to steal a work by me (presuming it was even good enough to be worth stolen, of course) and claim it as their own and make money off of it... well, it's rather nice to have laws in place to prevent that. OpenSource Composition doesn't work well. People don't often donate to composers. Copyrights are necessary in a world where people are perfectly happy with stealing other people's music and distributing it. Human nature is easily enticed to take something for free rather than pay for it.
So, what is this whole war between "private" file sharing and the RIAA doing to help the artists, whom, presumably, we all want to protect?
Because there ARE people that will steal [slashdot.org] other people's recordings and do all kinds of things with them; even among musicians, copying sheet music instead of buying it is pretty frequent (and illegal). Because, of course, we all know that all musicians and composers are as famous and rich as Spears or Shore.
Legal or illegal? (Score:2)
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