Alan Cox Attacks the European DMCA
forged writes "The Register already reported Alan Cox's involvement against the proposed European Union Copyright Directive before. Today, Alan Cox has issued a wake up call to the Linux community amid concerns that the pending EUCD could stymie open source development.
"The directive, which was approved last year, extends European copyright legislation so that it is even more restrictive than America's controversial Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA)."" If you haven't joined the EFF (or the equivalent in your country) , now might be a good time.
I was suprised that they require a donation to become a member. I realize they need the money, but it seems to me they would have more political clout if their total membership tally were much larger - and making donations optional would certainly accomplish this. People who will give money would do it anyway, people who are too broke to pledge monetary support might still like to be counted as against draconian measures like the DMCA...
Murphy was an optimist.
You can't get it off the Google list, but you can get it from their cache of the copyright directive.
"Anonymous Coward" is for whistleblowers, not unpopular opinions.
http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/fsfe-uk and
http://uk.eurorights.org/ are good places to get started
"It's better to regret something you have done, than to regret something you haven't done" - Orbital
Well, after the highly offensive campaign to force Americans to say they were not Americans before they could see the kernel changelog for security issues, should we turn about and do the same to Europeans?
I wrote an article summarising the issues discussed at the talk if anyone's interested here.
Sig: What Happened To The Censorware Project (censorware.org)
http://uk.eurorights.org/
We have about 6 months before the EUCD becomes law in this country to try and mitigate it as miuch as possible, and try and stop all the massive loopholes that the media industry is going to exploit in it. Any help we can get is alway appreciated!
I mean, a free open standard has worked pretty well for HTML.
Yes it has... but I worked as a <shame>webdesigner</shame> for a (short) while at the end of the browser wars.
And let me tall you.
For the longest time html was a mess! They (the w3c) even canned the 3.0 version and went to 3.2 because things were so confused. And 4.0 and CSS took years before most browsers implemented it in a reasonable way.
You can still run into issues created by Netscape and Microsoft in the browser wars if you don't watch out...
But you're right about things turning out ok in the end.
Html is good, css is ok, the browsers conform better to the DOM every day, and xhtml is a true blessing!
But it sure was a rough ride!
"First lesson," Jon said. "Stick them with the pointy end."
The directive is made up of two parts. The first part defines copyright in general, and the second part is the DMCA equalent.
The directive has a list of exceptions to copyright that each country can optional implement. One of those is the right to copy digital content for private purposes. The country I live in, Denmark, already allows this. It it is the equalent of fair use, except it is spelled clear out in the law.
The DMCA part is confusing. It is required that the copyright holder makes it possible to copy in the circumstates where those exceptions apply. So in Denmark, the copyright holder needs to make it possible for me to copy the content for private purposes??
Looks to me like the different interrest groups in EU could not agree on if they wanted freedom or the DMCA nightmare from USA. So they tried to do both, which will not work.
Here are some organisations to join:
EF Sweden www.efs.se
EF Norway www.efn.no
EF Finland www.effi.org
Just saying it like it are.
I like the final statement he makes:
I would love to take him up on that, except I'm not a member state, just a citizen.http://www.odl.qmul.ac.uk/eucd/
No, don't do this! Why? Simple, it doesn't work. MPs, as a general rule of thumb, are very busy and therefore pay more attention to messages from their electorate when more effort has been put in. An email, in the mind of an MP, requires zero effort. And they are right. A fax requires a bit more. A letter is the gold standard. Preferably hand written (as long as your writing is neat). Don't simply bash out a 5 minute email, write your MP a letter! It'll have more effect.
Fax is tempting, but last time I sent a fax to my MP I never got a reply :( This time, I'll write on paper with my hands. They'll pay more attention, and let's face it, the extra effort is worthwhile.