PayPal, Visa, MasterCard Prepare To Block Payments To Pirate Sites In France 82
An anonymous reader writes: The French government is deciding whether to allow PayPal, Visa, MasterCard, and other payments processors the right to refrain from executing transactions to pirate sites if copyright holders (MPAA, RIAA, PSR for Music) file a complaint. All pirate sites will be added to a blacklist, controlled by copyright holders, and not by a French court. A similar unofficial agreement between copyright holders and payment processors is actively being enforced in countries like the U.S. and the U.K.
As long as they accept court orders (Score:1)
To unblock the accounts...
It is after all fair game to have private relationships between companies.
However, that also formalizes a cartel of payment systems, which has other legal consequences.
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However, that also formalizes a cartel of payment systems...
Well, I would hope this is a place where Bitcion can fill in, and other alternatives can emerge.
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No true Scotsman would make such an assertion.
From TFA (Score:1)
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You've got to be able to show that your decisions can change the lives of millions and that you are smart enough to avoid oversight on appropriate use of such power.
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... oversight from some higher moral authority that isn't merely a sock puppet to those with golden hands.
Common carriers (Score:5, Insightful)
Payment providers should be forced to operate like common carriers in Telecom. Either you process all payments, or you process none. Barring specific court orders of course.
If the Payment providers do not like this, they can opt for the alternative, where they take full responsibility for all payment activities, in which case they will be considered accomplishes for all crimes that involve money transfers via their services.
It is not that difficult.
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So MasterCard should allow drug dealers and mob bosses to use their services?
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Alleged drug dealers and mob bosses, but not convicted drug dealers and mob bosses. The rule of law is what separates a civil society from despotism.
Money Transfer Laws (Score:2)
There are pretty strict laws for money transmitters and big, established players are like big banks: they're going to be incredible conservative and never risk having their business hurt by government regulators.
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hahaha the last worldwide recession begs to differ. and now they know, if they didn't already, that the penalty for crashing the financial system is...being given more money.
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Alleged drug dealers and mob bosses, but not convicted drug dealers and mob bosses. The rule of law is what separates a civil society from despotism.
^ This... it is perfectly reasonable to say that PayPal, Visa, etc. can't process payments for convicted criminals who were involved in illegal actives using such payment services...
But it is NOT reasonable to say they can't process payments for "alleged criminals" who haven't been convicted.
Re:Common carriers (Score:5, Insightful)
So MasterCard should allow drug dealers and mob bosses to use their services?
Assuming the courts haven't seen any reason to seize the money, MasterCard shouldn't be able to decide who you're permitted to give money to or not. I should not have to justify my spending habits to the bank any more than I need to justify my food habits at the grocery store.
Re: Common carriers (Score:5, Insightful)
This right here is why attempts to go to a cashless society have to be fought with extreme vigor. We cannot allow the government or, even worse, private companies, to decide who can give money to who.
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'Common carrier' is the modern disguised version of nationalization. Forcing private individuals and companies to deal with people they don't want to deal with by a global cabbal of violent governments is stealing peoples right to freedom, nothing less than that. Of course everything that governments do is destruction of individual rights, theft, nationalization, monopoly creation. The correct approach is to remove all legal barriers to entry into banking, financing, payment processing, lending, borrowi
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I believe you just made Rockefeller jizz in his tuxedo.
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You're assuming a credit card transaction is between you and the merchant. It's not. It's actually two separate transactions - the first is between the credit card company and the merchant, the second between you and the credit card
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Kind of a silly question, since that is exactly what they do [zerohedge.com]. This is purely cosmetic bullshit to cover up the serious stuff.
Chargeback Risk (Score:2)
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Not Legal In The EU (Score:1)
The EU has already ruled on this matter.
https://torrentfreak.com/hyperlinking-is-not-copyright-infringement-eu-court-rules-140213/
With respect to Torrent sites, most modern sites make use of magnetic links, rather than Torrent files. The links themselves do not constitute distribution of a copyrighted work, only the supply of the copyrighted material is considered distribution. The supply happens via the Bittorrent protocol which is entirely separate.
Thus, the UK is clearly acting illegally in blocking pa
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Oh... "accessory to infringement" is a term that comes to mind... No idea if it's a real legal term, but I'm sure it's not just in my head, but in the heads of the copyright holders' lawyers' heads too. If only they could get a law passed to that effect...
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The problem with idiots like you is that you're too stupid to realize that the party on pretends to be a member of is irrelevant and that all politicians are effectively the same, ESPECIALLY the ones who tell you they aren't.
Once you get a fucking clue and stop thinking that your party is better (whatever your party is) then maybe, just MAYBE your vote won't be a detriment to our country. Until then, your vote is actually worse than not voting at all because you're too stupid to know who you're voting for.
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It's never gonna end. The army of n00bs will always be larger so as long as the system requires consensus to make progress, we are screwed.
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"How many schools require classes in actual formal logic or classical debating? You know, where you actually have to EXPLAIN and SUPPORT your beliefs?
Yeah, none."
As a middle school math teacher, I apologize for my colleagues who failed you and invite you to follow my class.
Math is formal logic and/or classical debate where you have to defend your beliefs?
And you're a fucking TEACHER?!?!?
What.
The.
Fuck.
Thank you FOR MAKING MY POINT about crappy government-controlled education.
You're so clueless you don't even realize you're clueless.
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Goodbye Via and Paypal (Score:4, Insightful)
Welcome, Bitcoin.
If it wasn't already invented, now would be the time.
Goodbye bitcoin (Score:2)
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No, that is nothing like money laundering.
The equivalent of this is if the government could just wave a wand and suddenly you were incapable of gaining wealth- you couldn't pick something up if it had value, be it off the ground or in an exchange of goods. It's a wholly new risk generated by previously politically neutral organizations.
Wikileaks block springs to mind (Score:1)
When the US wanted Wikileaks not to publish embarrassing leaks, it got the credit card companies to refuse payment for Wikileaks donations. This mechanism is abused before and will be again:
http://www.cnet.com/news/credit-card-companies-wikileaks-block-just-fine-eu-says/
Copyright lobby has a long history of abusing the legal process, Anton Vickerman trial being probably the most appalling legal fiasco I've ever seen, with some head scratching behavior.
http://transgallaxys.com/~kanzlerzwo/index.php?topic=759
It's a bit tricky (Score:2, Interesting)
So yes. I think if something is illegal it should get payments blocked.
" if something is illegal " (Score:5, Insightful)
The key word being illegal. The copyright holders could get an injunction via the legal processes, with all their checks and balances and testimony under oath, and expert judiciary. Instead the proposal is to remove all the of legal process to determine if its 'illegal' and simply skip to the injunction on the word of the copyright lobby.
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And what's illegal will be determined by a non-law enforcement process arbitrarily and quickly. Sounds just, ever so solid.
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So yes. I think if something is illegal it should get payments blocked.
Oh I agree. Now next question, who determines if something is illegal?
Before you answer reread the second sentence in the summary.
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It's a tricky situation. The problem with paid pirated sites is that some users (read: my father-in-law for example) assume that since they pay - it must be legit. So they pay ~3$ and get infinite number of movies streamed.
Pardon me, but that's just silly and doesn't pass the giggle test - you do think that if you pay a drug dealer the drugs are legal? Or because he pays for Internet that everything on it is free for the taking? I think you're creating a ridiculous and unenforceable standard if the payment companies should decide for each and every customer if what you're paying for may or may not be in violation of some law, code or regulation.
Complaint isn't enough (Score:4, Insightful)
We've already seen the kind of harm that is caused by abuse of the DMCA via automated take down requests.
Blocking payment should at a minimum require a judge to sign off on it.
At least it will save people money (Score:2)
I do understand there are principles at stake when payment processors are dictated to over who they can do business with (like Wikileaks), but there is at least an upside in this case. Nobody need pay for pirated content, it is all out there available for free. Forcing people to learn that will be a valuable lesson that will save them money in the end.
Arbitrary decisions and ruining people's lives (Score:3)
Name names (Score:2)
For curiosity.
Since these "pirate" websites are selling unlicensed media for money, do any of them have a policy of funding the original artist or the labels?
Oh boy (Score:5, Insightful)
"...the right to refrain from executing transactions to pirate sites if copyright holders (MPAA, RIAA, PSR for Music) file a complaint."
Ha ha, no way this will be abused by the "copyright holders". I can't see anything that could go wrong here, no sir.
Except these "copyright holders" have been known to file utterly bogus complaints, claiming copyright over birds singing [techdirt.com], public domain works, anything that has a sound in the background [techdirt.com] that might (or might not) vaguely resemble some sound in something they own (or claim to own).
But don't worry, Citizen, the uber-mega-international corporations have your best interests at heart, never fear! All hail the glorious mega-corporations! Remember, "corporations are people too"! [washingtonpost.com]
Credit = Loan = Bank's Money (Score:2)
Credit is borrowing, pure and simple. It's the bank's money. Just like a loan, they can refuse to provide the loan if they are risk adverse to the transaction for any reason. If they think (they don't need to prove it) you're doing something illegal that may cause you to go to jail, incur fines, etc. or think you're doing anything that may affect your ability to pay off the loan, then they are justified in refusing it.
You get to use bank credit at their discretion. It is not a right, it is a contract privil
Bitcoin (Score:2)
Bitcoin gets crapped on a lot. Mostly it's justified. But it, and a few other fictional number based virtual moneys, are still around.
And this is why!
We already are in a situation where the #1 thing to do to attack user websites that don't have an army of lawyers is to get them banned from getting cash. You simply have a bunch of people spam where they get their money from, and that instantly goes away. This mini-financial crusade is instant, final, and is primarily worked around using bitcoin. Just a
New world police force (Score:1)
Bitcoin users not affected (Score:1)