Swedish Supreme Court MP3 Ruling 11
Molander writes: "The Swedish HD (Supreme Court in Sweden) rules that making mp3's
available for download on the Internet is equivalent to public
broadcast.
Link (in Swedish): link. This means that copying mp3's over the Internet is not the same as making a physical copy and giving it away. This also means that mp3's do not fall under the copyright laws but are covered by the public broadcast laws. The young man charged is therefore found not guilty of any copyright violations but
may still be charged with paying broadcast fees to the copyright owners." This sort of ruling wouldn't really help in the U.S., since the music industry charges fees for broadcasting music as well.
Well, specifically,... (Score:1)
Sorry, wrong number! (Score:1)
It actually says that putting an mp3 file up for download is not the same as broadcasting. This is a rejection of the defense's argument in the case. It says that downloading mp3 files is a copyright violation, as the prosecutors argued. And this is the High Court, so there's no appeal possible.
I realize we can't all be Swedish (so sad for you!), but maybe if you don't know the language you should be a little less certain of your reading of it? You only make yourself look stupid, at least to those of us who actually know the language!
Would someone else please confirm this? (Score:2)
Alternatively, if anyone can point me to a translation service that does any one of the following:
Swedish -> English
Swedish -> Spanish
Swedish -> Japanese
That would help me out as well. (Some americans
DO know other languages!
Do they really? (Score:1)
Maybe it is for Commercial Radio, but I <I>know</I> college stations and the like don't pay. Maybe this is simply because of their nonprofit status.
If this is true, couldn't website claim to be nonprofit, and get the same treatment?
Molander is right (Score:1)
mvh
I was thinking the same thing.... (Score:1)
Pfft, here's a quick translation (Score:1)
Troll Alert! (Score:1)
Attention A. Coward: You said in this comment [slashdot.org]: This [slashdot.org] was just to see what happened if I posted a comment saying that everything in the article was wrong. Since the article references a Swedish court decision available only in Swedish, I might get away with it, at least until someone who can actually read Swedish comes along.
Give up.
-- LoonXTall
Re:I was thinking the same thing.... (Score:1)
You ever heard some radio station play the same song 20 times in one day? Now you know why...
--
Michael Sims-michael at slashdot.org
Why BS? (Score:1)
--
Re:This would be great in the US!!! (Score:1)
but because Napster claims no responsibility for the actions of its users, it probably would have a tough time justifying how all of its clients can claim protection under a liscence they buy