KezNews.com
DownloadsOther NewsForumBlogsWallpapersJokewareSearch

News letter:


Enter Your E-mail:

Europe votes on anti-piracy laws


section: common, for your questions: KezNews forum, 8.7.2008

Europeans suspected of putting movies and music on file-sharing networks could be thrown off the web under proposals before Brussels.




The powers are in a raft of laws that aim to harmonise the regulations governing Europe's telecom markets.

Other amendments added to the packet of laws allow governments to decide which software can be used on the web.

Campaigners say the laws trample on personal privacy and turn net suppliers into copyright enforcers.

Piracy plan

MEPs are due to vote on the so-called Telecom Packet on 7 July. The core proposals in the packet were drawn up to help European telecoms firms cope with the rapid pace of change in the industry.

Technological and industry changes that did not respect borders had highlighted the limitations of Europe's current approach which sees national governments oversee their telecoms markets.

"The current fragmentation hinders investment and is detrimental to consumers and operators," says the EU document laying out the proposals.

But, say digital rights campaigners, anti-piracy lobbyists have hijacked the telecoms laws and tabled amendments that turn dry proposals on industry reform into an assault on the freedom of net users. Among the amendments are calls to enact a Europe-wide "three strikes" law. This would see users banned from the web if they fail to heed three warnings that they are suspected of putting copyrighted works on file-sharing networks.

In addition it bestows powers on governments to decide which programs can be "lawfully" used on the internet.

A coalition of European digital rights groups have banded together to galvanise opposition.

"[The amendments] pave the way for the monitoring and filtering of the internet by private companies, exceptional courts and Orwellian technical measures," said Christophe Espern, co-founder of French rights group La Quadrature du Net (Squaring the Net) in a statement.

The UK's Open Rights Group said the laws would be "disproportionate and ineffective".

source: news.bbc.co.uk

send email Send link 2 friend  |  Permalink
<< previouse article
Rising AntiVirus 2008 Free Edition English Download
next article >>
Microsoft Midori, a Candidate for the Operating System to Kill Windows

MORE RELATED ARTICLES:
Microsoft to beef up anti-piracy checks in Vista SP1 || Microsoft Helps Nab $900M Piracy Ring || Windows 7: The Anti-Vista? || Dell's "anti-crapware" initiative doesn't go far enough || Apple Adds Anti-Hacker Features to QuickTime

Comments(0)


No new comments are allowed for this article.

For your questions use our KezNews Forum