Catch up on stories from the past week (and beyond) at the Slashdot story archive

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
The Courts Government Your Rights Online News

Italy Implements EU Copyright Directive 19

Rozzo writes "On 29 April 2003 in Italy will be effective a new law modeled from DMCA, called EUCD, under European Community directives, which seems a very bad thing :-( Italy will tax also every music or video recording support (cdr, dvdr, videotapes...) often doubling it's actual street price. it's a tribute of 0.33$ for each hour of music recordable on a cdr, 1$ every 4.7Gb on recordable dvd... TV, radios and medias quite didn't mention this new law to the public ... fearing a mass disapproval as happened in Finland. Read more about it (in English) here. You can check the status of the EUCD threatening law. Starting 29 April 2003 that new law and tributes will be applied, and the masses will know about it and (perhaps...;-) react. Here's an Open Letter to the Italian 'culture commission'."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Italy Implements EU Copyright Directive

Comments Filter:
  • yay (Score:4, Insightful)

    by fredrikj ( 629833 ) on Saturday April 26, 2003 @03:11PM (#5816082) Homepage
    Italy will tax also every music or video recording support (cdr, dvdr, videotapes...) often doubling it's actual street price. it's a tribute of 0.33$ for each hour of music recordable on a cdr, 1$ every 4.7Gb on recordable dvd...

    And despite consumers having paid extra money for the stuff, "unauthorized" copying will be as illegal as ever, in fact yet easier to pursue thanks to the EUCD, and made impossible in many cases due to technology restrictions. Sigh.
    • Exactly. You know, I wouldn't mind paying an extra tax on recordable music and video media, if that tax entitled me to make and use noncommercial copies of RIAA and MPAA member content. But it doesn't, so...WTF? What a rip-off. The consumer gets cornholed yet again...
  • The directive [eu.int]
    itself has in fact many exceptions:

    (33) The exclusive right of reproduction should be subject to an exception to allow certain acts of temporary reproduction, which are transient or incidental reproductions, forming an integral and essential part of a technological process and carried out for the sole purpose of enabling either efficient transmission in a network between third parties by an intermediary, or a lawful use of a work or other subject-matter to be made.
    (34) Member States should

  • by Anonymous Coward
    If the EU is so eager to follow the laws of the US despite all the obvious flaws, then the US should give them some starter tips as a gesture of goodwill. Someone send them a fat guy to sue the fast food companies.
  • TV, radios and medias quite didn't mention this new law to the public ... fearing a mass disapproval as happened in Finland.
    Are we talking about all TV, radio and other media, or only those of Berlusconi?
    • What, 99, or 100%? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by twilight30 ( 84644 ) on Saturday April 26, 2003 @06:25PM (#5816720) Homepage
      I'm afraid you miss the point.
      Berlusconi owns the three major private networks here. As Prime Minister, he also controls the three public national networks.

      While this might seem like a loss of consumer rights, in actual fact things are a bit more nuanced than that. Italy has since 1992 attempted to bring its policies more in line with those of other EU nations, basically because those other countries have for several decades looked askance at its high debt, rampant corruption, and woefully inefficient bureaucracy.

      This is not to say that I like the idea, I don't. But the fact remains that Italy does these things not to gouge the customer so much as to slowly make the country a bit less wasteful and less beyond the rule of law. It's tortuously snail-like, mostly window-dressing, and frustrating, but you have to start somewhere. Nevertheless, the fact that it's Berlusconi, world-class fraud, behind this latest move, does not make it any less necessary.

      Moreover, 'mass disapproval' is massively overstating things (forgive the pun). Highspeed Internet in my area is practically non-existent. The nearest library is over fifteen kilometres from here. Unlike most other parts of Europe, the South of Italy is patchy as to consumerist development. On the other hand, where I am, you can get first-run movies on DVD, usually within a day of official release. Pirated, of course, but no less quality. Everybody does it. I've only met one person in the last year who actually bought a CD at a store (not including me, that is, and that was on a trip to Milan), everything else music-wise is pirated. Hell, I was offered Visual Studio Enterprise (version 6, but still) for *5 Euro* not too long ago. At Christmas I was offered a copy of Oracle.

      This price increase will crimp budgets. Marginally. It will not stop piracy. At all.
      • What really scares me is the bottomline message (from this and other recent measures): people obeying the law always end in paying also for people not obeying the law. In other words: if you obey the law, you are a (paying) moron.

        Morals aside, someone please tell me a reason why one should choose to obey the law at all with such premises. People are lawful mainly because they know it's a good way to protect their long-term interests (economical, health and peace). Take away this and people should be lawfu

        • Someone once suggested that la Mafia, la Camorra e la 'Ndrangheta were reasonable responses in a place where the law was not seen to work -- in other words, when civil society does not exist, and the rule of law weak, 'employing' private 'law enforcement' in order to ensure you got results was a natural response (unfortunately, I can't locate the specific person who said this).

          Despite the pessimism -- which is understandable, I share it -- isn't it true that some progress has been made over the last few ye
          • Your suggestion of an amoral law-abiding social norm actually does exist already

            Perhaphs you misunderstood me, or I'm misunderstanding you: mine is not a suggestion, but I was stating a fact: people choose to obey law because it serves best their long-term interests, and not because they fear the police.

            If in order to punish those who were not obeying the law, also the ones obeying the law are punished... well, it's like saying "you fool!" to those who obeyed the law in the first place, and this is the

            • it's like saying "you fool!" to those who obeyed the law in the first place, and this is the thing I can't tolerate in the first place

              Not trying to be cheeky, but how do you (I/we/la società italiana) change it? Vote for La Lega, or l'Ulivo? Try to get the bureaucracy to change? I'm not trying to trivialise what you say, but you're pointing to civil society questions, and these are by definition not so easily resolved.

              The trouble is, people don't have a real incentive to change, at least not quickl
  • by Alsee ( 515537 ) on Sunday April 27, 2003 @12:58PM (#5819984) Homepage
    0.33$ for each hour of music recordable on a cdr

    If I record my music at 32 kilobits per second that works out what, $16 per cdr?

    -

Keep up the good work! But please don't ask me to help.

Working...