Euro Parliament Warns Against Overzealous IP Enforcement 73
An anonymous reader writes "Days after New Zealand dropped
its support for the 'three strikes and you're out' approach for
terminating Internet subscribers, the European Parliament has now similarly
rejected the proposed approach. Today the EP adopted
a new report on security and fundamental freedoms on the Internet that
expressly rejects disproportionate measures for IP enforcement and the use of excessive access restrictions placed by IP rights holders."
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truncate immedately visible post length (Score:2, Insightful)
this spam is going way too far. we are having to scroll for pages until we can get to any valid comment. truncate immediately visible post length to a paragraph or something so that we wont need to scroll the hell outta page before getting to comments through spam. when we want we can read the full comment by clicking read more anyway.
Re:wonderfull news! (Score:5, Insightful)
It's a shame. The EP is the only democratically elected part of the organisation, and the genuinely seem to have our best interests at heart.
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Are you sure you know what you're talking about? The European Parliament is not the same thing as the Commission, the European Council or the Committees.
The European Parliament is relatively transparent, and it does not negotiate international treaties like ACTA.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-Counterfeiting_Trade_Agreement#European_Parliament
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Alas, not all [youtube.com] is well in EUville... But still, I would trade EC for EP any day.
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You're thinking of the Council of Ministers. They're unelected representatives of the national governments, and are generally secretive, underhand and otherwise responsible for behind-closed-doors things like ACTA. They're one of the least democratic parts of the EU.
The parliament on the other hand, is directly elected, and while not perfect, is generally pretty transparent. We can also thank the parliament for things such as striking down software patents in europe, in opposition to the Council of Minister
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Most prominent and unashamedly the UK and to an extend France.
In the case of France it's weird because they belong to the original 6 founding members, in the case of the UK it's weird because UK press and politics complains most about this lack of democracy.
So lets stop complaining about the EP and instead ask the UK and French governments what their (espective
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I know half the answer. As for the other half, presumably there's a French equivalent of the Daily Mail.
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I live in France -- for now -- and I can tell you that we are seeing major changes about the meaning of the words "democracy" and "freedom". And those changes are certainly not making France a better place to live in.
http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/henry_samuel/blog/2008/12/01/how_free_is_the_french_press [telegraph.co.uk]
http://www.infowars.com/sarkozys-police-state-database/ [infowars.com]
http://www.telospress.com/main/index.php?main_page=news_article&article_id=289 [telospress.com]
Let me be first to say (Score:1)
Abusers turn their attention to the Internet. (Score:5, Insightful)
Piracy is a serious issue. But the bulk of the problem with individuals doing piracy seems to be that there is often no good option to buy music and videos. Once companies bring themselves into modern thinking and modern ways of commerce, piracy will be less of a problem.
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Bullshit, no one ever wins the game.
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I did. [xkcd.com]
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Re:Abusers turn their attention to the Internet. (Score:5, Funny)
Piracy is a serious issue.
Indeed, but copyright is a fucking joke.
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I don't see copyright as a joke at all. I do believe it does have a place in modern society. I don't have a problem with the fact that people who make things get paid for them, even if what they make is an intangible thing.
Painter, writers, programmers, actors and others deserve to be paid, no argument there.
I do however see the internet as a great equalizer. If the difference between what someone makes from copyright is too large compared to what other people make doing something else then the law loses it
Re:Abusers turn their attention to the Internet. (Score:4, Insightful)
You're assuming that copyright is the "right way" to ensure that people who make IP get paid for it - indeed, authors already get paid for the "right to publish" their work (which amounts to selling their IP rights to someone else), which would be possible analogously (just not uploading the master to anyone until they pay you) without copyright, strictly. Of course, the incentive to buy those rights would be reduced, but...
The main problem with copyright, though, is that it has been strengthened and extended far too much over the last century, such that now it doesn't do what it was originally intended to do - encourage production of works *which enter the public domain after the copyright expires*. For several classes of content, copyright effectively never expires now, which removes the important second component of the feature.
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Re:Abusers turn their attention to the Internet. (Score:5, Interesting)
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Corporations dying or not is irrelevant, the right expires 95 years after the author dies, not the owner. The original reason for copyright extending beyond the author's life time was that back in the days before it was common for women to have jobs and for diseases to be curable the wives and children of authors would suffer a double blow if the author died, they would be widowed and deprived of their income, while the publishers would get a big financial bonus because they would no longer be paying royalt
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...they would be widowed and deprived of their income,...
Which still happens to spouses and children of people who do not produce IP (like plumbers, drivers, builders, managers). He's dead -> does not work anymore -> does not get paid.
So why are families of IP producers different? The person died, he no longer works and no longer gets paid. If he had some brains, he put some of the money he earned in a bank or invested it, so he has something to leave for his family. Just like every other person.
Personally, I'd go for 'copyright last x years after first publication, rights sold to coporations revert to the author if the work is not commercially exploited, rights reverted to the author expire quickly if the work is still not commercially exploited', and I'd say x should be around 30 to 50 ish.
I'd agree with that. If the company or author stops selling t
Re:Abusers turn their attention to the Internet. (Score:4, Insightful)
People also tend to forget that a work being out of copyright, does not prevent the original author making money from it. I find it amusing that the fall in the standards of new music is paralleled by the rise in the length of copyright terms. Extended copyright terms leave new artists with nowhere to go. Which is precisely the opposite of what copyright was intended to achieve.
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They also control 99% of all wealth, so that seems to be a reasonable tradeoff.
--Jeremy
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I also agree with the concept and spirit of copyright, but disagree with the implementation of it. Copyright by its nature should be none transferable. Meaning if John Doe wrote a piece of literature, you shouldn't say the the company xyz that bought the copyright wrote it, nor should the company package a group with the same name but fire the original authors and claim the packaged group wrote it. Further more, in no cases should any company bar the original author from using their own work. What it comes
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I hear this argument all the time.
Since when did people not have a way to get paid without copyright? Why should we give someone a monopoly for being so idiotic that they can't monetize their own creations, and interpret it so loosely as we had for the last 20-25 years?
Oh, right, so they don't innovate again and sit on the one single thing they create is a hit and never make anything else again. Oh, and re-release whatever it is into movies, action figures, tv series, etc, and sue into oblivion anyone who m
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Sometimes it's not a matter of idiocy but of resources and recourse. Let's assume that there was no copyright law. Let's also say that tomorrow I wrote a book and shopped it around to various publishers. Publishers A-D refused publication, but small-publisher E made a limited run of my book. It became a hit and less-than-scrupulous Publisher B decides to cash in. They take the manuscript copy I gave t
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The powerful want to make money or get more power by restricting someone else's freedom.
I used to think that was the point of the fight, but now I really have the impression that it is the clueless desperately trying to give the image that he is in control.
Nothing to do with IP (Score:5, Insightful)
Meh, these power grabs weren't even anything to do with "IP".. they were attempts to circumvent the legal system which has already rejected the nefarious claims of the music companies.
Edits much? (Score:1)
The case of PearC (Score:2)
Will this, one wonders, apply to the case of PearC, who are installing OSX on x86 machines in Germany? Will it have a bearing on any reaction Apple may make to EFI-X?
Useing the word "IP" is ovezealous. (Score:3, Informative)
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What method do you use to distinguish human rights from other rights? And how does this method detect normal property rights as human rights, but "IP" rights as other rights?
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Human rights are the rights you have independently of the local laws. Laws that infer to your human rights are considered unenforcable or unconstitutional. The U.S. even from time to time invade regions with other legislation (e.g. other countries) under the premise to reinstitute the human rights.
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You didn't answer my question. How did you determine that (normal) property rights are human rights? And how did you determine that "IP" rights are not?
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One of the big differences is that you can actually have a border around your property. You can't have a border around your "intellectual property", because even in the most original Works of Art there are layers and layers of cultural knowledge, environmental influences and ideas from other people.
As an easy example: "Which part of '42' is public knowledge, and which part is the intellectual property of Douglas Adams (Estate)?" (To make it more simple for you, using 42 in any circumstances is completely fr
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I cannot have a border around my life, my health, or my freedom of speech. Therefore I conclude life, health and freedom of speech are not human rights?
Note: I didn't ask you about the differences between property and "IP" (I know those), I asked you about why you think property is a human right, and "IP" isn't.
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I didn't. I just wanted to point out that there is a concept of "human rights", that stands above legislation.
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If the local laws say you don't have those rights, then people who live there don't have those rights, no matter how much anyone thinks they should have them.
So the whole world has to live by US law? Don't think so.
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Although I don't at al agree with the silly in excess of life time awarding of rights to authors and their successors I do wish to give them a chance to benefit from their often years of work.
Free Vs Copyright/DRM... (Score:1)
Trent Reznor/NIN - he releases all his albums for free with a "pay what you think it's worth" mentality.
Radiohead - they released an album under the same idea as NIN, and they profited wildly from it
Cory Doctorow - re
reject disproportionate measures for IP enforcemnt (Score:3, Funny)
What, no executions?
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"Now, either you all give yourselves up now and let us beat you up a bit, though not very much of course because we are firmly opposed to needless violence, or we blow up this entire planet and possibly one or two others we noticed on our way out here!"
@EDITORS: It is EU or European Parliament (Score:2)
Dear Editors,
It is called European Parliament or EU Parliament because of the European Union (EU) [wikipedia.org].
The Euro [wikipedia.org] is the official currency of 16 out of 27 member states of the European Union (EU).