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EU Proposing to Make P2P Piracy A Criminal Offense

brajesh writes "The European Commission is pushing for a proposal (.pdf) to crack down on organized piracy, which could also make indirect copyright infringement a crime across Europe, with implications similar to the recent MGM v. Grokster U.S. Supreme Court ruling. If the directive is adopted, developers who create software for file sharing that is then used for illegal ends could potentially be criminally liable in EU member countries." From the article: "The problem here is some activities, such as the creation of software, can be used for legal and illegal purposes, as is the case with Grokster...It gets really messy, because it is unclear what is legal or not legal, and it is problematic to operate with such abstract terms."

420 comments

  1. Imprecise Laws by Nom+du+Keyboard · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Socialist governments like imprecise laws, because then the laws can mean what ever you want them to mean today.

    --
    "It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
    1. Re:Imprecise Laws by Eightyford · · Score: 1

      Exactly, it's just too bad that in America some of the laws are precise - but rediculous.

    2. Re:Imprecise Laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "...developers who create software for file sharing that is then used for illegal ends could potentially be criminally liable..."

      Well since it's gone this far already, why limit it to software for file sharing? Why not say any software that's used illegaly. When an O/S company is on trial for aiding the authors of worms (ie. giving them a way in), what will happen? Just think of the lack of new features in the future of computers. Nobody is going to want to develop anything because they can all be used illegally which means the developer could go to jail.

    3. Re:Imprecise Laws by Carthag · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That has little to do with socialism and more to do with totalitarianism.

      (Note: I'm not saying the EU is totalitarian, mind you)

    4. Re:Imprecise Laws by seriesrover · · Score: 1

      same difference really. Hitler was head of the Socialist party in Germany, Stalin in Russia.

    5. Re:Imprecise Laws by learn+fast · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Right, the EU is considering this because of Socialism. Is socialism against filesharing? Copyright enforcement is hardly a socialist hot button.

      This can only be explained by corporatism. Intellectual "property" protection protects mostly Microsofts and Disneys.

    6. Re:Imprecise Laws by digidave · · Score: 1

      "why limit it to software for file sharing? Why not say any software that's used illegaly."

      Because the recording and movie industries have deep pockets to get laws made for them. Nobody with deep pockets is trying to get rid of all operating systems because they are used to write worms.

      You have to understand that these laws aren't being made because they're the "right" thing to do, these laws are bing made to appease an industry.

      --
      The global economy is a great thing until you feel it locally.
    7. Re:Imprecise Laws by L.+VeGas · · Score: 1

      This is not unique to socialist governments by any means, nor is it necessarily good or bad (not that you implied so).

      The U.S. Constitution is extremely imprecise, which used to be considered a great strength because of its flexibility to adapt to the times. Right to bear arms? We've been arguing about that one for a couple hundred years now.

    8. Re:Imprecise Laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, it's not right to expect to be paid for some task or work that you perform or something you create.

    9. Re:Imprecise Laws by Max+von+H. · · Score: 1

      Ahem, Hitler was at the head of the National Socialist party, which is a helluvalot different from the Communist party Stalin was at the head of.

      Also, please refrain from mixing Socialism and Communism, it'll enhance your chances of not looking like a complete idiot in public.

      --
      -- It's always darker before it goes pitch black.
    10. Re:Imprecise Laws by I+confirm+I'm+not+a · · Score: 2, Informative

      Socialist governments like imprecise laws...

      Maybe (and maybe not), but it's hardly relevant: as of 10th July 2005 the largest bloc in the European Parliament was not the GPES (European Socialist Party - including those notorious revolutionaries in the British Labour Party currently supporting Comrade Bush), but the EPP-ED (European Peoples Party - the conservative/Christian Democrat group): Wikipedia. Nice troll, though.

      --
      This is where the serious fun begins.
    11. Re:Imprecise Laws by NickFortune · · Score: 1
      Socialist governments like imprecise laws, because then the laws can mean what ever you want them to mean

      That's a very interesting definition of "socialist". I bet there are loads of nations you wouldn't normally think of as left wing that qualify under that analysis.

      --
      Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
    12. Re:Imprecise Laws by Mind+Booster+Noori · · Score: 1

      What isn't right is to trying to avoid piracy using unethical methods that will damage non-pirates...

    13. Re:Imprecise Laws by digidave · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You missed the point entirely.

      They want to criminalize what software writers create if it's used for an illegal activity, but only for a single type of software.

      Virus writers do more damage than copyright infringers, but you don't see the people that create software development tools going to jail, do you? That's because lawmakers aren't being pressured by the industry to do so, so we end up with crooked laws that don't make sense... they punish a very small subset of people while other people who are essentially doing the same thing (writing software) aren't punished.

      For justice to be served you should punish the people who actually do the crime. Putting software writers in jail is absurd. This law would make Bram Cohen (author of Bittorrent) a criminal even though his software is used legitimately by countless companies to distribute large files, such as Linux ISOs.

      --
      The global economy is a great thing until you feel it locally.
    14. Re:Imprecise Laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You should rightly be paid for the original act of creation or performance. Not paid over and over again a hugely inflated price for each damn-near-negligible-cost-to-produce copy thereof.

      After the initial creation or performance, the only right I recognise is your right to be recognised as the creator or performer, and identified as the source of the original work in the case of any derived work. I grant you no right to control my distribution of any information. (what "the" law says is irrelevant to what rights I choose to grant you under MY law, even if the domain of my law doesn't extend very far past my shirt right now (that WILL change). If you want to get paid for creation or performance, work on commission (or even charge a quite reasonable cost for a high-quality guaranteed-traceable-origin copy - people pay more for meat traceable all the way to a particular farm, and, similarly, it's now well established that they will pay a copy of a CD direct from an artist even if the tracks are freely available elsewhere))

      WHY do the record companies have so much money to burn pushing for these corrupt laws? Positive feedback cycle: Copyright monopolies destroying the free market allow them to nigh-on print money, rather than their product price equilibrating near marginal cost of production with a reasonable profit as would happen in a free market. This gives them stupid amounts of money with which they can increase the strength of their copyright monopolies and/or buy big sacks of cocaine to snort until their noses fall off as they see fit.

      Solution? Abandon copyright monopoly law. Remember in particular that in Europe, copyright and patent monopoly law is a weakening of the original absolute monopolies monarchs used to hand out: no reason it shouldn't eventually weaken to nothing like the other powers kings used to enjoy.

    15. Re:Imprecise Laws by Malyven · · Score: 1

      You do realize why no one is trying to get rid of those systems. Because there are other pockets making money of off the existence of such malware. And entirely agree with your statement about appeasing the industry. The problem is a law this broad and open to interpertation can be used to cover all more stuff than we are currently talking about, and I can see this getting dangerous in the future, Especially if the trend contintues along such paths.

    16. Re:Imprecise Laws by JudicatorX · · Score: 1

      Not so much precise as overbroad, I'm afraid.

      --
      "It is a good divine that follows his own instructions" - Portia, The Merchant of Venice
    17. Re:Imprecise Laws by 21st+Century+Peon · · Score: 1

      Why limit it to software?

      If a software manufacturer is liable for its customers illegal use of its product, then surely ALL manufacturers should be equally liable; makers of guns (murder), paper shredders (non-compliance with Freedom of Information laws), printers (forgery), matches (arson), shoes (trespassing - OK, I'll stop).

      --
      "Knowledge, sir, should be free to all!"
      ~Harcourt Fenton Mudd
    18. Re:Imprecise Laws by Macadamizer · · Score: 1

      what "the" law says is irrelevant to what rights I choose to grant you under MY law, even if the domain of my law doesn't extend very far past my shirt right now (that WILL change)

      I, for one, welcome our Anonymous Coward overlords...

      You should rightly be paid for the original act of creation or performance. Not paid over and over again a hugely inflated price for each damn-near-negligible-cost-to-produce copy thereof.

      But why is this so bad? Why shouldn't the creator continue to be paid for his creation? Everyone says this is a horrible thing, but why is it a horrible thing? Is it just because YOU don't want to pay for something, or is their some grander scheme?

      Copyright monopolies destroying the free market allow them to nigh-on print money, rather than their product price equilibrating near marginal cost of production with a reasonable profit as would happen in a free market.

      But what does a "free market" mean in the creative world? There is only 1 U2 or Coldplay out there -- what does a "free market" mean when there is only a single source of the goods? IF there really were a free market for creative goods, that would imply that there were several U2's out there, and they would compete to provide the best product at the lowest price.

      However, there is only 1 U2 out there -- with or without copyright laws, if someone wants U2 songs, there is only 1 supplier -- it's a monopoly situation, not a free market. In such a market, copyright law does NOT establish the monnopolies -- they already exist automatically -- it simply attempts to eliminate "freeloaders."

      What you -- and most of the folks here on /. -- want is not a free market, but a market where freeloaders can continually undercut prices. The free market rules, which would suggest that competition would drive prices down to marginal cost + reasonable profit CANNOT apply when the market consists of a monopolist (like U2) who carries all of the costs and risk associated with creating their product, and freeloaders who carry none of the risk or costs. U2 can never compete with the freeloaders on price as long as they have to recoup their costs before they can turn a profit. Since the costs for the freeloaders approach zero, they can always undercut the monopolist.

      Copyright, and other IP protections, are the only way that such a monopolist can try and minimize the problem of freeloaders. Is copyright perfect? No, but neither is "no copyright."

      --

      "That's not even wrong..." -- Wolfgang Pauli
    19. Re:Imprecise Laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if someone wants U2 songs, there is only 1 supplier

      Actually, there are hundreds of bands that are adequately substitutable for U2 for the average music consumer. CK has a monopoly on "one" perfume too, but other perfumes can be sold.

      Anwyay, I'd be willing to bet that U2 would go on making (ahem) "music" in the complete absence of copyright law (Artists, though I use the term advisedly with reference to Bono et al. aren't driven solely by profit).

    20. Re:Imprecise Laws by Macadamizer · · Score: 1

      Actually, there are hundreds of bands that are adequately substitutable for U2 for the average music consumer.

      I don't know about that -- when the average music consumer hears a U2 song on the radio, do they go to the music store and decide not to buy the U2 CD because there is something else "adequately subsitutable" for U2 for $.50 less? When you go to a store to buy a CD or buy from Amazon (I know, a big assumption here on /.!), do you try and purchase specific CD's by specific artists, or do you shop solely on price?

      When you hear about a new book or novel, do you purchase that novel or book, or do you try and find a cheaper one, because it should be "adequately substitutable?" Did you buy Half-Life 2, or did you find some "adequately substitutable" shareware or freeware?

      The point is, a lot of "creative" works that are the types of things covered by copyright (but not everything, of course) are the types of things that there really aren't adequate substitutes for, at least not until the prices get totally out of wack. I agree that if a no-name band's CD was selling for $2.00, and U2's new CD for $30.00, maybe that would be enough of a price gap to get people to buy the no-name CD (although I suspect that people would mainly just not buy the U2 CD, and not buy the no-name CD either). If you really want to hear the new U2 CD, there simply isn't an adequate substitute. That's why free market ideas don't work so well with creative works.

      People don't buy music, art, books, etc., based soley on price -- price is usually an issue, of course, but the price decision becomes more of a buy-or-don't-buy decision, versus buy U2 or buy some other CD decision. That's why traditional notions of competition don't work.

      Now, if more than 1 record company was selling the same U2 CD, maybe with different artwork or with some different features of something, THEN maybe you would have a true competive situation, where a consumer could purchase the U2 from whichever record label offered the best combination of price, service and features. But as long as bands, authors, artists, etc., are bound to exclusive licensing and distribution networks, this kind of competition simply can't occur.

      BTW, that's also true for bands who sell their own CD's and don't go through a label, or go through indie labels -- there STILL isn't any real competition...

      --

      "That's not even wrong..." -- Wolfgang Pauli
    21. Re:Imprecise Laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I second that. If makers of software can be held liable for other-party use of their product, then so should gun manufacturers. That's real good, Ford gets a ticket if you're caught speeding.

    22. Re:Imprecise Laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So what? The parliament can only suggest to the Commission that they would like to see some specific legislation created. The Commission has the sole power to actually initiate and draft legislation in the EU. This is the primary problem with democracy in the EU, and the current proposal under discussion demonstrates how the Commission can be lead astray by business interests.

    23. Re:Imprecise Laws by PriceIke · · Score: 3, Insightful

      >> You should rightly be paid for the original act of creation or performance. Not paid over and over again a hugely inflated price for each damn-near-negligible-cost-to-produce copy thereof.

      > But why is this so bad? Why shouldn't the creator continue to be paid for his creation? Everyone says this is a horrible thing, but why is it a horrible thing? Is it just because YOU don't want to pay for something, or is their some grander scheme?

      The US Constitution grants the Congress the power to enact laws to "To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries." (section 8). Note use of the word "limited". Once an author creates a work, getting paid repeatedly, indefinitely, for that work does not incent him to continue to author. If he can just take his one book (or song or invention or whatever) to the bank for the rest of his and his children's children's children's lives, what motive would he have to continue to produce?

      Notice how science and art are both represented here. Consider what would happen if universities treated discoveries the same way the **IAs treated media. Research would be impossible. If no one was ever allowed to build on the research and findings of those coming before them without financially compensating hundreds of other scientists in the process, it would be too cost prohibitive to research anything, and we'd forever be living in the bronze age. Why should it be one way for science and another way for the arts?

      Now Disney and the **IAs want copyrights and patents to be enforcable indefinitely, because they don't want to have to create something new which would supplant the revenues lost when their copyright protection sunsets. This does not promote or incentivize new creativity. To the contrary, it shuts the door on it.

      --
      It's not a lie. It's the truth with lossy compression.
    24. Re:Imprecise Laws by PriceIke · · Score: 1

      > Is socialism against filesharing?

      Yes.

      --
      It's not a lie. It's the truth with lossy compression.
    25. Re:Imprecise Laws by Macadamizer · · Score: 1

      I understand that's what the constitution says -- I was arguing in the more philosophical sense, because "You should rightly be paid for the original act of creation or performance. Not paid over and over again a hugely inflated price for each damn-near-negligible-cost-to-produce copy thereof" isn't what the constitution says either.

      Once an author creates a work, getting paid repeatedly, indefinitely, for that work does not incent him to continue to author.

      But how many authors and artists can continue to make a living after publishing only one work, even though they get paid "indefinitely?"

      If he can just take his one book (or song or invention or whatever) to the bank for the rest of his and his children's children's children's lives, what motive would he have to continue to produce?

      Again, there aren't many authors or artists that can continue to make a living off of a single recording or novel. Maybe it happens once in a while, but most don't make that much even when there product is first printed or published -- the incentive to create another work is the same incentive most of us have every day when we get up and go to work -- to make more money.

      Also, BTW, I know you didn't make this argument, but I've seen it a lot on /., and that's the argument that a company shouldn't own the patents that their employees make, but the employees should own the patents and reap the benefits. Well, the current system we have for patents in these cases is essentially the pay-once system -- the employee gets a paycheck -- and people don't seem to like that. I guess maybe it's because somebody else -- the employer, in this case -- is reaping the benefits of the patent. But that's the same thing that would happen here -- if artists were paid once for their product, and that's it, then others would be free to come in an profit from their creations. Maybe its not a complete direct parallel, but I think it helps to point out some of the diverging IP arguments we have here sometimes...

      Now Disney and the **IAs want copyrights and patents to be enforcable indefinitely, because they don't want to have to create something new which would supplant the revenues lost when their copyright protection sunsets.

      When was the last time a new album came out from an RIAA member? Don't several hundred new albums come out every year, at least? How many new movies has Disney made in the last few years? True, Disney would lose some income if copyright protection went away, but it is hard to see how Disney is NOT incentivized by the current length of copyrights, unless you want to say that Disney would produce even more movies if they didn't have copyright protections, or record labels would produce and distribute even more CD's if copyright went away.

      --

      "That's not even wrong..." -- Wolfgang Pauli
    26. Re:Imprecise Laws by Catbeller · · Score: 3, Interesting

      "But why is this so bad? Why shouldn't the creator continue to be paid for his creation? Everyone says this is a horrible thing, but why is it a horrible thing? Is it just because YOU don't want to pay for something, or is their some grander scheme?"

      Straw man.

      Firstly, the vast, vast major of contracted musicians don't see a penny from their copyrighted works, because they don't own the copyrights -- the labels do. And the labels screw them out of whatever cash they may be entitled to. Even successful artists rarely see a dime until the second or third hit album.

      And anyway, copyright and payment is not a bad thing -- if it is limited for a short time. Copyright, however, is now eternal, and the original bargain made by the Constitution's framers is dead. Until copyright is reined in, it is a Bad Thing.

      "what does a "free market" mean when there is only a single source of the goods?"

      You've changed the definition of the goods. There is ONE source in the world for U2 performances -- U2 itself. That's what concerts are for, to obtain that unique product that only U2 can provide.

      BUT, the recordings of the songs are not provided by a monopoly - not anymore - have millions of sources available for repro, are infinitely reproducible at almost no cost, and have a street value of either retail price or free. Amazingly, a lot of people are purchasing the retail package, but free seems to be popular as well. The free market has assigned its values. That the copyright lords do not agree with the reality of the free market doesn't change the reality. The copyright holders should be shudderingly grateful that people are willing to pay anything at all for a 25 cent disc.

      "U2 can never compete with the freeloaders on price as long as they have to recoup their costs before they can turn a profit."

      Obviously, they can compete. Bono doesn't seem to be hurtin' for money.

      Bands, as I said before, rarely make money off of their album sales because of the amazing accounting practices of the recording industry. They DO make money off of their live performances, after the labels eat their share. Live performances are the way to go if you want to eat.

      As for the revenues of the labels, who give a crap. They don't give it to their artists, and if you'll recall, they almost slipped a provision into federal law that would have made ALL RECORDINGS "works for hire" -- meaning the payment the artist received for recording the work would have been the LAST payment the artist would ever see, because the copyright would have been owned by the labels forever and ever and ever. And they probably would have taken the payment back from the artists for "expenses" that only they could define.

      Wrappin' it up, I can only throw in my only real, extralegal reason for tossing copyright into the trash. Copyright was a deal, a compromise in the Constitution, that let a creator make money for a limited time, and then released the work into the public domain in less than 20 years. That would insure that things like "Huckleberry Finn" would be part of the public heritage, and available for interpretation and expansion or whatever anyone wanted to do with it.

      But Twain's writings are STILL COPYRIGHTED, and will be forever; they are held by an IP concern which trades in the stuff like stock certificates. This is the reality. The works of mankind are now product, never to be released.

      The deal was broken in the late 20th century. WE did not break it; greedy, selfish and stupid men broke it. They killed copyright by making it eternal, and made it criminal to violate their "property", making "reading" or "copying" equivalent to "stealing". Just the semantic evil of what they've done pisses me off.

      They declared war on the human race, not me.

    27. Re:Imprecise Laws by Macadamizer · · Score: 1

      Firstly, the vast, vast major of contracted musicians don't see a penny from their copyrighted works, because they don't own the copyrights -- the labels do. And the labels screw them out of whatever cash they may be entitled to. Even successful artists rarely see a dime until the second or third hit album.

      And that's just as irrelevant to the argument -- if the artist felt that selling his or her rights to the record company was the best thing for them to do, why shouldn't the record company then be able to profit from it? As is noted over and over ad naseum on these boards, nobody forces the artists to sign their contracts with the labels -- they do it of their own free will.

      And anyway, copyright and payment is not a bad thing -- if it is limited for a short time. Copyright, however, is now eternal, and the original bargain made by the Constitution's framers is dead. Until copyright is reined in, it is a Bad Thing.

      Life + 70 years is a long ass time, I will agree, but is far short of eternal. Read Eldred v. Ashcroft (maybe you already have) to see the arguments as to why life + 70 is constitutional.

      You've changed the definition of the goods. There is ONE source in the world for U2 performances -- U2 itself. That's what concerts are for, to obtain that unique product that only U2 can provide.

      BUT, the recordings of the songs are not provided by a monopoly - not anymore - have millions of sources available for repro, are infinitely reproducible at almost no cost, and have a street value of either retail price or free. Amazingly, a lot of people are purchasing the retail package, but free seems to be popular as well. The free market has assigned its values. That the copyright lords do not agree with the reality of the free market doesn't change the reality. The copyright holders should be shudderingly grateful that people are willing to pay anything at all for a 25 cent disc.


      So, you think that the artists should only charge for concerts, and should give away the CD's for nothing? Maybe artists shouldn't record CD's at all, and should just perform, and not allowe recording of their shows.

      Obviously, they can compete. Bono doesn't seem to be hurtin' for money.

      You are right, Bono isn't hurting. But would Bono be where he was today if the record company couldn't have sold cassettes and albums back when U2 started? How would anyone know whether or not U2 could sell out a small club or an arena if there was no measurement of their popularity?

      How about another example -- if you are a young singer, just starting out, would you rather be playing small clubs, trying to build up a buzz and get some interest going, and giving away CD's that you paid to produce and record, or would you rather take a check up front, get your CD recorded and produced professionally, and have a record label doing the marketing, distribution, getting you airplay, getting you into videos, getting you onto SNL or Letterman, or whatever. If the record labels couldn't make money selling CD's, then you wouldn't have record labels providing the services labels do.

      Now, I'm not an apologist for the labels -- but they do provide a service that an awful lot of artists seem ready and willing to take advantage of, and pay handsomely for. Who are you to tell them that the deal they are making is not a good deal just because YOU would like to pay less for their music.

      But Twain's writings are STILL COPYRIGHTED, and will be forever; they are held by an IP concern which trades in the stuff like stock certificates. This is the reality. The works of mankind are now product, never to be released.

      Mark Twain died in 1910. Even if he published something on the day he died, it would long be public domain by now. Huckleberry Finn was published in 1885, which means it was public domain in 1899, if I remember my old copyright laws correctly.

      Wrappin' it up, I can only throw in my only real, extralegal reason for tossing copyright into the

      --

      "That's not even wrong..." -- Wolfgang Pauli
    28. Re:Imprecise Laws by Darkangael · · Score: 0

      Life + 70 years is a long ass time, I will agree, but is far short of eternal. Read Eldred v. Ashcroft (maybe you already have) to see the arguments as to why life + 70 is constitutional.

      It may be reasonable for individuals, but corporations rarely die. It is corporations who own the copyright for most works. Perhaps Mark Twain died in 1885, but who owned the copyright at the time? (I'm not sure whether the grandparent post was correct with his details, but they are conceivably true if a company owned the copyright at the time. It is certain that other works, however, will have a copyright extending LONG past the authors' deaths).

    29. Re:Imprecise Laws by I+confirm+I'm+not+a · · Score: 1

      So what?

      Ah, my mistake. I was understand the impression that a Socialist government was one where the bulk of the representatives were representatives elected by Socialists, not conservatives/Christian Democrats. Damn, and there was me bemoaning Europe's current crop of legislators as being right-wing. Silly me.

      Guess I don't need to wait until the GPES are re-elected - I live in a Socialist paradise right now!

      --
      This is where the serious fun begins.
    30. Re:Imprecise Laws by Crumplecorn · · Score: 1

      Yeah, it's not right to expect to be paid for some task or work that you perform or something you create.
      Inevitable post, but I'll bite.

      Of course you should be paid for something you create. However, if what you create is a file on a computer, I'll simply create a duplicate, and take that. Since I created it, I can even sell it on!
      Obviously if this attitude was enforced, everything would fall apart. Well, with the exception (in the case of music) of live performances, merchandising, original silver CDs, original silver DVDs of concerts, and anything else they could think of. Oh, and of course the fact that digital media like MP3s simply can't compete with well priced physical alternatives, like an original CD with a nice insert with the lyrics. But let's ignore all that (not being sarcastic) for a minute.
      How would you prevent endless duplication of files and the destruction the industry? Surely there must be a way? Oh, yeah, licence the product. Now, if copying a copy file is illegal duplication, surely listening to a CD over and over again is too? You are, in a way, creating a copy of the song, as until you play it, it is just a few bumps on a disk. You must pay every time you hear the song. Something like this was tried http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DIVX.

      So we have a choice: a world where inferior digital reproductions which cost nothing to create are distributed for ... nothing, and the industry has to 'fight back' with things that can't be created by right-clicking and hitting 'Copy'. This will put them in a worse and worse position as compression gets better and average Internet connection speeds get higher, but they will always be the only ones who can mass produce original CDs.
      Or a world where everything is regulated by the companies. Which would probably eventually end up with DIVX being forcibly re-introduced, and a continuation of the 'war'.
      Adding some morality to the issue on the pirate side we have people forging disks and selling them as the real thing, which is bad for everyone but the pirates. P2P, well, that doesn't really hurt the industry much. On the company side we have them making life tough for legitimate customers to get their hands on the cash, and attacking anyone who gets in their way. And let's not forget suing little girls. Won't somebody think of the children!

    31. Re:Imprecise Laws by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      AFAIK corporations have special rules, I think they're treated as "dead" right from the beginning.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    32. Re:Imprecise Laws by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      Hitler was NOT the head of the socialist party in Germany, that was Otto Wels. Hitler outlawed the SPD in 1933.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    33. Re:Imprecise Laws by boppa · · Score: 1

      Once an author creates a work, getting paid repeatedly, indefinitely, for that work does not incent him to continue to author. ME: place my job(autoelec) instead of author.. ive created several circuits(some now used in many ignition killers).damn does that mean i cant send a bill every year to everyone who i fitted it to their cars?? But how many authors and artists can continue to make a living after publishing only one work, even though they get paid "indefinitely?" ME:DOH apparently i should have been sending out those bills!! If he can just take his one book (or song or invention or whatever) to the bank for the rest of his and his children's children's children's lives, what motive would he have to continue to produce? ME: what the so why the hell have i been elbow deep in some citron(sp?) engine guts trying to figure out how to remove the alternator?? hmm autoelecs of the world unite-no car shall start until we get paid repeatedly, indefinitely, for the changing of a bulb!!! (TIC) but then hmmmm.......

    34. Re:Imprecise Laws by Catbeller · · Score: 1

      "Well, hell yes. Ford makes cars and trucks that go faster than 75 miles per hour, even tho the speed is illegal. They are winking at the speeders. How many people die every year because of that excess capacity for speed? And Ford is not liable... why?"

      WTF is this moderated as "troll"?

    35. Re:Imprecise Laws by Macadamizer · · Score: 1

      I know I am a couple of days late here, but in case anyone is still tuned in, the current life + 70 years is for individual authors; corporations, and authors who do not use their own name, get 120 years from the date of creation. So the fact that "corporations don't die" doesn't mean that copyrights don't die -- the current lifetimes of copyrights is very long, but even for corporations, copyrights will eventually expire.

      In Twain's days, it wouldn't matter whether or not a corporation owned the copyright of not beause copyright terms were based on the date of publication, not the life of the author. It didn't matter who published it -- 14 years from publication was the length of copyrights in those days.

      Finally, even if an author later sells his copyright to another person or corporation, the copyright term is based on the AUTHOR's life, not the life of the person or coporation he sold the copyright to. The 120 year term for copyrights is only for the case where a corporation itself is the author -- like software, or instructional manuals, that sort of thing.

      --

      "That's not even wrong..." -- Wolfgang Pauli
  2. But I thought Europe was all about freedom? by dhakbar · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Especially the freedoms we Americans don't have.

    1. Re:But I thought Europe was all about freedom? by tilleyrw · · Score: 0, Troll

      This is a common example of thoughtcrime.

      Americans have all freedoms and have fairly reelected G. W. Bush to maintain this degree freedom. A goal of the U.S.A. Government is to spread this degree of perfect freedom throughout the world.

      This message has been presented by Worldcom-Enron-GWBushPetrol-Unicol-GlaxWelcomSmith .

      --
      This post encoded with ROT26. If you can read it, you've violated the DMCA. Handcuffs please, sergeant.
    2. Re:But I thought Europe was all about freedom? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The good news is that most criminal courts have jury. There is always a chance that the jury decided the damages of P2P is just cost of the Cd or a DVD or a simple theft which carries much lower fines/penalities than the civil suits.

    3. Re:But I thought Europe was all about freedom? by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

      Especially the freedoms we Americans don't have.

      They can take our copyrights, but they can never take our FREEDOM!

      [scuffle chains metal door swings shut]

      Darn them!

      --
      -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
    4. Re:But I thought Europe was all about freedom? by leonmergen · · Score: 1

      I don't believe any country who is part of the EU has a jury comparable to the US-type of jury...

      ... not that I'm aware of, at least. Over here, it's just pure lawyers and judges deciding the potential criminal's life.

      --
      - Leon Mergen
      http://www.solatis.com
    5. Re:But I thought Europe was all about freedom? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      common mistake. Europe is free as in shareware.

    6. Re:But I thought Europe was all about freedom? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The UK does - that's where the US got it from...

    7. Re:But I thought Europe was all about freedom? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Er. Common Law jurisdictions in the european union like Ireland, England and Wales that the USA's law is (mostly, except for Louisiana) based on can all have jury trials (think Scotland might too, but their laws are a bit funny in general), going right back to the Magna Carta in 1215 (yes, the basis for our current legal system is rather older than the USA :-) )

      AFAIK this includes, similar to the USA, the ability for a jury of one's peers to decide in a case that the law is at fault and overturn the law, but I'm not 100% sure there - I imagine that power is greater in the USA.

      One of the reasons many Irish and British people are only leukwarm supporters at best of the EU is because we regard the Civil law jurisdictions of mainland europe as primitive and barbaric. Similarly, many europeans in Civil law jurisdictions regard us as primitive and barbaric because in their eyes Common Law basically amounts to "whatever the fuck those rosbif idiots think it is at any given moment" rather than "what the Big Book of Law says".

      If you're a citizen of the USA, PLEASE be aware of your right to overturn an unjust law when you're on a jury (don't necessarily tell people you're aware of your rights there until you're already on the jury, though, or they'll get rid of you as fast as they possibly can!)
      http://www.fija.org/


      Making copyright violations a criminal offense might therefore be the first step in getting copyright law completely destroyed in Britain or Ireland.

    8. Re:But I thought Europe was all about freedom? by lxs · · Score: 1

      Oh it is, but we're catching up fast.

    9. Re:But I thought Europe was all about freedom? by lordholm · · Score: 1

      In the constitution for the EU it was stated that the freedom of speech may not be prevented regardless of frontiers. But of course, thank the Dutch and the French who didn't want such laws.

      Hopfully they will com to their sense sooner or later and approve it, but I'm not counting on it happening any time soon.

      --
      "Civis Europaeus sum!"
    10. Re:But I thought Europe was all about freedom? by Darkman,+Walkin+Dude · · Score: 1

      What we need, in the face of this ongoing deluge of laws put forth by the distinguished lawyer-politicians of the world as they panic in the face of the ubiquitous spread of new technologies, is a data haven. Somewhere anyone can store any data they like, without fear of repercussion, with solidly encrypted and easy to use methods of data transfer.

      Because they don't get it, these marketing types, these book trained spindoctors, these crowd pleasers and strutting demagogues. The ride is over, and no longer can they gouge their fellow man for anything and everything that they deem to have substantive value, with the strong arms of the lawmen to back up their regal decrees.

      The nation or group that first successfully establishes a data haven will immediately become richer than Switzerland. Of course, they will face not inconsiderable difficulties in the process. They would probably need to have a nuclear deterrent, since the mere claim of sovereign statehood has proven to be less than sufficient to stop the forces of justice and freedom from violating that statehood by force of arms, lately. They will also need to account for the fact that other states might simply sever physically their data connections to the outside world, or mandate that they be stricken from the internet root servers. Further, they need to be able to account for the possibility that other nations may censure, fine, or dismantle any group that uses the data haven facility. And finally they need to have the strength of will to accept that not all of the data in their haven might be morally acceptable.

      Once this facility was in place and these obstacles overcome, however, all of the IP laws in the world are basically rendered invalid and unenforcable, in a single stroke, and no amount of grandiose speechifying will reverse what is, in my opinion, inevitable; that is a complete re-evaluation of what exactly constitutes property, and what a glorious day that will be.

      A good location for such a facility would be North Korea, after it collapses.

    11. Re:But I thought Europe was all about freedom? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not anymore..
      Today the world has three big economic poles : USA (Bush), Europe (Barroso), and China (Hu).
      Guess which leader is the elected one ?

    12. Re:But I thought Europe was all about freedom? by KillShill · · Score: 4, Insightful

      you forget which country sent a massive number of "lobbyists" to change europe's docile copyright/patent laws.

      corruption and "lobbyists" go hand in hand.. skipping all the way to the IMF/Worldbank.

      --
      Science : Proprietary , Knowledge : Open Source
    13. Re:But I thought Europe was all about freedom? by farble1670 · · Score: 1
      you don't live here, and don't have a clue. the only time an american has the "freedom" to shoot someone in the face is if that someone is pointing a gun at them.

      yes, and indeed, europe these days seems to be a lot about having other countries metaphorically shoot them in the face, while they do nothing. stand proud my friend.

    14. Re:But I thought Europe was all about freedom? by Taladar · · Score: 1

      I don't know about you but I wouldn't mind if someone took all copyrights and vanished with them, fair use rights however...

    15. Re:But I thought Europe was all about freedom? by rob123 · · Score: 0

      It's already happened: http://www.havenco.com/

    16. Re:But I thought Europe was all about freedom? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > An American's idea of freedom is the right to shoot someone in the face for trespassing on their property.

      Uh, yeah. If someone is on my property, and I tell them to leave and they don't, and I think they have hostile or otherwise unwelcome intent, damn right I will protect myself and my property with whatever force I see fit. Too bad the French still haven't learned that lesson. Over here, it's common sense.

    17. Re:But I thought Europe was all about freedom? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have no freedom with which to break the law. So you lose nothing with this proposal.

    18. Re:But I thought Europe was all about freedom? by gibbsjoh · · Score: 1

      "Collapses?" Surely you mean, "is liberated." :).

      --
      -- "...I'm a bad guy because I, well, I sing some rock-and-roll songs." M. Manson
    19. Re:But I thought Europe was all about freedom? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It certainly hasn't always been that way. Wasn't the US the land of the free? Europe is mostly pretty lacking in terms of freedom, the reason you hear about European freedoms so much now, is that today, we actually have more freedoms than Americans. AFAIK, breaking even more freedoms than the Europeans wasn't the idea of founding the US.

      Except for some propaganda rethoric, Europe was never about freedom. It was about quality of life, wealth, power and culture. The US was about freedom. That you get more freedom in Europe now says a LOT more about the US than about Europe. It shouldn't surprise anyone that both will grow to the other-ones standards.

      (btw, I live in the Netherlands)

    20. Re:But I thought Europe was all about freedom? by Safety+Cap · · Score: 1
      you don't live here, and don't have a clue. the only time an american has the "freedom" to shoot someone in the face is if that someone is pointing a gun at them.
      You may live here, but you have even less of a clue.

      Here in TexAss, you can shoot anyone on your property, provided you can prove that they threatened you or your stuff at night and there was "no other way" to keep them from "threatening" you.

      Bang, bang.

      --
      Yeah, right.
    21. Re:But I thought Europe was all about freedom? by farble1670 · · Score: 1
      no, actually, you don't have a clue, and also, you can't follow a simple thread. the original post said nothing about "threatening", it said "shoot someone in the face for trespassing on their property".

      in case you didn't know, trespassing != threatening. and also, for most US courts, "threatening" means that your life is in danger. that means the trespasser must be wielding a deadly weapon. whatever your uncle billy-bob told you about shooting people who steal his corn, it's BS.

    22. Re:But I thought Europe was all about freedom? by drsquare · · Score: 1

      Since when did anyone have the freedom, or the right, to infringe copyrights? This new proposal is just tying up loose ends, it's not taking away anything you had before. Copyright infringement is wrong, it's illegal, has been for centuries, always will be. All the whining in the world won't make downloading illegal MP3s any more acceptable. I guess you'll just have to follow copyrights like normal, sane human beings, and realise that you're not allowed to break the law just because you're using a computer.

    23. Re:But I thought Europe was all about freedom? by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 1
      What we need, in the face of this ongoing deluge of laws put forth by the distinguished lawyer-politicians of the world as they panic in the face of the ubiquitous spread of new technologies,

      What we need in this ongoing deluge of laws is a concerted public and global effort to make those "distinguished" lawyer-politicians completely and utterly powerless. Allow them make laws until the cows come home, but make sure only most the basic, common-sense ones can be enforced.

      After they get done screaming about the sky falling, and then realizing that everyone is ignoring them & getting on with their lives, then those lawyer-politicians can go do something useful like running a hotel or designing cars or something.

      (Yeah, nice daydream - but I suspect nothing will happen until the current legislative framework collapses under its own weight. The U.S. legal system looks like a massive legacy COBOL system ready to collapse into a pile of contradictory & buggy spaghetti at any moment, and the rest of the world seems prepared to follow the U.S. over the cliff.)

    24. Re:But I thought Europe was all about freedom? by Goth+Biker+Babe · · Score: 1

      Wel our juries are more informed but where do you think the American legal system came from? The US legal system is a fork of the UK one, as is the Irish and the one in much of the world.

    25. Re:But I thought Europe was all about freedom? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The profoundly Eurosceptic British public would have rejected it if the others hadn't. This was why Blair made sure that the British referendum (which he didn't really want) took place well after all the others. If (as he hoped) somebody else rejected it first, he could avoid Britain being seen as the "bad boys of Europe" once again.

      Note also that any EC constitutional freedom of speech guarantees would have no more effect on excessive protection of entrenched media interests than those same guarantees did in the US. Protecting free speech is not the same as allowing free information.

      IMO the greatest thing that we lost when the EC constitution got rejected was the extra powers that it gave the elected parliament, with a consequent diminution of those held by the comission, council of ministers, and Eurocrats. The whole EC edifice would therefore have become both more transparent and more democratic, whereas we will now have to live with the current highly unsatisfactory situation for the forseeable future.

    26. Re:But I thought Europe was all about freedom? by Darkman,+Walkin+Dude · · Score: 1

      That being the point of the nuclear deterrent part of my soap box theatrics...

    27. Re:But I thought Europe was all about freedom? by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      Courts have found in one case that an ice cream wielded by a kid was enough reason for the defendant to assume the "intruder" was armed and had the right to shoot the "intruder".

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    28. Re:But I thought Europe was all about freedom? by Safety+Cap · · Score: 1

      My side of the story--the story I will tell the cops--was that you threatened my property, my wife and my child with rape, sodomy, hanging and illegal drug use. I tried to get you off the property, but you kept on coming, while shouting obscenities. I finally pulled my little gun and told you to go away; you refused. Done.

      Your side of the story... well, there isn't one, because when I shoot you in the face with my Desert Eagle .50 cal, you will not be able to tell your side of the story to anyone but jesus or vishnu. The law says nothing about welding a weapon to fit the requirement of "threatening." The only requirements are that it is nighttime and there is a reasonable reason (property "threatened") why the perp was shot in the face.

      --
      Yeah, right.
    29. Re:But I thought Europe was all about freedom? by farble1670 · · Score: 1
      that's not how it works. because the law requires a little thing called evidence. ever heard of it? there must be evidence that you were being physically threatend. that means that they need to find a gun in the other guy's hand. think about it. you don't get to gun down anyone that steps foot on your property, and get off by simply saying "he was threatening me." that would be ridiculous. i wonder if you have tried applying common sense here?


      okay, you maybe you happen to own a serial-less gun just for this purpose, and you're going to slip it into the dead guy's hand. well, that might work. there's always people like you ready to go to any means necessary to break the law. maybe it will be successful, maybe not, and increasingly less so in the age of advanced CSI techniques.


      and also, maybe you're willing to drag people you've murdered 3 feet on to your property to justify killing them. if so, you're a neat person. i wish you were my neighbor.

  3. Just end it all, please... by garcia · · Score: 5, Insightful

    A directive being pushed by the European Commission would, among other things, criminalize "attempting, aiding or abetting and inciting" acts of copyright infringement.

    Let's ban everything that attempts, aids, or incites acts of anything. It would eliminate cars, guns, tools, computers, people, milk, water, and air.

    Fuck, let's just blow up the whole earth, some corporation would likely benefit from it -- I'm sure they have a patent on the bombs, cleaning up the destruction, and cloning human life after creating the vegetation and animal life.

    Let's stop making laws that only support the businesses that have endless supplies of money please.

    1. Re:Just end it all, please... by alexandreracine · · Score: 1

      If I had some mod points left, I'll would MOD YOU UP!

      --
      No sig for now.
    2. Re:Just end it all, please... by shark72 · · Score: 3, Informative

      "Let's ban everything that attempts, aids, or incites acts of anything. It would eliminate cars, guns, tools, computers, people, milk, water, and air."

      Maybe the summary wasn't clear enough. This is an attempt to institute a standard of liability similar to that of MGM vs. Grokster. The folks behind Grokster were taking active measures to profit from piracy -- their ad campaigns and email trails showed that quite clearly. If you're not sure why Grokster fell into this category and a gun manufacturer does not, it may help to compare Grokster's business model and advertising campaign to that of BitTorrent.

      Any moron can slippery-slope this one. We're smarter than that.

      --
      Sitting in my day care, the art is decopainted.
    3. Re:Just end it all, please... by garcia · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If you're not sure why Grokster fell into this category and a gun manufacturer does not, it may help to compare Grokster's business model and advertising campaign to that of BitTorrent.

      The only reason is because of lawyer speak. Guns were created to kill living things but they are marketed with clever wording that includes everything but.

      P2P was created to quickly and effectively distribute data without a central server handling all the load. Problem is that the corporations that don't like it being used against their current business models have more money than the users and creaters of the P2P software.

      I'm not slippery sloping anything. I'm stating a fact.

    4. Re:Just end it all, please... by ciroknight · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I've been reading through these posts and I haven't seen anything that none of us hasn't seen before. But what do we do about it? We sit on our asses, yelling at a website because our rights are being violated left and right.

      What happened to the days when a country's movements were so offensive that people would march? That people would have sit ins and public readings and such? Words are just words people, unless any of us is willing to stand up for our rights, we're just blowing hot air.

      Perhaps all of those users of P2P programs, software developers, people who feel like their rights are being encroached on should get off their asses and go to DC for a day, sit down on the captial lawn, and get some influential people to talk and unite us. I'm sure RMS would have no problem, nor would Linus or anyone; a day out of their lives to support such an important cause isn't going to hurt anyone.

      I'm just tired of hearing about this on Slashdot and having no outlet than to whine about it on here. It's far past time we actually *do* something about it.

      --
      "Victory means exit strategy, and it's important for the President to explain to us what the exit strategy is." G.W.Bush
    5. Re:Just end it all, please... by IamGarageGuy+2 · · Score: 3, Funny

      I'm sensing a bit of negative attitude here.

      --
      Stay tuned for new sig...
    6. Re:Just end it all, please... by yellowbkpk · · Score: 1

      So go do something about it! Stop complaining about the people who are complaining. Don't tell US what to do, go do it yourself!

      OSS philosophy here...

    7. Re:Just end it all, please... by Ahnteis · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The difference is the advertising, not the product.

      If your software is advertised as a way to download copyrighted works without permission from copyright holder, you are a Napster and will be held liable.

      If your software is advertised as a data distribution network with no emphasis on copyrighted works, you are a bittorrent and will not be held liable.

      (If you are a gun manufacturer and you advertise that your weapons can be used to kill HUMANS you will be held liable. If you advertise that your weapons can be used to kill animals and targets, you won't be held liable.)

    8. Re:Just end it all, please... by ciroknight · · Score: 1

      The idea is to get people to notice that they're doing the same, not to reply with "clever" comments such as yours.

      Just so you know, I'm a heavy supporter of the EFF, and I sit down and write my congressmen about once or twice a month, which is really all the time I have as a college student. Sadly, my words alone can't convince anyone, but get enough people noticing what they can do about it, and things happen.

      If I had the ability to schedule a march on the captial, I would in a heartbeat, but I'm no leader, and can barely support myself as it is. I'm sure if their was a march, I would go, but it does take quite a bit of work to organize one, and that's something nobody can do alone.

      I guess what I'm getting at is that a person is just that, a person. They can do whatever they want and can, but no more. But people are capable of much, much more. Teamwork is something that matters. The OSS philosophy doesn't work too well politically; no supporters, no movement.

      --
      "Victory means exit strategy, and it's important for the President to explain to us what the exit strategy is." G.W.Bush
    9. Re:Just end it all, please... by tomjen · · Score: 1

      And how would going to DC help on an EU proposal?

      And for the public readings - the internet is a much better medium.

      --
      Freedom or George Bush
    10. Re:Just end it all, please... by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Two million people marched in London to protest against the Iraq war.

      Approximately 78% of the electorate did not vote for Tony Blair's Labour party at the recent UK general election.

      Our troops still went into Iraq, and Blair is still in power.

      If the biggest mass protest in recent history couldn't avert a war that has killed thousands, it's not going to do much about some random Eurocrap. We need to do something more than bitch on Slashdot, but apparently marching isn't it.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    11. Re:Just end it all, please... by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1


      So my advertising is the factor that decides my culpability?

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    12. Re:Just end it all, please... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Civil war.

      Y'know, overthrow the government.

      Let's do it.

    13. Re:Just end it all, please... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah... let's ban stupid, knee-jerk, over reaction, and exaggeration too, while we are at it.

      And take all those idiots who modded the post up as insightful with you. :rolleyes:

    14. Re:Just end it all, please... by zootm · · Score: 2, Informative

      So my advertising is the factor that decides my culpability?

      Exactly. There's a difference between creating software that can do something, and specifically marketing it for doing that thing. Grokster sat on their site and said "violate copyright with our products". That was a prime reason they were held responsible when their users did exactly that.

    15. Re:Just end it all, please... by CaymanIslandCarpedie · · Score: 1

      OK, if they want to go after companies like Grokster fine. I have no problem if they are flagrantly advocating copyright infringment. My problem is with the wording. Why cannot they just say EXACTLY what is illegal?

      "It also covers attempting, aiding or abetting and inciting such offenses". What the HELL!!! By that definition they could go after ISPs, PC makers, OS makers, etc, etc, etc, etc...... As you say "any moron can slippery-slope this one". Why not make it so some moron DA (or whatever the EU equivilant is) CANNOT slippery-slope it? Why not just spell out exactly what is illegal?

      I remember when it used to be "Its better for 10 guilty men to go free than one innocent man be found guilty". With the "loose" wording of these laws almost everyone COULD be found guilty. It seems more and more like they try to word laws so if they feel like it, they could go after anybody. Then they can just choose who it is they really want to get. Somehow that just doesn't sit right with me.

      --
      "reality has a well-known liberal bias" - Steven Colbert
    16. Re:Just end it all, please... by geoffspear · · Score: 1
      We're smarter than that.

      You must be new here.

      --
      Don't blame me; I'm never given mod points.
    17. Re:Just end it all, please... by pilgrim23 · · Score: 1

      Who was it who said:
        "Anything which is not deemed illegal shall be compulsory!"....

      --
      - Minutus cantorum, minutus balorum, minutus carborata descendum pantorum.
    18. Re:Just end it all, please... by geoffspear · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Actually, the gun analogy falls apart more easily than that.

      It would be more accurate to say that you'd be held liable if you marketed your guns for killing people illegally. Like, "Is your neighbor annoying you? Our guns will shut him up, forever." On the other hand, "Worried about home invasions? Protect your family with our guns" would be seen as a legitimate use of the weapon, which also involves killing humans.

      Yes, you can share data with lots of people without it being illegal. If you market your data sharing tool as a way to get Hollywood movies for free, that's when you're crossing the line. Market it for getting copies of people's crappy home movies, and you're fine.

      --
      Don't blame me; I'm never given mod points.
    19. Re:Just end it all, please... by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1


      What happened to the days when a country's movements were so offensive that people would march?


      Because most of these protests are empty gestures that affect nothing.

      Gathering up in a big group to do something pointless like sit around and chant doesn't achieve as much as well-written letters to your representatives in government. Any dolt can join a march and shout "Hell, no, we're not slow." or something else that is inane, but rhymes, but a well-written letter shows there is a brain behind the stance. But of course, letters don't make the nightly news and don't offer that fleeting chance of 15 seconds of fame.

      Just my 2 cents.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    20. Re:Just end it all, please... by boarder8925 · · Score: 1
      We need to do something more than bitch on Slashdot, but apparently marching isn't it.
      The solution is to pay the government.

      Hey, it works for everyone else!
    21. Re:Just end it all, please... by Winterblink · · Score: 1

      To quote V,

      "People shouldn't be afraid of their government. Government should be afraid of the people."

      Or somesuch. The reason protests and marches and all that don't fly is because governments do not care anymore what the people say, no matter how hard and loud they say it. We have no power, they have all the power.

      --
      "I'm a leaf on the wind. Watch how I soar."
      -Hoban Washburn
    22. Re:Just end it all, please... by pete-classic · · Score: 1
      We need to do something more than bitch on Slashdot, but apparently marching isn't it.


      I know a guy with a few ideas.

      -Peter
    23. Re:Just end it all, please... by Tim+C · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Approximately 78% of the electorate did not vote for Tony Blair's Labour party at the recent UK general election.

      In that figure you are of course including the people who did not vote at all, despite being eligible. According to the BBC, there was about a 60% turnout of voters. Therefore, 40% of that 78% didn't vote at all.

      I'm not detracting from your main point - that the majority of us did not vote Labour - but the way you present it implies that something dishonest occurred, which is not the case.

      We need to do something more than bitch on Slashdot, but apparently marching isn't it.

      Our government isn't listening. It hears what it wants to - fears over immigration, terrorism, etc - and acts on that. On other matters - ID cards, the Iraq war, etc - it simply claims to know best and carrys on regardless.

      And you know what? It's as much a fault of the 40% who didn't vote at all, as it is of those that voted Labour. (Not that the Tories are any better if you ask me, but that's a rant for another time)

      Oh, and a disclaimer: it's my fault too, as in the end I didn't vote either. I didn't see that there was any real point; my constituency (Hornchurch) is split roughly 45/45 Tory/Labour, with the remaining 10% or so "other" (mainly Lib Dem). Not much of a choice, if you ask me.

    24. Re:Just end it all, please... by NanoGator · · Score: 1

      "I've been reading through these posts and I haven't seen anything that none of us hasn't seen before. But what do we do about it?"

      Wait for it to pass, then set up copyright land-mines. Once a well placed politician finds himself in court, the issue will be revisited. The neat thing about copyrights is that they can be assigned to something as simple as an image of a cute little kitten posed a like a ninja.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    25. Re:Just end it all, please... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I've been reading through these posts and I haven't seen anything that none of us hasn't seen before."

      Oh yeah, well my mom got her foot stuck in jello while dusting the top of the fan with the cat. ... seen that before?

    26. Re:Just end it all, please... by gordo3000 · · Score: 1

      I woudl bet so many people feel like you that this is why it is now pointless. The civil rights movement was mainly fueled by marches, sit-ins, and general protests. It was only after several YEARS of this(which mainly changed the stances of many people) that the government began to listen and change its stances.

      So guess what, its not an easy road. No matter how much slashdot seems like the world, lots of people out there are very happy with what the government is doing. Government always bends to the will of the people in the states, you just have to realize that most of the people just might be against you.

    27. Re:Just end it all, please... by dasunt · · Score: 1
      The only reason is because of lawyer speak. Guns were created to kill living things but they are marketed with clever wording that includes everything but.

      What?

      Look in a hunting magazine. Guns are marketted to kill things.

      Even handguns are marketed for self-defense, with ads strongly implying that killing things is what makes handguns effective.

    28. Re:Just end it all, please... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Two million people marched in London to protest against the Iraq war.

      Approximately 78% of the electorate did not vote for Tony Blair's Labour party at the recent UK general election.

      Our troops still went into Iraq, and Blair is still in power.

      If the biggest mass protest in recent history couldn't avert a war that has killed thousands, it's not going to do much about some random Eurocrap. We need to do something more than bitch on Slashdot, but apparently marching isn't it.


      As much as you seem to think that sadaam is a fun-loving guy that should be invited to everyone's graduation party..he killed 100's of thousands more than the U.S. invasion. But protesters seem to always forget this part.

      Also, the U.S. still has him captured..in prison. If it were any other country in the world, he would have been dead before even entering our soil.

      I hope one day that the terrorists come in and destroy both the U.S. and england...so then I can say: "I told you so". But alas, by that time..there will be noone left to tell.

    29. Re:Just end it all, please... by ta+ma+de · · Score: 1

      I don't know ... what about ... um ... uh maybe a ... JIHAD. yeah. yeah. a jihad thats the ticket. Uh oh. no thats no good. Gitmo is not the Maldives holiday I was hoping for. Fuck it. I, for one, support the reinstitution of slavery and offer myself for sale. An ebay exclusive, payment to be made the US Treasury.

    30. Re:Just end it all, please... by zaroastra · · Score: 1

      You mean, like in the end, UK residents and europeans all the same still got screwed when the US wanted to get some oil?
      And dont go modding me troll because im stating a fact that everyone knows.
      He who still thinks that Iraq oil was about something else than american economic supremacy and oil control should learn about "media brainwashing".
      It was all being drafted for years. 2001-09-11 only made it all too easy for wierdly ellected bush to get internal support, not so funny laws aproved and external simpaty.

      Doubts? Check some links e.g.
      http://www.newamericancentury.org/iraqclintonlette r.htm
      to start with...
      then just follow the money...

      --
      I'm trying to get modded "Interesting Flamebait Informative and Insightful Redundant Troll" *-* Please Help *-*
    31. Re:Just end it all, please... by KillShill · · Score: 1

      actually guns do more than just kill things. it has many legitetmate uses. it is a tool, a tool that has been used by many criminals but it's a tool nonetheless.

      --
      Science : Proprietary , Knowledge : Open Source
    32. Re:Just end it all, please... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      thousands wow. that is a lot. oh wait, casualties of previous wars have almost always been in the millions. im pretty sure that it wasn't worth it to keep a tyrant from testing weapons on his own people and killing millions of them. seriously, people are stupid.

    33. Re:Just end it all, please... by antiMStroll · · Score: 1
      "Guns were created to kill living things..."

      Which generally isn't illegal.

    34. Re:Just end it all, please... by antiMStroll · · Score: 1
      "Our government isn't listening. It hears what it wants to - fears over immigration, terrorism, etc - and acts on that."

      I'ld quibble with that. Not just your government, any government. They claim to act on public fears but really just use it as lip service to do whatever the hell is necessary to line their pockets with corporate funds in time for the next election.

    35. Re:Just end it all, please... by KillShill · · Score: 1

      mod this guy up. i couldn't have said it better myself (actually i couldn't. i'm not as articulate or as concise).

      people don't hear about the massive vote fraud in britain this past election or the one in 2004 in the US (not to forget about 2000). there is OVERWHELMING evidence to show that the vote frauds took place. why the mainstream media don't talk about it is... something i'll leave up to you to decide. of course, the maintream media also completely and without exception "bought" all the lies of the US administration as well...

      no wonder they are attacking blogs left and right... getting a law passed that would prevent political discourse to take place on blogs/web.

      blogs, with minuscule resources had the balls and werewithall to tell the public what was actually going on. discrediting the internet... yeah they've got that (TM).

      oh and that CIA agent that was outed... her husband threatened to expose the niger uranium claim as a fraud. so the administration TM, didn't like them being called out as liars, decided to punish him by outing his wife. now why would they forge documents if there was overwhelming evidence that iraq had/was building WMD.... hmmm makes one think. i wonder why blogs who have virtually no money and few "reporters" could see this so clearly and the mainstream media will hundreds of millions of dollars and thousands of employees could not...

      tip of the iceberg. i wonder what else is going on that you don't know about... those hundreds of spies that were caught in late 2001 but that didn't make headline news... those "middle-eastern" looking men caught near nuclear facilities in the US with traces of TNT in their trucks...

      ah well... join me next time when we uncover the den of war criminals and the spies who love them, here on Justice For All.

      --
      Science : Proprietary , Knowledge : Open Source
    36. Re:Just end it all, please... by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Guns were created to kill living things but they are marketed with clever wording that includes everything but.

      No, only the anti-gun loons think the manufacturers are involved in some nefarious conspiracy to 'trick' the public into thinking that the gun isn't a deadly weapon. It is, and that's the primary reason most people own a gun. It wouldn't be worth much if it *didn't* kill the person you're shooting at.

      Sometimes people try to kill one another. It's in your interest to be the best-armed person in any such conflict. Especially if you aren't built like Arnold, or are a woman facing down an enraged man, or elderly, or disabled, etc. etc.

      It's better to be alive and reviled by the anti-gun nuts than, well, dead. Alive just can't be beat.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    37. Re:Just end it all, please... by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      What happened to the days when a country's movements were so offensive that people would march?

      The same thing that happened to the days when a country's movements were so offensive that people would vote. Oh wait...That never happened. People prefer bullets to ballots.

      --
      What?
    38. Re:Just end it all, please... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      In America, we had a choice between Kerry, who was in favor of the war and PATRIOT, and Bush, who made the war and PATRIOT. Before Kerry there was Dean, who got sunk when the media played a tape from a noise-cancelling microphone 700 times in one week and made him sound like a loon. There were some third-party candidates, and I voted for one of them, but they were all shut out of the debates and mostly ignored by the media, and got less than one percent of the vote.

      I'm seriously considering joining the non-voting horde, on the theory that the system is fixed anyway and voting just gives these people legitimacy.

    39. Re:Just end it all, please... by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      What happened to the days when a country's movements were so offensive that people would march?

      Marching and public protest are extremely ineffective at driving change. They simply don't work, regardless of the 'romantic' public notion about these activities. If you want to change the way things are done you'll have to go for something a bit more productive than walking down a street and shouting slogans while wearing a ThinkGeek t-shirt.

      I'm sure RMS would have no problem

      RMS might enjoy being the demagogue, but most of us wouldn't touch him with a ten-foot pole. Just because you like him doesn't mean he's qualified to lead, much less that others will follow him.

      nor would Linus

      Linus isn't an activist, and I honestly believe he'd find the idea of 'leading' such a group a nauseating one.

      a day out of their lives to support such an important cause isn't going to hurt anyone.

      And it won't accomplish anything either.

      It's far past time we actually *do* something about it.

      Then go ahead and do something about it. But marching, sit-ins, etc. aren't going to accomplish much of anything but pissing off all the people you're going to inconvenience.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    40. Re:Just end it all, please... by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      The solution is to pay the government.

      You already do. It's called "taxes". And it's painfully obvious this doesn't guarantee you representation.

      What you might try is paying off your elected officials. THAT seems to work just fine.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    41. Re:Just end it all, please... by PriceIke · · Score: 1

      > You mean, like in the end, UK residents and europeans all the same still got screwed when the US wanted to get some oil?

      I can't mod you Troll today, but you are indeed a troll.

      I wish we HAD gone into Iraq for oil, maybe our gas prices wouldn't be the highest they've ever been in my adult life.

      We went into Iraq for oil? Then where's the fucking oil? I'm sick of paying $2.25 a gallon.

      --
      It's not a lie. It's the truth with lossy compression.
    42. Re:Just end it all, please... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except the analogy falls apart as soon as you enter Europe where shooting intruders is illegal and will end you in jail. Hell, intruders can even sue if they get hurt while inside a house in UK, although someone did get off shooting someone last year which sets a precedence.

    43. Re:Just end it all, please... by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      The civil rights movement was mainly fueled by marches, sit-ins, and general protests. It was only after several YEARS of this(which mainly changed the stances of many people) that the government began to listen and change its stances.

      The marches, sit-ins, and protests had nothing to do with civil rights gains. Every single civil rights victory was won in court or in Congress, after it became apparent that if Congress didn't do something the courts would.

      The activities of the protestors didn't matter for shit, other than providing a target for everyone right of moderate to vent their ire upon.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    44. Re:Just end it all, please... by Nazadus · · Score: 1

      No, the reason guns aren't outlawed is becuase we have an amendment static we can have them.

      Ironicially, the reason for this amendment was in case we needed to act against our own government and we would be able to defend ourselves.

      --
      "Do or do not. There is no try." -- Master Yoda (Half man, half muppet)
    45. Re:Just end it all, please... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yes, like deer birds what have you?

      is that a problem?

    46. Re:Just end it all, please... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some governments have recognized this problem and dealt with it in better ways. The Canadian government, for example, seems to have marginally more protection from bribery and corporate interests.

      That doesn't mean that large corporations can't push the government around, because they can and do. What it does mean, however, is that corporations cannot buy off political parties with generous 'campaign donations'. It's not much, but at least it's *something*.

    47. Re:Just end it all, please... by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      The marches, sit-ins, and protests had nothing to do with civil rights gains.

      I wouldn't say that. I think the marches served a very important purpose and helped to expedite the process by allowing the masses to make themselves be heard and understand what was going on. The opposition to the Civil Rights Bill (largely from the Democratic party by the way), couldn't stand under the withering public criticism of millions marching in Alabama, Mississippi, Washington D.C. and elsewhere. This wasn't going to go away, and the marches and speeches made that clear.

      You can't say MLK's "I Have a Dream" speech didn't inspire millions... not that most people in the civil rights movement these days would be caught dead actually going by his words of "judging people on the content of their character", but that's another story.

      However, today it's much different. In the age of ubiquitous media and flash mobs and blogs and who knows what else, just gathering a big crowd seems kinda pointless (s/seems/is). I mean every other month there's a million-this-march or a million-that-march, they hardly make the news any more (not to mention the fact that maybe 500 people show up).

      To make a different in this day and age, you need to DO something.

      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?

      Your God is the star of a comic book. My God created the Universe.

      Nope, no questions here.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    48. Re:Just end it all, please... by gordo3000 · · Score: 1

      really now? you think the busses in montgomery allowed blacks to sit up front because of court gains or congress?? go read a history book before you start making civil rights comments that both sweeping and uninformed.

      check your facts as well. Congress was another battle ground but congress was vehemently against the civil rights movement until public opinion finally crushed them. The FBI was knowingly used to try and crush civil rights leaders(especially members of the black panthers).

      Civil rights might have been finally won in the courts and in congress, but that was only made possibly by the daily work of millions of blacks(and tens of thousands of whites) in the trenches. The willingness to stare down a fire hose or gun for something as simple as going to the same restroom helped open the eyes of millions of americans. and without that, nothing would have changed. or do you think that congress would have gotten around to enacting the civil rights act without the civil rights movement??

    49. Re:Just end it all, please... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >our rights are being violated left and right.

      What rights ?
      You have NO right to take copyrighted material.
      Has Slashdot suddenly been taken over by low life pirates and thieves ?

      I'm pro freespeech and pro Linux. But using P2P to copy movies and games is just WRONG. If you cannot afford the software, just do not buy it and the price of it will eventually come down.
      Of course, if you use P2P to distribute your own works or GPL'd works then great and this proposal does nothing to affect that.

      I can't believe how many people have zero morals these days *sigh*

    50. Re:Just end it all, please... by mikael · · Score: 1

      Oh, and a disclaimer: it's my fault too, as in the end I didn't vote either. I didn't see that there was any real point; my constituency (Hornchurch) is split roughly 45/45 Tory/Labour, with the remaining 10% or so "other" (mainly Lib Dem). Not much of a choice, if you ask me.


      You are better off than most constituencies - usually one party has a dominant majority that can never be displaced. If it's a low-income neighbourhood dependent on benefits, Labour are voted in. If it's an neighbourhood of secluded executive homes or retirees who have paid off their mortgages, the Tories are voted in. If it's neighboorhood of professional couples on basic pay, then the Lib-Dem's will get in and if there's a hung vote they'll form an alliance with the party that get the most votes. The best that could happen is if we had more independent candidates that fought for local issues and didn't just do what the national parties told them what to do.

      I did vote in the last election, but couldn't bring myself to vote for Labour or the Tories. Not that it made any difference - a dominantly Tory stronghold.

      And if anyone dares change the constituency boundaries to make it a fair, they only end up aggravating local sentiments.

      --
      Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
    51. Re:Just end it all, please... by shmlco · · Score: 1
      He who still thinks that Iraq oil was about something else than american economic supremacy and oil control should learn about "media brainwashing".

      Of course it was about something else. Old Bushy boy wanted to prove he could go in and get the "job" done, unlike his father.

      Handing out billions in pork to Halburton and other oil interests was just icing on the cake.

      --
      Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
    52. Re:Just end it all, please... by boarder8925 · · Score: 1
      What you might try is paying off your elected officials. THAT seems to work just fine.
      That's what I meant. ;)
    53. Re:Just end it all, please... by Travelsonic · · Score: 1
      >our rights are being violated left and right. What rights ? You have NO right to take copyrighted material.

      Even if you have permission do do so, as in OSS abd independent music? Need I remind you that they are still copyrighted, it is just the licensing is allowing for the distribution.


      Has Slashdot suddenly been taken over by low life pirates and thieves ?


      Pirates maybe, theives... no, since we are talking about copyright violations and not theft laws. As for it affecting distributing of OSS/independent music, that may not be affected now, but if things get any more out of hand, I have a feeling that what is a potentially (and oftentimes well utilized method) of distibution could be threatened.


      I can't believe how many people have zero morals these days *sigh*


      Woah, so somebody pirates, and all of a sudden, they loose all of the merit and moral based on one act? Just because one person pirates DOES NOT mean they are not following other morals in other fields.

      --
      If you believe in privacy, and believe you have "nothing to hide" at the same time, you're a goddammed idiot
    54. Re:Just end it all, please... by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Your God is the star of a comic book

      Yet another example of the failure of the school system to actually educate. Try something simple, like dropping in on Wikipedia and typing in the search term "Thor". Then ask yourself this question: which came first, the myth or the comic book?

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    55. Re:Just end it all, please... by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Congress was another battle ground but congress was vehemently against the civil rights movement until public opinion finally crushed them.

      Riiight. Public opinion, in case you didn't live through that era and have no fucking clue what you're talking about, didn't really give a shit about the issue one way or another. If anything, the number of people *for* racial segregation far outstripped the number of people *against* racial segregation.

      The FBI was knowingly used to try and crush civil rights leaders(especially members of the black panthers).

      The FBI crushed anyone who wouldn't support the status quo. It wasn't anything new, and it certainly wasn't limited to the black panthers or a bunch of pothead morons in tie-dyes.

      Civil rights might have been finally won in the courts and in congress, but that was only made possibly by the daily work of millions of blacks(and tens of thousands of whites) in the trenches.

      It was made possible via a friendly court system that reinterpretated the Constitution along with the elimination of things like the Poll Tax. Combine this with a few demagogues willing to play the power game with the vote and you get change...because that's how deals are made.

      The willingness to stare down a fire hose or gun for something as simple as going to the same restroom helped open the eyes of millions of americans.

      Who generally called the lot of you a bunch of fucking commies. Your point?

      and without that, nothing would have changed.

      You're deluded if you think that's the case. Most Americans despised "hippy protestors" and "uppity blacks", and though that violence was a perfectly acceptable way to handle the situation.

      or do you think that congress would have gotten around to enacting the civil rights act without the civil rights movement

      Yep, because effective game-players came along and worked the system to the advantage of blacks, hispanics, and other non-white groups. That's how it's always been and how it'll always be. Protestors are nothing more than window-dressing for the show.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    56. Re:Just end it all, please... by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      Oh, get real. I know who you are talking about. But, I stand by my statement.

      Comic book, Norse mythology. Either way, they're stories. Good stories, but just stories.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    57. Re:Just end it all, please... by jZnat · · Score: 1

      Do you have a lot of data you want to publish? Do you dread having to fix a slashdotted server due to a small article? Share your publications with BitTorrent!

      Hmm, I think I get it...

      --
      'Yes, firefox is indeed greater than women. Can women block pops up for you? No. Can Firefox show you naked women? Yes.'
    58. Re:Just end it all, please... by jZnat · · Score: 1

      $2.25 a gallon? That's cheap compared to the $2.70+ prices in California. I swear, sometimes I think they use Canadian money or something.

      --
      'Yes, firefox is indeed greater than women. Can women block pops up for you? No. Can Firefox show you naked women? Yes.'
    59. Re:Just end it all, please... by jZnat · · Score: 1

      *whiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiz*

      That's the sound of a Hitchiker's Guide to the Galaxy series reference (more specifically, from Life, the Universe, and Everything, where Trillian has the hots for Thor for a little while) going right over your head and nailing that guy behind you in the face. You insensitive bastard!

      --
      'Yes, firefox is indeed greater than women. Can women block pops up for you? No. Can Firefox show you naked women? Yes.'
    60. Re:Just end it all, please... by geoffspear · · Score: 1

      What if the intruders are armed and a reasonable person would feel there was a threat they were going to be killed? I'm not exactly a European Law expert, but if there's no exception for self-defense then there's a serious problem with the law.

      --
      Don't blame me; I'm never given mod points.
    61. Re:Just end it all, please... by drsquare · · Score: 1

      If everyone who chose not to vote had instead voted against Blair, he'd be out of power today.

      The two million number is highly exaggerrated, and is still a small percentage of the population. And that's not including any foreigners who took part. Also the war on Iraq was necessary. I didn't see all those protestors offering alternative solutions.
              It's just the 'I'm alright Jack' attitude, those protestors get to live in a democracy, live how they please, and go home to a house with food and running water at the end of the day, they can even protest and have free speech without being executed. The Iraqis couldn't do any of that, but then the protestors don't care about them, they just want to pretend to care about politics for a day.

      How on earth will you protest against this anti-piracy legislation? Walk around London holding signs up saying 'piracy is OK' or 'we want free mp3s'? I doubt you'll get much support for that. Outside of the Slashdot reality distortion field, people realise that there is no right to piracy.

      As for the original poster, save the scaremongering and the slippery-slope fallacy, you're not impressing anyone, although you'll get modded up because piracy is one of Slashdot's buttons, make a post supporting piracy and it's instant +5.

    62. Re:Just end it all, please... by RAMMS+EIN · · Score: 1

      ``I didn't see that there was any real point; my constituency (Hornchurch) is split roughly 45/45 Tory/Labour, with the remaining 10% or so "other" (mainly Lib Dem). Not much of a choice, if you ask me.''

      You are better off than most constituencies - usually one party has a dominant majority that can never be displaced.''

      Now, in pasts times, I would say this is the fault of a broken election system. A system like the one used in the UK (and US), where only the largest party gets anything at all. All votes that were not for that party basically get thrown away.

      These days, I am more pessimistic. Even if representation in parliament is proportional to actual number of votes, bad stuff happens. Not because such a system isn't democratic, but because, as I believe Churchill once said, ``the best argument against democracy is a 5-minute conversation with the average voter.''

      People really vote in bad politicians, even sometimes politicians who would take mostly decisions that the people who voted for them would disagree with. I think the core of the problem is a lack of awareness, combined with the fact that people are easily swayed, especially when they feel threatened. With the media being more interested in making money than in providing a balanced view, it's a recipe for disaster.

      ``Not that it made any difference - a dominantly Tory stronghold.''

      That doesn't mean your vote was completely wasted, though. If enough people vote for some party, the other parties may be inclined to look at what that party is doing that people like, and copy them. It gives you a little more influence than if you hadn't voted at all.

      --
      Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
    63. Re:Just end it all, please... by surprise_audit · · Score: 1

      Damn. I guess that means I can't demand the courts hold other software manufacturers to the same high standard if I get hauled in for writing something that could be used to infringe copyrights. I'm thinking specifically of Microsoft's Windows directory sharing capability...

    64. Re:Just end it all, please... by RichardX · · Score: 1

      Pff
      You want to try living in the UK, mate.
      We're around the $7/gallon mark where I live in Scotland. I'm sure plenty of other Brits can weigh in with their horror stories as well.

      --
      Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
    65. Re:Just end it all, please... by RichardX · · Score: 1

      those protestors get to live in a democracy, live how they please, and go home to a house with food and running water at the end of the day, they can even protest and have free speech without being executed. The Iraqis couldn't do any of that,

      You might have a point there, if the war actually had anything to do with that whatsoever.
      We went to war for precisely one single reason.
      Namely that Iraq was an imminent threat to the US and UK due to it's stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction and readiness to use them.

      Not to save the people from the regieme. Not to remove Saddam from power. Not to found a democracy, and open trade links. The legal case for war was WMD, and WMD only.

      A rather poor case, really, when you consider that there actually were no WMD, and doubly poor when you realise that Blair and Bush actually had been advised before hand that there were no WMD.

      --
      Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
    66. Re:Just end it all, please... by RichardX · · Score: 1

      Comic book, Norse mythology. Either way, they're stories. Good stories, but just stories.

      Oh my. I think this post has just redefined irony.
      A Christian arguing that someone else's religion is based on a book of fiction.

      --
      Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
    67. Re:Just end it all, please... by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 1

      Bible, Christian mythology. Either way, they're stories. Not very good stories, but just stories.

      Before you go dissing an ancient mythology, please prove the truth of your own. And if you can't, then keep your prejudices to yourself.

    68. Re:Just end it all, please... by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      I'm not going to reply to all the follow-ups in this thread, since many say the same thing, but I'll address the points raised by one of the ACs here.

      As much as you seem to think that sadaam is a fun-loving guy that should be invited to everyone's graduation party..he killed 100's of thousands more than the U.S. invasion. But protesters seem to always forget this part.

      We forget no such thing. And we're not protesting about removing Saddam per se. We do not think he is a nice man, nor support nor condone his actions against people in his own country and elsewhere. Please understand this.

      What we're protesting about is our country being led into war against the wishes of the people by politicians who deliberately lied to us. Tony's cronies weren't acting for the people they're supposed to represent when they took us to war.

      Even the "He was a bad man and it was our duty to remove him!" plea is pretty wet. We left him alone for a decade despite his continuing poor behaviour, and we continue to leave alone and even maintain diplomatic relations with countries and administrations that have records at least equally bad.

      Also, the U.S. still has him captured..in prison. If it were any other country in the world, he would have been dead before even entering our soil.

      Sure, the US is the very heart and soul of human rights, particularly in its conduct of the Iraq war and its aftermath. There have been no instances of holding people for years under dubious conditions without applying due process, nor any confirmed allegations of abuses by US troops on the ground in Iraq, and in none of those allegations that have not been made did US troops verifiably execute defenceless Iraqis, resulting in no disciplinary actions against troops serving in Iraq becoming matters of public record.

      Also, while we're having such fun with trolls, the US is not the biggest state sponsor of terrorism in the world, certainly not including effectively installing both Saddam and Osama in their positions of power or supporting other governments in Arab states that have very poor records on both human rights and harbouring terrorists, all in the interests of promoting US oil interests. The US is also quite right to worry about the WMDs that we knew all along probably didn't exist in Iraq, being the only nation in the world ever to have actually used WMDs resulting in the loss of huge numbers of civilian lives.

      I hope one day that the terrorists come in and destroy both the U.S. and england...so then I can say: "I told you so".

      I don't normally descend to swearing on Slashdot, but on behalf of two people dear to me who were sitting next to one of the bombs that went off on 7 July and aren't here to say it themselves: fuck you.

      The intelligence analysts warned the government before the war that going into Iraq would increase the risk of terrorist attacks on the UK. They had Osama in Afghanistan, yet let him go to divert troops to Iraq. The Iraq war did nothing to prevent terrorism; on the contrary, it has been the biggest rallying call for anti-western extremists for many years. And what's worse, our government pretty much knew it would be, and they went ahead and did it anyway.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    69. Re:Just end it all, please... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      just to add to that...

      guns don't kill people, people kill people...

      P2P don't infringe copyright, people infringe copyright.

    70. Re:Just end it all, please... by westlake · · Score: 1
      The difference is the advertising, not the product

      The difference is in the services you provide and how they are marketed:

      For example, direct links to files. Search engines that make it dead easy to locate and retrieve DVD rips, etc. Ratings systems and other schemes that insure a "quality" download...

      It won't be any one thing that brings you down or keeps you in the clear. But if you walk like a duck, and quack like a duck...

    71. Re:Just end it all, please... by mikael · · Score: 1

      That doesn't mean your vote was completely wasted, though. If enough people vote for some party,

      I voted for the Green party - mainly because I'm got up of the way the city council hands over playing fields and primary schools to luxury property developers, while ignoring the protests of parents and school boards. Not that local residents could afford them or that the number of units goes anywhere near local demand.

      (Play music: Steppenwolf - The Ostrich).

      --
      Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
    72. Re:Just end it all, please... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, get real. I know who you are talking about. But, I stand by my statement.

      Comic book, Norse mythology. Either way, they're stories. Good stories, but just stories.


      Christian mythology, Norse mythology. Either way, they're just stories.

      And, as the grandparent pointed out, the Norse are much cooler.

    73. Re:Just end it all, please... by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      yes because putting it IN ALL CAPS makes it true.

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    74. Re:Just end it all, please... by toddestan · · Score: 1

      I'm seriously considering joining the non-voting horde, on the theory that the system is fixed anyway and voting just gives these people legitimacy.

      If you aren't going to vote third party, don't sit at home. Instead, go and vote but abstain in the Presidental election. That way, you are showing that you care enough to go to the polls, and they can't write you off as simply being lazy. Can you imagine the message sent if a non-negligable number of ballots are blank?

    75. Re:Just end it all, please... by toddestan · · Score: 1

      Also the war on Iraq was necessary. I didn't see all those protestors offering alternative solutions.

      Here was my solution. Leave Iraq alone. Sure Saddam was a bad guy that gassed his own people, but he did not pose a threat to the United States (or even his neighbors), nor did he harbor terrorists. He was a bad guy, he was certainly annoying, but he was also a known and we more or less knew how to deal with him.

      Eventually, we probably would have to do something about Saddam and Iraq. But in the meantime, we could of used our forces much more effectively by finishing up our work in Afganistan. Then we could do things like taking care of countries that really do pose a threat to the US like Iran and North Korea, or doing something like cleaning up terrorist nests located in our "allies" such as Pakistan and Saudi Arabia.

    76. Re:Just end it all, please... by deimtee · · Score: 1

      Nobody thinks they went in to get the consumers cheap oil. The mess in Iraq justifies the huge rise in prices for oil products.
      It doesn't suddenly cost more to produce or process oil from other fields, so where does the extra you pay go? - That's what they mean by follow the money.

      --
      I'm guessing that wasn't on their radar screen...
    77. Re:Just end it all, please... by gordo3000 · · Score: 1

      just one thing: Name your game players please. these people you think made these changes possible. you seem to be good at putting up loads of arguments with nothing behind them. name your court cases besides the one I already did that you feel paved the way. name your leaders who made it all possible.

      I will always give that Brown vs. board was a major case of the time. But keep going. because that can't be all that you mean. Many southern states didn't desegregate for 15-20 years after that, so I guess your court system and friendly congress were really getting their act together?

    78. Re:Just end it all, please... by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      Depends on their armaments and how likely they were to use them. If one guy had a knife in hand but used it only as a tool you might have trouble justifying lethal force. If you shoot them dead immediately the judge might ask why you didn't warn the intruder and gave him the option to surrender and why you had to kill him instead of shooting him in the knee or something.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    79. Re:Just end it all, please... by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      I take it you aren't aware of the extensive historical corroboration with the Bible. Regardless of your position on religion, the Bible describes events that happened in history. Naturally, many of the stories are allegorical, but you are being a complete fool to equate it with pure mythology.

      That's just as ironic. But I expect no less from the level of discourse around here. Get a clue, learn some history and maybe after you graduate from high school you'll know something.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    80. Re:Just end it all, please... by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      Well, almost all of Western civilization is a testiment to the truth of it. You can keep your glib statements, which is probably the most intelligent rebuttal anyone on /. has ever made against Christianity. Show me the contributions to culture, society, civilization, science and learning associated with Norse mythology and after I put the microscope down, maybe you'll have a little perspective.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    81. Re:Just end it all, please... by RichardX · · Score: 1

      Regardless of your position on religion, the Bible describes events that happened in history.

      Some, yes.
      I never said it didn't.
      The Da Vinci Code describes some real places and events. It's still a fictional book of mostly fictional characters and events though.

      Y'know that norse mythology stuff you denounced as being a load of meaningless fiction?
      Guess what. There are real events and places mentioned in some of that, too.

      Egypt and Israel being mentioned in the Bible doesn't make it true any more than the North Pole being mentioned in Rudolph The Red Nosed Reindeer makes that true.

      To drive the point right into the ground, and restate the blindingly obvious yet again: Just because a work is fictional doesn't mean it cannot reference real places, people, or events. And just because a work references real people, places, or events does not mean it isn't fictional.

      Now, if you'd care to provide any extra-biblical evidence (preferably not involving drdino.com) to suggest that Jesus not only was a real person, but was also either God or the son of God (either will do), and that the virgin birth and resurrection really happened, then you might have a point.
      Less critically, you may also want to provide some evidence for the 6 day creation, divine authorship of the bible, Noah's flood, and Joshua's long day, however I accept that you may view some of these as allegory.

      Given that you have stated that "Naturally, many of the stories are allegorical", I wonder if you would care to state where you place the dividing line - which are allegory, and which are historical fact?

      The bible IS mythology. There is no evidence whatsoever to suggest that most of the important events in it ever happened (the supernatural ones, for example), and the fact that it references a few real places and events doesn't change that.

      Your post basically boils down to two elements. The first is the accusation that I have said that because the bible overall is a mythological work there must be absolutely no real life elements contained within. This is obviously false. The only reason I didn't state that specifically in my earlier post was because it seemed so obvious.

      The second element reduces your post to an ad hominem, which says much about your ability to make a case for yourself.

      --
      Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
    82. Re:Just end it all, please... by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 1
      Show me the contributions to culture, society, civilization, science

      And how would describing that "prove" any kind of religion, including Christianity?

      I'm not asking for societal effects, I'm asking for PROOF - uncontestable, physical evidence that PROVES the basis of a religion. And I will reiterate - Christian mythology has the same amount of hard, physical proof for it that any other religion (including the Norse mythology) does: ZERO.

      If a religion had hard, physical proof of its basis, then it wouldn't require Faith to keep itself alive, would it?

    83. Re:Just end it all, please... by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      You have good points. I should have said "fiction" when I said "mythology" as my last statement of my previous post.

      However, my ad hominem statement was no less flip than yours. I failed to make a better case simply because given the 60-hour work weeks I've been having lately, I really haven't had the mental energy to defend it better. I just wanted to see how the person who had that obnoxious quote about the hammer as a sig would respond to an equally obnoxious quote. I was neither impressed or surprised.

      The truth is that I really enjoy /. for the technical discussions and general nerd culture of which I am deeply ingrained, but once you get beyond computers, geeky TV shows and high technology, a large proportion of the inhabitants here are some of the most close-minded, bigoted and ignorant people you'll meet.

      I'm glad that you, for one, are not one of those.

      (And yes, I realize I'm still not defending my case...)

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
  4. 'ere now, what's all this? by Stanistani · · Score: 4, Funny

    Crowds of file-sharing enthusiasts herded into makeshift prison camps.

    How nostalgic for Europe.

    1. Re:'ere now, what's all this? by grub · · Score: 1


      "Ah, I see you're a filesharer. I can tell by the black square on your uniform." said the man with the yellow star on his.

      --
      Trolling is a art,
    2. Re:'ere now, what's all this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please remove your head from your ass.

      Did you know that in 1972 the American government backed the Military dictatorship in Pakistan, when East Pakistan won an overall parlimentary majority, yet the military dictatorship refused to give power to the democratically elected parties ?

      Oh wait.... you're American, rigged elections are how it works over there... I keep forgetting that.

    3. Re:'ere now, what's all this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ha! We've backed similar bastards and dictators dozens of times besides that! Supported coups and assasinations whenever we felt like it... your simple example is laughable! Like a child telling an adult he heard they kill cows to make hamburger.

      We know the score by now.

      Making a simple joke about another place's problems does not mean that we do not recognize our own many faults. Quit being so knee-jerk defensive or agitated. Stick to the program, we are united in certain aspects, the GP was just making a bit of a joke you ignorant sod.

    4. Re:'ere now, what's all this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How nostalgic for Europe.

      I laughed at the first part, but this sentence was quite painfull to me. I know it's just humor, and you probably meant nothing really bad, but these kind of references linking the current situation to that where so many of us are aware of the death of family members like grandmothers, in a cheap humorous way... May I kindly ask you to be a bit carefull in your jokes about it? Jokes about horrible events are fine, but please keep a bit more dignity and style on an international forum such as this...

      I guess the other guy that gave a standard US-sucks response was feeling the same thing.

    5. Re:'ere now, what's all this? by Random832 · · Score: 1

      it wasn't a joke, it was an invocation of godwin's law

      now everyone stop talking.

      --
      We've secretly replaced Slashdot with new Folgers Crystals - let's see if it notices.
    6. Re:'ere now, what's all this? by Stanistani · · Score: 1

      Actually my attitude was more one of sadness that Europe, despite the best historical reasons not to criminalize a group of people, is at it again.

      Expressed in sarcasm.

      The US (where I'm from) is no better.

  5. Whose definition of copyright infringment? by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

    Disney's "all your copyrights are belong to me"?

    SCO's "all you Linux/BSD are belong to me?"

    The US version?

    The Brazilian version of copyrights - I'm down with that ...

    Or the actual current state of EU copyright, which is not quite as silly as the US version?

    The devil's in the details.

    [after reading the linked article, this is what I thought]

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
  6. Nothing... by Rhoon · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    ... for you to see here. Move along.

    --
    "If all the world's a stage, I want to operate the trap door." - Paul Beatty
  7. How about cracking down on another kind of... by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 3, Insightful

    organized crime: monopolies and artificially inflated prices?

    Two wrongs doesn't make a right (i know, three lefts do), but those corporations have no moral ground to talk about lost profits.

    --
    It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
    Be yourself no matter what they say
    1. Re:How about cracking down on another kind of... by LurkerXXX · · Score: 4, Interesting
      It doesn't matter how much profits they make. They are free to charge as much as they like for their movies/music/software.

      You are also free not to buy any of it.

      The problems with these types of laws is that you don't always know if what you are downloading off the internet is something that is copyright'd ,and not freely re-distributable, vs something that may be copyrighted, but freely destributable (opensource software, promotional free-music, etc). You usually don't really know until you have it downloaded and can run/play it. Even then, you might not know if it's legal or not. ex: Plan 9 from outerspace was a commercial movie, but it's now being freely distributed legally.

    2. Re:How about cracking down on another kind of... by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 1

      "They are free to charge as much as they like for their movies/music/software."

      You're right that the current situation looks like this, however i don't think that this is appropriate all the time. The "you don't have to buy it" works if the buyer and seller are on the same level, like on ebay, but honestly it's just not working in today's economy, for multiple reasons, like for example vendor contracts, and mostly sheer ignorance by the buyers.

      --
      It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
      Be yourself no matter what they say
    3. Re:How about cracking down on another kind of... by Silver+Sloth · · Score: 1

      It would be oh so lovely if laws were made on moral grounds. Meanwhile, back in the real world, laws are made by those with power and cash == power so laws will always favour the major corporations.

      As for cracking down or organised crime, don't they have cash too?

      --
      init 11 - for when you need that edge.
    4. Re:How about cracking down on another kind of... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmm... Software that is then used for illegal deeds... hmm... does Windows qualify? Maybe they are going to go after MS after all...

    5. Re:How about cracking down on another kind of... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is Plan 9 from outerspace being distributed legally? One can not find it on Archive.org anymore and it was awfully late dated to have its copyright expire in my lifetime. I'm pretty sure that one hit the "lifetime of the author + 75 years" and was being distributed illegally the entire time by mistake. Sure would be a shame if everyone who distributed and thought it was legal got busted, wouldn't it?

    6. Re:How about cracking down on another kind of... by Travelsonic · · Score: 1
      It doesn't matter how much profits they make. They are free to charge as much as they like for their movies/music/software.

      Actually, No. They are not. There are laws that govern this field. Ever heard of price fixing?

      --
      If you believe in privacy, and believe you have "nothing to hide" at the same time, you're a goddammed idiot
    7. Re:How about cracking down on another kind of... by retards · · Score: 1

      The problems with these types of laws is that you don't always know if what you are downloading off the internet is something that is copyright'd

      Exactly. That is why only software made by the media industry will be allowed, because they can guarantee that only stuff that is not freely distributable will be available.

      The true enemy of the music/movie/software industry is not piracy, but availibility of free alternatives. This law would kill distribution of free stuff, which is exactly what is intended.

      You are also free not to buy any of it.

      Right, but you pay when the radio is on in a cab or in a barber shop (at least in some countries). Ditto when you walk into a store and hear music, royalties are being paid. Music is to be everywhere and paid for over and over and over again.

    8. Re:How about cracking down on another kind of... by LurkerXXX · · Score: 1
      Price Fixing, Bid Rigging, etc, are types of Collusion, which is an all togeather different matter than charging an extremely high price.

      You are perfectly free to charge a trillion dollars for a song if you like. You just can't use collude with other firms to increase the price for all songs sold.

    9. Re:How about cracking down on another kind of... by mark-t · · Score: 1
      The solution to that is simple.

      Make it illegal for copyrighted material to be freely distributable.

      The above recommendation is made, of course, with tongue firmly implanted in cheek.

    10. Re:How about cracking down on another kind of... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where is the reasonable lenght of copyright that might make them charge market prices? There would be a hell of a competition to have with a large and modern body of copyright. The reason copyright gets extended, to lock it all away and maybe release some of it once in a while for some easy cash and the pretense that they value it.

    11. Re:How about cracking down on another kind of... by KillShill · · Score: 1

      i guess if we're free not to buy it that would mean we're free to copy it.

      --
      Science : Proprietary , Knowledge : Open Source
    12. Re:How about cracking down on another kind of... by LurkerXXX · · Score: 1

      No, but while you are in jail, between lovemaking sessions with your cell mate Snake, please take a course in logic. I think you'll eventually find the mile-wide flaw in your logic.

    13. Re:How about cracking down on another kind of... by zentigger · · Score: 1

      I think one of the points that is often overlooked in this debate is the fact that they can freely charge whatever they want, BUT you are not allowed to resell it for whatever you want.

      There are also many issues revolving around the fact that the Big Media corps. make it extremely difficult for anyone to independantly distibute their own works through mainstream channels.

      Finally, keep in mind that copyright laws have largely been written by the Big Media corps as well. That a person can own a thought or idea, (i.e. Intellectual Property) really is a pretty nebulous concept designed to protect corporate interests more than anything.

      --

      the above is my personal opinion and does not necessarily reflect that of the little voices in my head

    14. Re:How about cracking down on another kind of... by LurkerXXX · · Score: 1
      About your first point: If you are talking about the DRM stuff, then yes, that's a real problem. However if you own any CD's, DVD's, tapes, books, etc, You can easily resell those for whatever price you want (well, at least what someone else is willing to buy a 'used' copy for). DRM is a real consumer problem though.

      As for your other points, agreed, although some independent groups are popping up and helping with that. It's just going to take some work organizing that. Getting publicity, distribution, etc, for your work isn't easy. Expect to pay or do some work for it. That's one of the reasons the Big Media corps take such a big cut. They already did the work to get that organization in place and are set to do the work as part of their cut.

  8. Lots of tools can be used to pirate by ChadAmberg · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What about MSN messenger? I send executable files across that all the time.
    Or, heaven forbid, a floppy disk containing copywritten software on it and thrown across the room.

    1. Re:Lots of tools can be used to pirate by yellowbkpk · · Score: 2, Funny

      Cisco will have to stop making routers. They send my copywritten movies across the internet, don't they?

    2. Re:Lots of tools can be used to pirate by shark72 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      " What about MSN messenger? I send executable files across that all the time. Or, heaven forbid, a floppy disk containing copywritten software on it and thrown across the room."

      I think the person who wrote the summary mistakenly assumed that most readers would know the background of the recent MGM vs. Grokster case.

      The whole point is to separate the "bad actors" from the providers of generic tools. That's what the decision showed us -- if you create an ad campaign focused on piracy, build your business model on inciting piracy, leave an email trail showing that you're aware of and condone what's on your network, and then lie to the government about it, you'll get nailed.

      Knowledge is power here, guys -- it's important to understand the difference between people who set about profiting off of other people's works, vs. the people who write IM applications. The EFF page linked in the summary contains further links to the supreme court decision and lots of other stuff which would have answered your question.

      --
      Sitting in my day care, the art is decopainted.
    3. Re:Lots of tools can be used to pirate by Azarael · · Score: 1

      A law based on those points wouldn't be very effective. People already know what applications to use to get movies, music, etc so it's hardly necessary to advertise the fact. Can you reduce advertisement to the point where you can't even say a program is for filesharing?

    4. Re:Lots of tools can be used to pirate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The File Share organizations should just play stupid, it'd benefit them in the long run. "You can send each other files, like your favourite pictures!" would be fine as far as advertising goes. If they got caught for doing something illegal, and played stupid, regardless of whether they knew or not, then a less serious conviction would be given. A wise man once told me "It's better to be caught ignorant of what you did wrong, then to be caught knowing exactly what you were doing."

    5. Re:Lots of tools can be used to pirate by wfberg · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Knowledge is power here, guys -- it's important to understand the difference between people who set about profiting off of other people's works, vs. the people who write IM applications.

      You know the difference between those two? It's only that "people" writing respectable applications like IM are actually large software and media corporations, the same ones buying this legislation; like AOL-TimeWarner, Microsoft..

      Which is why internet explorer isn't classified as a piracy device, even though the main function it has is to download material from the internet without prior permission to copy it. It's supported means for authorized copying (i.e. authentication) are so lackluster, they might as well be non-existent!

      PS: you don't have permission to copy this post to your cache. Pirate!

      --
      SCO employee? Check out the bounty
    6. Re:Lots of tools can be used to pirate by Lord+Pillage · · Score: 1

      Don't forget a ship! You can get lots of booty with a ship! Arrrr me mateys!

      --
      try { Signature mysig = new CleverAttempt(); } catch(NonCleverSignatureException e) { postanyway(); }
    7. Re:Lots of tools can be used to pirate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OH GOD YOU'RE RIGHT!

      If we have to ban bittorent, gnutella, and napster, then we should also pay royalties for ftp, http, usenet, irc, aim, msn, yim, icq...(rambles on)...and ethernet, and our motherfucking FIREWIRE CABLES which could all potentially be used to violate copyright!

    8. Re:Lots of tools can be used to pirate by d34thm0nk3y · · Score: 1

      You know the difference between those two? It's only that "people" writing respectable applications like IM are actually large software and media corporations, the same ones buying this legislation; like AOL-TimeWarner, Microsoft..

      Like Bittorrent?

    9. Re:Lots of tools can be used to pirate by surprise_audit · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, Cisco doesn't market their routers as tools for infringing copyright. Shame that...

  9. Beer! The other p2p by LuciferBlack · · Score: 3, Funny

    I am going to blame beer for making me share sex with girls that I may not have otherwise had sex with. Please governments of the world...save me!

    --
    I'm working on a good joke about your mom being /.'d, but it's not finished yet.
  10. sucks to be... by Shakrai · · Score: 1

    If the directive is adopted, developers who create software for file sharing that is then used for illegal ends could potentially be criminally liable in EU member countries.

    I guess it sucks to be the guy who wrote mIRC or the guy who came up with the FTP protocol then....

    What a dumbass, overly broad law. Wouldn't survive a court review in the US.

    --
    I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
    We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    1. Re:sucks to be... by DaHat · · Score: 1

      Might not survive a court review, however the poor soul who was brought to court where the review would occur would not have a fun or easy time. Not to mention the cost of defending oneself until he could get off.

    2. Re:sucks to be... by Fareq · · Score: 1

      yeah, but we could start a legal defense fund, and between all of us, we could probably come up with 3 or 4 hours worth of a real lawyer's time for help...

      Or, we could do the typical /. thing and just send him 2TB of material useful for being his own lawyer...

      Oh, and there's every chance it might survive a court review. And not because of evil corporations or any of that...

      Have you ever noticed how bad the average individual is when it comes to figuring out computers? Ever had to answer user's questions that make it absolutely clear that they see a computer as a magic box?

      Ever find a user that answers "PowerPoint" when you ask where they saved a file?

      Ever had a similar question come up after the 25th time you politely described the differences between a computer, a file, a program, and a hard drive?

      What makes you think the courts are any better. People don't understand technology, but they are afraid of hackers. Until we change that, we're pretty much without hope. The courts, try as they might, simply can't understand what we're talking about in some of these cases, and so the conclusion (that we're wrong) is blatantly obvious.

      Why is everyone so up-in-arms about the whole GTA/Hot Coffee thing? Because they don't really understand what we mean when we say "you have to hack at the game to get that stuff" and instead hear something like "my kid could push some buttons and see that stuff"

      (Granted that in GTAs case, the devs probably expected (possibly hoped) that the hack would be found. But that's not the point here, the point is people don't understand software, so they don't really understand software being used in a manner the developer didn't intend).

      Anyway

      </RANT>

    3. Re:sucks to be... by Z-Knight · · Score: 1
      "Wouldn't survive a court review in the US."

      What?!? What part of "US Supreme Court vs Grokster" did you miss?

      P2P and even the internet has already lost here in the US...even this converation/forum is probably illegal by now.

    4. Re:sucks to be... by geoffspear · · Score: 1
      Now the Supreme Court sued Grokster, too?

      (I'd be a bit less quit to jump on your stupidity, if you didn't make the badly made-up name of the case in quotation marks. Ok, not really.)

      --
      Don't blame me; I'm never given mod points.
  11. Messy? Unclear? by RobotRunAmok · · Score: 1

    Messy? Unclear? Please.

    If you distribute copyrighted stuff from your computer without any formal agreement with the copyright holder to perform such distribution, you're liable. If you distribute non-copyrighted stuff -- public domain, creative commons, or (gods forbid!) something you've created yourself, -- you're okey doke.

    One may disagree with the scope and breadth of legal protections afforded copyright holders, but that's a different debate.

    Of course, you're not liable if you download only and don't (re)distribute. You're a leech, but you're a *legal* leech.

    Messy and unclear? Not at all. Sticky and socially unacceptable? Now *there's* a topic worth discussing...

  12. Stupid! by zonix · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The problem here is some activities, such as the creation of software, can be used for legal and illegal purposes, as is the case with Grokster...It gets really messy, because it is unclear what is legal or not legal, and it is problematic to operate with such abstract terms."

    Well, let me make it easy for you! Here's a hood ... it can protect you in a snowstorm, or you can use it to rob a bank. Ban hoods!

    Geez!

    z
    --
    What would an EWOULDBLOCK block, if an EWOULDBLOCK could block would? -- me
    1. Re:Stupid! by duguk · · Score: 1
    2. Re:Stupid! by Dunbal · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Here's a hood ... it can protect you in a snowstorm, or you can use it to rob a bank. Ban hoods!

            You may laugh, but in some countries (eg. Costa Rica) it is ILLEGAL to sell full face motorcycle helmets because these were used by criminals to rob banks...

            I guess it was easier to create this law than for bank security to USE COMMON SENSE AND DECENCY and ask customers to remove their helmets before being allowed in the bank.

      Back on topic:
            Funny how they never managed to make cassette tapes and tape recorders illegal, yet people used to tape stuff and make copies of casettes all the time. But now because someone THINKS they have the right to tell MY computer what to do (that's a real funny one), copying digital information is seen as "criminal behaviour".

            At least some of us know HOW computers work, and we will never be stopped. It listens to me, not to you.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    3. Re:Stupid! by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1


      Hoods have been banned in some "privately owned" places such as shopping centres in the UK.

      Gist of it is that young people wear hoodies, affluent grown-ups don't (except me sometimes). Therefore, they get banned.

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    4. Re:Stupid! by Mozk · · Score: 1

      Criminal: I'm going to rob your bank with this full face motorcycle helmet on so you are not able to identify me.
      Guard: I'm going to have to ask you to take off that helmet, sir.
      Criminal: But I'm trying to rob your bank! The helmet is part of my fool-proof plan, along with this gun I have, allowing me to threaten you into letting me enter.
      Guard: Sir, we do not allow you to enter with a helmet.
      Criminal: Damn... I'll have to try another bank.

      --
      No existe.
    5. Re:Stupid! by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 1

      Well, let me make it easy for you! Here's a hood ... it can protect you in a snowstorm, or you can use it to rob a bank. Ban hoods!

      What if you use it when going to your local bank in New York during winter? :-/

    6. Re:Stupid! by johnjaydk · · Score: 1
      You may laugh, but in some countries (eg. Costa Rica) it is ILLEGAL to sell full face motorcycle helmets because these were used by criminals to rob banks...

      Oh my. It's a well known fact in motercycle circles that full face helmets are waaayyy better and safer then the open ones. In northern Europe you're hard pressed to find to find a motorcyclist with an open helmet that's not associated with HA et al, a Harley nut or usually both.

      I guess the money in the bank is worth more than the life of some yahoo's on motercycles.

      --
      TCAP-Abort
    7. Re:Stupid! by adamgolding · · Score: 1

      "I guess it was easier to create this law than for bank security to USE COMMON SENSE AND DECENCY and ask customers to remove their helmets before being allowed in the bank"

      uhhh.. yeah... ask the nice man with the gun to remove his helmet... he'll have the common sense to realize that we can't tell the polic what he looks like if we can't see his face...

  13. Negligent Ministers. by mikelieman · · Score: 1

    I cannot believe that with the threat to freedom from both International Terrorist Networks and Unethical International Corporations, they find time to consider this.

    When the next terrorists strike, It'll be because these guys were busy playing games.

    Hanging's too good for 'em!

    --
    Technology -- No Place For Wimps! Grateful Dead and Jerry Garcia Chatroom -- http://www.wemissjerry.org
  14. Funny, I thought piracy was already a criminal act by Jugalator · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What's the difference between P2P piracy and piracy?
    Isn't the former just a subset of the latter?
    Do we need special laws to make FTP piracy illegal too?
    Usenet piracy?
    IRC piracy?

    --
    Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
  15. Stupid law... by Tominva1045 · · Score: 3, Interesting



    Another stupid law. Using this reasoning any web browser manufacturer could be found criminally liable.

    1. Open mozilla browser.
    2. Download image and share with friend.
    3. Lawyer sues mozilla because they let me do it.

    If I buy a pencil and poke my neighbor in they eye with it the lumber company should not be sued either.

    They should go after the actual criminals but they don't because there isn't any money in it.

    This law should be called the EU Extortion Act.

    --
    Cogito Ergo Sum
    1. Re:Stupid law... by Zunni · · Score: 1

      Don't give away my masterplan to bring M$ to it's knees please..

      Oh what the hell I'll share.

      While simultanously using IIS and Exchange to make available copius amounts of copywritten materials, I'll be downloading every MP3 in existance using IE..

      Then it'll all be M$'s fault

    2. Re:Stupid law... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you should use internet explorer instead, but it would more likely apply to the web server software itself... so make sure its a server running IIS instead of apache... let microsoft take the heat since they have plenty of money to throw around

    3. Re:Stupid law... by TomTraynor · · Score: 1

      Hell, even any O/S would qualify. The O/S allows the programs access to the net. If those programs allow pirating therefore the O/S facilitated that crime. Hardware manufacturers of network cards, the PCs themselves, burners could also be implicated as the hardware allowed for pirating.

      --
      Panic now, beat the rush!
    4. Re:Stupid law... by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I haven't looked at the EU law, but I think the key issue is promotion.

      My understanding with the Grokster case is that Grokster opened themselves up to trouble because they promoted it as tool to help trade illegally shared files, which "incitement" was almost an accurate term for it, the way it was promoted.

      Mozilla does not promote Firefox, Mozilla Suite, etc. as a tool to break the law, which is a key difference, even if Firefox could be used to do so. Firefox could be used as a means to trade child porn, but because Mozilla Foundation doesn't promote it as such, they can't be held liable.

    5. Re:Stupid law... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      does the electric company promote electricity to run your appliances? since computers run on electricity, then the electric companies can then be held liable.

    6. Re:Stupid law... by pieterh · · Score: 1

      Before you write such things, it's probably worth reading the draft proposal. It is in English and remarkably short and clear for a EU document.

      It appears to be mainly aimed at non-software infringement, i.e. at stopping the trade in counterfeit goods. The law affects those who intentionally do such acts on a commercial scale. That rules out any attempt to criminalise individual copying.

      However, there is one sentence in the document, whereby anyone "inciting" infringementments, and doing this inciting on a commercial scale, is liable.

      This sentence was presumably slipped in by the anti-P2P lobbyists, the BSA et al., who are good friends with the Commission. There is no other domain I can think of where people make money from inciting others to break copyright laws.

      Making and distributing p2p software is not in itself an incitement to copyright infringement, and doing it without commercial gain would seem to be a loophole in any case. However, running a tracker website, with advertising revenue, which listed copyrighted materials, would be a violation.

      The infringement must be "intentional", so e.g. Google could not be sued because they index tracker files.

      IMO it's not really a stupid law. If you accept copyright as being a reasonable protection for investment in literary and other creative works, such laws are needed or copyright means nothing.

    7. Re:Stupid law... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The "inciting" part is there to deter commercial distributors of counterfeit goods, not merely those who who manufacture them. It is a recognotion of the fact that without distribution channels, counterfeiters would be reduced to hawking their wares themselves. In both effect and intention therefore, it is much like the laws that most countries have against knowingly receiving / selling stolen goods (i.e. fencing). Of course, as is the case with all such "receiving" laws, this one will have little effect because, as most studies into crime and punishment have shown, draconian punishments have little deterrence value if the likelihood of getting caught is low.

  16. Bram Cohen by DaHat · · Score: 1

    I would suggest that if Bram Cohen is considering any future travel to the EU that he do so now, just in case this legislation gets passed.

    Why? Because he would probably be target #1 for all of the rampant piracy that occurs via bittorrent, all despite his original intentions for the protocol/system.

  17. not gonna happen by MooseTick · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Lots of companies make products that can be used for both legal ald illegal purposes. No one is going to go to jail for making some software that merely allows people to swap files. Everytime somplace tries to make a law to limit/minimize illegal file sharing people here get all antsy. If you don't share things you aren't supposed to you won't get in trouble. If you don't like the laws concerning copyright, fight to change them. Why does everyone feel they have a right to do anything they want to simply because they can?

    1. Re:not gonna happen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you don't like the laws concerning copyright, fight to change them.

      Fight how, exactly? That could likely be made fall under the "criminal offense to incite others to break copyright" clause of the proposed law. Even if it shouldn't truly do so to a programmer's logical mind, it would only take one little slip of the tongue even in that case: Libre Programmer standing on soapbox: "People shouldn't have to obey copright monopoly law!" vs. "People shouldn't [LOUD CHEER FROM CROWD OBSCURES "have to"] obey copyright monopoly law!"

      Latter case: police haul you off to gaol to await trial, your computers are seized (proposed law has Mareva and Anton Pillar provisions - if you are ACCUSED of copyright infringement, your equipment is seized.)

    2. Re:not gonna happen by anicca · · Score: 1
      --
      A people that values its privileges above its principles soon loses both. Dwight D. Eisenhower
  18. So, Web Servers and FTP server would be illegal by mo26101 · · Score: 1

    Wouldn't this then make Web, ftp, SMTP, NNTP, etc server software illegal? After all, way before P2P these were all being used to distribute pirated software/music/viedos/etc.

  19. "Abstract Terms" by Tackhead · · Score: 5, Interesting
    > From the article: The problem here is some activities, such as the creation of software, can be used for legal and illegal purposes, as is the case with Grokster...It gets really messy, because it is unclear what is legal or not legal, and it is problematic to operate with such abstract terms.

    "Did you really think that we want those laws to be observed?" said Dr. Ferris. "We want them broken. You'd better get it straight that it's not a bunch of boy scouts you're up against - then you'll know that this is not the age for beautiful gestures. We're after power and we mean it. You fellows were pikers, but we know the real trick, and you'd better get wise to it. There's no way to rule innocent men. The only power any government has is the power to crack down on criminals. Well, when there aren't enough criminals, one makes them. One declares so many things to be a crime that it becomes impossible for men to live without breaking laws. Who wants a nation of law-abiding citizens' What's there in that for anyone? But just pass the kind of laws that can neither be observed nor enforced nor objectively interpreted - and you create a nation of law-breakers - and then you cash in on guilt. Now that's the system, Mr. Rearden, that's the game, and once you understand it, you'll be much easier to deal with."

    - Ayn Rand, Atlas Shrugged, 1957

    Whoever came up with the "abstract terms" locution was pretty clever; that's certainly a new twist on it. Usually, the folks who want unenforceable laws want the laws to be abstract. Now that there's so little left unregulated, they can take the gloves off and come out and say it -- "everything not compulsory must be forbidden, and everything not forbidden must be compulsory."

    1. Re:"Abstract Terms" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Very well put.

      From reading the article, I've come to the conclusion that corporate copyright holders *want* laws like this to be broken, to make an examples out of the law-breakers and keep people paying outlandish fees for listening to music or looking at pictures.

      If you think about it, it's not that dissimilar to antitrust laws in the U.S., which are also designed to be broken: if your price is too high, you're price-gouging; if your price is too low, you're trying to monopolize the market or engaging in unfair competition; if you match your competetor's prices that's collusion and restraint of trade.

    2. Re:"Abstract Terms" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you sir, win an internet for the Atlas Shrugged quote.

    3. Re:"Abstract Terms" by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1


      And then when all that is completed, they will say that "Happiness is Mandatory."

      It was meant as satire once. It looks more like the future every day.

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    4. Re:"Abstract Terms" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Excellent comment. It's true that so many laws are created to game the system by elements in business and politics that have ulterior motvies. DRM is an area where the idea of congress getting involved is terrifying, and could have terrible results. This reminds me of the novel The Syndrome Rule.

    5. Re:"Abstract Terms" by CagedBear · · Score: 1

      How true this is.

      I got a letter yesterday stating that I am now a criminal because I forgot to renew my dog's license on time. I've been found in violation of code bladdy bla of the agriculture act of bla bla bla. They want to know "how do I plea". I plea BULLSHIT!

    6. Re:"Abstract Terms" by Audacious · · Score: 1

      If I were a programmer - I'd use an abstract class for the abstract term. ;-)

      --
      Someone put a black hole in my pocket and now I'm broke. :-)
    7. Re:"Abstract Terms" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Smart man, now tell that to the court.

    8. Re:"Abstract Terms" by Kojiro+Ganryu+Sasaki · · Score: 1

      Let me quote the rest of what he said: "The (proposed directive) uses vague language and unclear standards that increase or add uncertainty to (the software and IT) market that is very much in a state of flux," This guy does not seem to want unenforcable laws considering that he doesn't support this directive.

  20. Re:Funny, I thought piracy was already a criminal by Eightyford · · Score: 1

    Kinda like making hate crime laws, when existing laws would do the trick if enforced correctly.

  21. sedn me stuff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    send_me_stuff@myway.com

  22. the criminals to go after by frovingslosh · · Score: 1
    That's pretty crazy but typical of the times. You might as well go after Internet Service Providers too rather than tool makers, as they are not only providing a kay part of what is needed but are also profiting from it (something not all tool makers are). Will not happen though, because the ISPs have money and the tool makers generally don't.

    But there is actually a group of international criminals that are involved in music piracy too. Why not go after them? The music piracy would not exist without them. I'm talking, of course, about the record companies and their cartels like the RIAA. I suggest that the music companies are certainly more reponsiable for music piracy than the maker of a software tool that is intended for downloading files other than music. They must be stopped from making this music that promotes piracy in the first place! Sure, it may have some legal outlets too, but they know it's being involved in piracy, and so by their own standards it must be stopped.

    --
    I'm an American. I love this country and the freedoms that we used to have.
  23. Mass criminalization by nurb432 · · Score: 4, Insightful



    If you lower the bar far enough, and make most everyone criminal, You can pretty much take away everyone's rights.

    Once you are 'assumed' to be a criminal, just because you breathe ,then its easier to take things from you ( such as money ) and redistribute t to the 'victims'.

    As well as destroy other rights you had, such as privacy.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:Mass criminalization by DaHat · · Score: 1

      To quote my favorite book:

      There's no way to rule innocent men. The only power government has is the power to crack down on criminals. Well, when there aren't enough criminals, one makes them. One declares so many things to be a crime that it becomes impossible for men to live without breaking laws. -- Ayn Rand in Atlas Shrugged (1957)

    2. Re:Mass criminalization by Fareq · · Score: 1

      I didn't really like that book, though I've found very similar quotes in more recent stuff that I do read.

      I didn't know this originated with Rand, though I'm not in the least bit surprised. (I assume it originated here, or did someone else popularize this thought about too many laws).

      There's a quote from Terry Goodkind's Soul of the Fire which was similar and good, but different.

      I don't have the book at work, so I can't give you the quote, but the jist (sp?) is this:

      Unenforced laws are wonderful things, because if you have loads of unenforced laws, you'll inevitably have loads of law-breakers, and then, when someone becomes a problem, you decide to enforce a few of them, and the problem goes away.

      Incidentally, ever seen a list of absurd laws still on the books in various jurisdictions? I wonder what would happen if a female the government wanted to get rid of were to be arrested for driving in San Francisco without a man walking in front carrying a lantern.
      (Assuming that particular absurd law I read about is actually a law... I haven't checked snopes in awhile, and I forget... and now I can't find the right snopes page... oh well).

    3. Re:Mass criminalization by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "If you lower the bar far enough, and make most everyone criminal, You can pretty much take away everyone's rights."

      I know what you mean. I mean, when even the president of the U.S. can't control himself from violating copyright (having an iPod chock full of illegally copied songs), what hope is there for the rest of us? http://www.boingboing.net/2005/04/13/bushs_ipod_fi lled_wi.html

    4. Re:Mass criminalization by gosand · · Score: 1
      If you lower the bar far enough, and make most everyone criminal, You can pretty much take away everyone's rights. Once you are 'assumed' to be a criminal, just because you breathe ,then its easier to take things from you ( such as money ) and redistribute t to the 'victims'. As well as destroy other rights you had, such as privacy.

      Sounds like the makings of a revolution to me...

      --

      My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

  24. But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Was it free sex as in free beer, or free as in sex with a prostitute?

  25. Old adage by qeveren · · Score: 5, Funny

    Better to err on the side of money... er, caution.

    --
    Don't just stand there, get that other dog!
  26. Re:Beer! The other p2p by Eightyford · · Score: 1

    I'm going to blame those girls for making me drink heavily the next day to forget.

  27. Ban Networking? by CypherXero · · Score: 1

    "If the directive is adopted, developers who create software for file sharing that is then used for illegal ends could potentially be criminally liable in EU member countries."

    I guess they should ban the internet, and all software with networking protocols, such as Windows, Linux, OS X, and any other OS or application that has the ability to share information over a network. Hell, they might as well get rid of e-mail, too.

    Nothing will EVER stop file sharing, short of getting rid of the internet, and you know that's never going to happen.

    1. Re:Ban Networking? by pickyouupatnine · · Score: 1

      Yes.. but having the laws in place does allow them to sue people as they wish in order to generate revenue. Need to increase profits for Q4 of 2010? .. Just sue a few hundred p2p users.

      --
      _Vishal www.squad9.com
  28. I hereby propose by LexNaturalis · · Score: 0

    That we make all vehicles illegal. It is clear that without vehicles you could not have drive-by shootings, vehicular manslaughter, and other blights on society. Those carmakers must be punished for making such an insidious product!

    Seriously, though, how asanine is it to suggest that a product maker is liable for the misuse of a product? Almost anything can be used illegally by criminals. That doesn't make the products any less good. I am personally against software/music/etc piracy, but I'm even MORE against this kind of legislation and overreaction. What I find most disturbing is the language in Article 3, that says "This Article obliges Member States to consider all intentional infringements of an intellectual property right on a commercial scale as a criminal offence. It also covers attempting, aiding or abetting and inciting such offences." However, before people get on the bandwagon of "Oh noes!! ISPs and computer makers are now liable" it should be noted that the end of Article 3 states "The infringement must be intentional, that is to say that the act must be deliberate, whether it is an actual infringement, an attempt at infringement, or aiding and abetting or inciting such an offence."

    I still think this sort of legislation sets a dangerous precedent. I hope that cooler heads prevail and that any anti-piracy legislation that is passed in the future actually has merit and thought behind it... but sadly I doubt that will be the case.

    --
    Men occasionally stumble over the truth, but most of them pick themselves up and hurry off as if nothing ever happened.
  29. Jail them all by MickyJ · · Score: 2, Interesting

    So SMTP, POP3, NNTP, FTP, and HTTP are potentially illegal as they can potentially be used to transmit and receive copyrighted material illegally. And I can potentially punch someone in the face with my fist (or both of them, if I'm lucky), so you'd better chop my hands off, just in case.

    1. Re:Jail them all by xtrvd · · Score: 1

      I hear you 100%.
      I've been training in Martial Arts for 13 years now and am fortunately very capable with my body. I compete regularily in tournaments and have been to world championships where the fights are bare-knuckle and full contact; yet for some strange reason, I am not allowed to carry cuticle trimmers (Nail Clippers) onto an airplane in fear that I may stab somebody with them. If we were to really take into consideration the safety of other passengers while people like myself are on the plane, they would have to handcuff me and tie me down to prevent such an attack.

      Similarily, it boggles my mind why such restrictions are ever even put in place. If you're going to place a restriction on tools for piracy, you best put a restriction on tools for murder, tools for child-pornography, and hell, why not just put a restriction on that damn Dihydrogen Monoxide (www.dhmo.org), it's the source of all of our problems!

      The only problem with this is that you *CANNOT* ban these tools because they're used for a common and greater good. That is the key point. As long as guns are used to keep away The Bad Guy(tm), they'll always be allowed in our society. I'd like to see the face on Sir Tim Berners Lee when they ban his World Wide Web because 'it could be used to pirate music'.

      There you have it my friends, Unbelievable.

  30. Re:Beer! The other p2p by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    sex with girls

    Liar

  31. Time to put up or shut up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If the people of europe want to actually demonstrate that they honestly and seriously want to protect the rights of the individual, and not just have government which exists as a tool of multinational corporations, then now is the time to start doing so.

    Becuase nother few years of this and you'll be no better off than America.

  32. Didn't you see this coming? by cdrguru · · Score: 4, Interesting
    You should have. The US will be shortly on its way with this kind of law as well. It is a matter of survival for an "information economy" - if you can't make money because someone is "sharing" it out from under you, there can't be an "information economy".

    I would equate this level action similar to what police do in inner city areas. You live there for years and there is a murder here and there, a few robberies a day and every once in a while some grandmotherly-type is raped and beaten. The police generally do nothing and it seems this is all just happening and nobody can do anything about it. Does this not sound like the level of copyright enforcement today?

    Well, one day (actually more likely a dark night) the police come. Not just your usual two officers assigned to the neighborhood patrol car, but tens or even hundreds of cops in vests carrying all kinds of heavy weapons. Anything that gets in their way gets thrown into the paddy wagon and hauled off. Some people get shot, some by accident and some because they thought they would stand up against this invasion. Like what happened in Philly, maybe a building gets burned down as well.

    Three weeks later, everything is back to normal. The drug dealers are back on the corner, the neighborhood liquor store got robbed last night and somebody gets shot and might live. The police came, put up a show of force, and left. They won't be back for a year or so.

    We can expect a show of force soon over copyright. China gave up and has ceased all commercial music production. We can expect that in a few years here as well. It is almost the identical situation to the inner city - if the people don't give a hoot about it, the police (and RIAA, courts, government, etc.) can do nothing except put up a show of force. It is all just a show and it will be over soon.

    1. Re:Didn't you see this coming? by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      if you can't make money because someone is "sharing" it out from under you, there can't be an "information economy".

            Or perhaps you:

      a) can't make as much money as you would LIKE to make - dream on. The real world isn't like that, or

      b) aren't providing anything that people are willing to pay for.

            Either way, whining about it and obtaining draconian regulation is not going to ensure more success in the future. Pehaps there can be no such thing as an "information economy".

            But when everyone is a criminal, then what do we do?

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    2. Re:Didn't you see this coming? by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 1

      Like what happened in Philly, maybe a building gets burned down as well.

      Was that the case that they allowed the building to burn and prevented firemen from putting the fire out? My understanding was that people died in that fire. That made me mad, and if it is true that people died because of that, I'd call that police department a den of murderers.

    3. Re:Didn't you see this coming? by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1


      But when everyone is a criminal, then what do we do?

      Realize we're in the majority and organize.

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    4. Re:Didn't you see this coming? by cahiha · · Score: 1

      It is a matter of survival for an "information economy" - if you can't make money because someone is "sharing" it out from under you, there can't be an "information economy".

      Good: let's get rid of the "information economy" then.

      Well, one day (actually more likely a dark night) the police come. Not just your usual two officers assigned to the neighborhood patrol car, but tens or even hundreds of cops in vests carrying all kinds of heavy weapons.

      Sounds like Nazi Germany or the USSR. Granted, for people like you, who enjoy that sort of thing, the opportunities are dwindling, but North Korea may still be willing to take you in.

    5. Re:Didn't you see this coming? by Lifewish · · Score: 1

      I would equate this level action similar to what police do in inner city areas. You live there for years and there is a murder here and there, a few robberies a day and every once in a while some grandmotherly-type is raped and beaten. The police generally do nothing and it seems this is all just happening and nobody can do anything about it. Does this not sound like the level of copyright enforcement today?

      Nice analogy. Not at all slanted...

      Incidentally, I'm not sure your comment about China was right. I have a friend from there who has a decent number of professionally-produced-looking chinese music CDs. I could be wrong on this tho.

      --
      For the love of God, please learn to spell "ridiculous"!!!
    6. Re:Didn't you see this coming? by cdrguru · · Score: 1
      Yes, that was the case. Yes, I believe more than one person died in the fire.

      And yes, when "disorder" reaches a certain tipping point the police are certainly a "den of murderers".

      It is our own fault for letting that tipping point get reached.

    7. Re:Didn't you see this coming? by Greedo · · Score: 1

      I'm trying to Google some more information on this incident, without success.

      Got any links?

      --
      Tuus crepidae innexilis sunt.
    8. Re:Didn't you see this coming? by cdrguru · · Score: 1
      Or perhaps you:


      a) can't make as much money as you would LIKE to make - dream on. The real world isn't like that, or


      b) aren't providing anything that people are willing to pay for.


      Well, (b) is irrelevant - people are sharing it, so it must be worth something to them. If it was worth nothing then there wouldn't be a problem. Maybe it is priced above the point at which it is valued, but that is a market problem.

      I think the real issue is (a). Who the heck are consumers to say how much money someone makes? Can I walk into a car dealer and say "this car is worth $10 to me, so here's your ten bucks - give me the keys." What you are talking about is pretty much forcing a market on someone unwillingly. What you are suggesting is that some outside third party, apart from the buyer or seller gets to interfer in the transaction and say "Naa, that's too much money to spend, I'll offer the same to you for nothing."

      Yes, this is undoubtably doomed to fail. There can be no "information economy" where there is "sharing" like this. It is going to take some time for folks to realize this, but I believe it is going to happen. When it does, there will be no more software for sale, no more music or movies in stores because the only production there is will be private individuals doing it because they want to. And it will be free - all of it. Because with the Internet you can't sell something digital in China and give it away in UK. Or vice-versa. Will we be "richer" when the "information economy" collapses? Maybe, maybe not. It will just be different, probably not better or worse.

    9. Re:Didn't you see this coming? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, he's definatly wrong about China's music industry. It's huge, it's just that the Chinese industry has no interest in exporting any of it. When you can find modern Chinese music, someone went out of their way in a "China town" to bring it over.

      There really is almost a second Chinese economy at this point. There is the economy that produces goods and services for export, and there is one for things within China itself.

    10. Re:Didn't you see this coming? by jonfr · · Score: 1

      Since when did the E.U start lisening to the U.S ? Also, is this madness never gonna end ? This is also clear sample about the fact that the big corps don't care about the pepole, they just don't want more, more, more profit! But as most pepole know, pure profit only comes with monopoly.

  33. The Final Solution by MiKM · · Score: 1

    Let's just ban electricity. Every act of piracy requires electricity, therefore electricity causes piracy! I love faulty logic.

  34. It just doesn't make sense to me by alvinrod · · Score: 1
    FTA:

    If the directive is adopted, software used primarily for illegal file sharing, for example, could potentially make its developers criminally liable in one or several EU member countries.

    I think this would get a little bit tricky and could cause some serious legal problems. Sure you could go after BitTorrent because people can use it for illegal purposes, but you have to realize that this is no different than most other products.

    Cars are a wonderful way of getting from place to place that can be used for such illegal activities as escaping from the scene of a crime, running people over, and smuggling drugs into a country.

    Guns and Bows can be used for hunting, whether for sport or food. Of course they are both also used in illegal manners such as killing people, robbing someone, and hijackings.

    Explosives provide us with a nice and easy way to demolish old buildings, blast through mountains to provide tunnles, and to clear the land for whatever reason. Unfortunately, they can be used for doing very naughty things like car bombing some unfortunate soul, trying to blow up the WTC, and to forcably get into vaults.

    Just about anything that serves a useful purpose to mankind has some way of being used for destructive, immoral, or illegal purposes. If we banned everything that could be used for harm and arrested the people who made those things, there wouldn't be very many people out of jail to use the very few products that were left.

    I'd rather see a focused effort at the people who are commiting the crimes.

    1. Re:It just doesn't make sense to me by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      Cars are a wonderful way of getting from place to place that can be used for such illegal activities as escaping from the scene of a crime, running people over, and smuggling drugs into a country.

            Not to mention having sex in the back seat with some drunk girl you just met in a bar, on some deserted strip of road...hic

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    2. Re:It just doesn't make sense to me by 1ucius · · Score: 1

      Fortunatley, phrases like attempting, aiding and abetting, and inciting are legal terms of art and have excepted, predictable meanings when used in laws (at least in the US). The general "x merely makes something that hypothetically could be used to to Y" fact situation wouldn't qualify, imo.

  35. MOD PARENT DOWN!! by dapyx · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This current initiative has absolutely nothing to do with socialism, but with politicians being bought out by corporate interests.

    --
    I'm sorry, the number you have dialed is an imaginary number. Please rotate your phone 90 degrees and dial again.
    1. Re:MOD PARENT DOWN!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Slashdot: where conspiracy theories are "Insightful"

    2. Re:MOD PARENT DOWN!! by PriceIke · · Score: 1

      If you call that a conspiracy theory, you my friend are living in a wide wide world of naive.

      --
      It's not a lie. It's the truth with lossy compression.
  36. Gun makers should be sued too by kyoko21 · · Score: 1

    For the wrongful deaths of kids shooting kids.

    1. Re:Gun makers should be sued too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's been tried already.
      Gunmakers such as Smith & Wesson are shipping pistols with trigger locks included now, due to past legal nonsense.

      Another case of faulty logic - If the purchaser does not use it, who cares, they are covered legally.

  37. If software authors ... by PineHall · · Score: 1

    can be held liable for writing software that can be used for copyright infringement. I wonder if email programs like Outlook should be included. Maybe Microsoft should be found liable for copyright infringement. Or Mozilla for Thunderbird. Oh no, browsers can download copyrighted material so there is liability there too. It is a crazy proposal.

  38. Re:Beer! The other p2p by DistantShadow · · Score: 1

    girls that I may not have otherwise had sex with

    I find that hard to believe...

    -ds

  39. Pens and paper by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 1
    Why not make it illegal to make pencils and paper - people might use them write notes saying "this is a stick-up" during bank robberies.

    And glovves for hiding their finger prints.

    --
    Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
  40. Uh-huh. by ShaniaTwain · · Score: 1

    Riiiiight.

    Cause something like this would never be pushed by a the freedom-loving government of the USA..
    only in socialist europe would they try to push through silly laws to protect the profits of huge media conglomerates.

  41. Just take away our computers and be done with it by Feanturi · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If you want to start making it illegal to posess software that could be used for piracy or counterfeiting then you might as well just call it quits on the whole computing age. Photoshop should be illegal since I could use it to claim credit for someone else's artwork. My soundblaster driver should be illegal because it allows me to record anything playing on it. Web browsers should be illegal because they cache copies of protected or copyright material that I can recover if I know where to look. Better get rid of my video capture functionality too, because I can record DVDs right from my Playstation with no issues other than a loss of quality. And TV-out, gotta get rid of that too, I might videotape licensed content off my computer. All chat programs are potential piracy vectors as well, for maintaining contact in 'the scene' or whatever, better get rid of those too. Where does it stop?

  42. Ban OSS by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    That part will be propsed at some point. Since its not 'trusted'.

    That evil OSS stuff could be used to 'circumvent something', but your trusted OS ( i.e. windows ) will be safe, and prevent you from doing 'bad things'..

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  43. F**king Commission by hazee · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What the hell is it with this unelected bunch of goons? First they do their level best to introduce patents across the EU, despite the will of the (elected) parliament, now they're sticking their noses into another area they know bugger all about.

    It really is high time that the EU Commission was given the boot.

    And they wonder why people across the EU are jumping at the chance to say NO to the EU constitution, which cements the Commission into place...

    How on earth did we get this bunch of cretins foisted upon us, and why aren't we the people of the EC allowed to say "actually, no, we don't want them, we never have"?

    Democracy? Pah!

    1. Re:F**king Commission by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes indeed.

      from http://europa.eu.int/comm/about_en.htm>Europa

      "The European Commission embodies and upholds the general interest of the Union and is the driving force in the Union's institutional system. Its four main roles are to propose legislation to Parliament and the Council, to administer and implement Community policies, to enforce Community law (jointly with the Court of Justice) and to negotiate international agreements, mainly those relating to trade and cooperation."

      I'm very pro European, I was gutted that the French scuppered progressive integration, but I agree with you that the commission are shooting the whole project in the foot with their protofascist legislating. Problem is ordinary folk dont take much interest in European politics, and most other businessmen I know are anti-european so only the big corps lobyists have any voice. That's why all we get from the commission is absurd anti-capitalist red tape and protectionism.
      It was the commission that destroyed the European project by not listening to the people of Europe.

  44. Making knives should be a criminal offense by Corson · · Score: 1

    Mmmm.... Yeaaahhh.... Then maybe manufacturing kitchen knives should be a criminal offense, too, as criminals might use them to kill people. How about bags? When thieves steal away money, they usually put it in a bag. How about cars, planes, and ships? That's how heroin gets shipped from South America to the United States. Jeez, what a paranoid waste of time combined with corporate a..-kissing.

    1. Re:Making knives should be a criminal offense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please get a grip on yourself man

      The primary purpose, the designed purpose of a kitchen knife is for cutting food. The primary purpose, the designed purpose of a gun, is to shoot other people with. Don't deny that, because it's true

      The *right* to carry in gun, so that you can use "lethal" force for defence, is a misnomer.

      Oddly though Canada has similar levels of gun ownership to the US but, much less murder due to firearms. One would think that rather then broadcast this fact from the rafters, that the gun industry would want to keep it quite.

      Why?

      Because, if US society is so violent, that it's firearm murder rate is *so* much higher then Canada's it actually makes *sense* to limit access to weapons.

      Gun proponents in the US, often astound me, by claiming that society is safer... making it easier for an already voilent society, to have access to the arguably *easiest* means of killing another human, ie, the gun!

      Fortunately I don't live in the US so, this isn't my problem.

  45. It covers PATENTS too! by NigelJohnstone · · Score: 1

    It covers all Intellectual property crimes, including criminalizing patent infringement.

    The items covered are the same as 2005/295/EC
    http://wiki.ffii.de/Ipred0504En

    So it would make it a criminal offence to infringe a patent. No kidding, imagine Philips Siemens, Nokia and their officers all vulnerable to a criminal infringment of some 'smiley' patent.

    1. Re:It covers PATENTS too! by latroM · · Score: 1

      It covers all Intellectual property crimes, including criminalizing patent infringement.

      That with software patents could make it illegal to develop any free software.

  46. Solving the wrong problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Instead of creating stupider and stupider laws to protect copyrights why not reduce the privileges granted by a copyright so there would be less need to create stupid laws to protect it.

    I wish people would stop spending so much effort trying to protect copyrights which is a pretty old and out of date idea. Instead think of new ways of compensating creators and stimulating creativity.

  47. Publicized Intention of Software by viperstyx · · Score: 2, Informative

    My understanding was that the issue in the MGM vs. Grokster case was that Grokster marketed their software to be used in an unlawful manner. But the judge clearly stated that other software (ie. IM software used to send files, web browsers, etc) and companies would not be held responsible for their tool simply being used for illegal purposes so long as the tool was not marketed to be used in that way. So whats the deal? That sounds like a logical outcome to me...

    1. Re:Publicized Intention of Software by shark72 · · Score: 1

      "My understanding was that the issue in the MGM vs. Grokster case was that Grokster marketed their software to be used in an unlawful manner. But the judge clearly stated that other software (ie. IM software used to send files, web browsers, etc) and companies would not be held responsible for their tool simply being used for illegal purposes so long as the tool was not marketed to be used in that way. So whats the deal?"

      Thank you for pointing that out. Many people have completely forgotten that important point.

      I think the US Supreme Court ruling was pretty clear... Grokster was clearly guilty. What the experts in the Wired article are cautioning is that the wording in the EU document is overly vague compared to the precedent set in the US.

      --
      Sitting in my day care, the art is decopainted.
    2. Re:Publicized Intention of Software by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But MGM Grokster worked out for MGM. Therefore the law was not needed.

  48. The fall out of this could be disastrous by Ceribia · · Score: 1

    If an inventor, and that's exactly what software developers are, can be held accountable for how there creations are used by others then we are going to freeze innovation in its tracks. If someone is to invent a better engine can I sue them when a car using it hits me? How about those who invent better processors? Can I sue them because some script-kiddie uses a computer containing their invention to launch a DOS attack on my server? Of coarse I can't. An inventor can not be held accountable for improper use of his or her creations by others.

    --
    It has yet to be proven that intelligence has any survival value. Arthur C. Clarke (1917 - )
    1. Re:The fall out of this could be disastrous by shark72 · · Score: 1

      "An inventor can not be held accountable for improper use of his or her creations by others."

      Exactly -- you understand perfectly. And so does the US Supreme Court: piracy was indeed a very proper way for using Grokster. They encouraged it, built their business model on it, and the email trails show that they knew about it and condoned it. When Grokster told the court that piracy wasn't their intent and that they didn't encourage or condone it, the evidence showed that they were clearly lying.

      As long as the EU adopts a standard of proof equal to or above that which the US Supreme Court did in the precedent-setting MGM vs. Grokster case, I don't think Europeans have much to worry about.

      --
      Sitting in my day care, the art is decopainted.
  49. Re:Beer! The other p2p by LuciferBlack · · Score: 1

    Mom! I told you not to follow me here! GOSH!

    --
    I'm working on a good joke about your mom being /.'d, but it's not finished yet.
  50. Argh! by cavemanf16 · · Score: 2, Funny

    The other day I boarded me PC and headed out on the wide open network seas of information to find me some poor bloke's PC to board and swaggle all his mp3's for fear of me runnin' him thru with me l337 computer hacking skills. But to me su'prise, there were all sorts of bloke's wandering around the network seas INVITING me in to their cabin to rifle through their hoard of files in the hold's of their PC's! Shiver me timbers! They paid good drinkin' money for their massive hoards of music and movies and then started magically duplicatin' 'em and givin' to all us pirates FOR FREE!

    Unhappy as a parrot without a shoulder, I turned me PC back around to head back to port 80, for me horn-swagglin' days of maurauding the wide open network seas were thru - for there be no one left to steal from these days!

  51. Piracy is a propaganda word by latroM · · Score: 1

    ..used by the media companies to make it morally justified to make such harsh laws.

    1. Re:Piracy is a propaganda word by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Similarly, Copyright infringement is NOT theft but the RIAA and the MPAA would like to make you think it is.

  52. Nice sensationalist headline by Gothmolly · · Score: 1

    making P2P piracy a crime is not the same as making software vendors whose product is USED for P2P piracy liable.

    Piracy already is a crime. It's the whole 'facilitation' issue thats up for debate here.

    --
    I want to delete my account but Slashdot doesn't allow it.
  53. A guy walks into EU... by MirrororriM · · Score: 1
    Say a guy breaks into another guy's house, steals his gun, shoots the owner of the house with it (doesn't kill him) then shoots himself in the head. Does this mean the owner of the gun can now be held responsible for one count of suicide and attempted homocide? Let's not forget about charging the gun manufacturer too...and the bullet manufacturer...and the place that ored the metal to create the gun and the bullet...and then the NAACP will sue the gun manufacturer for allegedly making it too easy for criminals to get guns...and then my head will explode...and...

    Just putting it in persepective. Yeah, it's a crazy scenario, but this is a crazily vague law too.

    --
    Content Management System: A pretentious way of saying "text editor."
  54. Sheesh... RTFA by zoomba · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This is a proposal to attack specifically the act of INTENTIONALLY infringing or contributing to infringement. Grokster or Napster would get nailed under this because it is clear that ths software was meant to redistribute music files, they built their companies and communities on the idea of music piracy (ok... those of you who are going to say "But you could distribute your own music too!" can leave the room now. Both Napster and Grokster KNEW what was going on, they built the system to make it as easy as possible to pirate music).

    When you come to technologies like BitTorrent or Freenet, you have technology platforms that are completely independent of what is being distributed. Going after BT because it allows infringement would be like going after E-Mail technology because you can send files, or FTP etc...

    The wired article is a piece of FUD trying to scare up some controversy when what this proposal is calling for is to explicityly make criminal IP infringement through P2P. People love to argue that the law is fuzzy on whether or not it's criminal, so now they're clarifying it.

    1. Re:Sheesh... RTFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sony KNEW what was going on when they sold more than 50 CDs per month and everyone wanted a CD burner. (They make it as easy as possible to buy these thing) And they knew everyone wasn't producing their own music.

  55. This applies to whom? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The number 1 method I use to transfer large legal files to other people? DVD.
    Ohhh noooes!!!11oness
    Is Sony, or Panasonic, or Toshiba or any other business going to go in the slammer for providing means to infringe copyright?

  56. anonymous encrypted P2P by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since the "European Commission" seems to defy the democratic decisions of its citizens again perhaps it is time for anonymous encrypted filesharing with programs such as Freenet: http://freenetproject.org/

  57. Let's put a stop to all illegal activity forever by BlackCobra43 · · Score: 1

    It's simple : Ban human life.

    --
    I never spellcheck and I freely admit it. Save your karma for more worthwhile "lol erorrs" replies
  58. Better idea! by oGMo · · Score: 1

    I have an even better idea! Let's step back and look at this problem from a broader view. What are we trying to prevent here? Illegal activities! What is the primary thing that makes a person a criminal?

    That's right: LAWS!

    Yes, folks, we should outlaw laws that make activities illegal, because without them, there would be no crime!

    I say we start by making politicians criminally liable for proposing any new law that might result in criminal activity...

    --

    Don't think of it as a flame---it's more like an argument that does 3d6 fire damage

    1. Re:Better idea! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And I'm suggesting that you now be arrested for making criminals of those poor politicians... hold on someone at the door... police? wtf?

  59. This just in: by Twiceblessedman · · Score: 1

    Europe makes using the internet illegal for fear of piracy.

  60. I'm really naughty by elal1862 · · Score: 1

    %cat pirated_content.tar >/dev/tcp/my.friends.hostname/some_random_port (...he's listening on with another stupid single command line)

  61. Ban Hoods? Already done! by Chordonblue · · Score: 1

    "Here's a hood ... it can protect you in a snowstorm, or you can use it to rob a bank. Ban hoods!"

    Check out this article from the 'Australian'...

    "ITALY has banned Islamic burqas under tough terrorism laws that provide two-year jail terms and E2000 ($3200) fines for anyone caught covering their face in a public place.

    The counter-terrorism package, passed by Italy's parliament yesterday, doubles the existing penalty for wearing a burqa or chador -- traditional robes worn by Muslim women to cover their faces -- or full-faced helmets or balaclavas in public.

    Police can extract DNA samples without a suspect's consent, detain them for 24 hours without a lawyer present, and deport foreigners suspected of terrorism under the new legislation. Soldiers involved in counter-terrorism have been given the same stop-and-search powers.

    The changes, approved in a rare show of bipartisanship, came as Italian police arrested a fugitive hunted by British police over the bungled bombing attempt in London on July 21. "

    --
    "...Well, there's egg and bacon; egg sausage and bacon; egg and spam; egg bacon and spam; egg bacon sausage and spam..."
  62. Not Floppy's! by xtrvd · · Score: 2, Funny

    NO! You can't copy floppy's, that's wrong! See this if you don't believe me!

  63. great by roman_mir · · Score: 1

    so, ICQ, MSN, Yahoo etc., will they all be liable? Those are also p2p apps.

    1. Re:great by Twiceblessedman · · Score: 1

      why not operating systems while we're at it? I can record audio from any medium and copy it to my pc and distribute it to my friends. (Legally in canada under fair use laws) This is an absurd law.

  64. Passing the blame... by CyanDisaster · · Score: 1

    ...developers who create software for file sharing that is then used for illegal ends could potentially be criminally liable...

    Why stop there? Go after Microsoft. I mean, it's their products that are allowing viruses to propagate, and in some cases, be created. Go after vehicle manufacturers because their cars can go faster than the posted speed limit, or can be used to purposely run people down. Hell, go after keyboard manufacturers because without them, it'd be pretty damn hard to write the programs that are used for illegal purposes.

    Just because something is easy to do, doesn't necessarily mean that whoever provides the means to do such should be the one who is responsible for it.

    Hope be with ye,
    Cyan

  65. Re:SURPRISE, COCKFAGS! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Piracy causes more net-loss than rape and child-misuse combined.

    It's only reasonable that they follow the example of the United States.

  66. Fair use? by slavemowgli · · Score: 1

    So, what about fair use then? There are several European countries where you automatically pay a fee for each and every CD/vinyl record, each and every CD-R or other blank media, and - last not least - each and every *computer* you purchase, in order to compensate the content industry for losses they suffer due to fair use.

    It seems that (unfortunately, even though understandably) the content industry would like to keep these fees while at the same time outlawing fair use.

    But what exactly *is* fair use, anyway? It's not at all clear, and the introduction of criminal penalties for copyright infringement (not piracy - piracy means sailing the seven seas, bringing up other ships, stealing their cargo and keelhauling the crew) is likely to scare people enough so that they won't even exercise their fair use rights for fear of going "too far" and opening them up not only to civil lawsuits, but criminal cases as well.

    But of course, it may not be a problem, since despite the fees they collect, the content industry seems to be happy to include copy-prevention measures on their media that do not just inhibit copyright infringement but also fair use.

    What's more, it's been ruled in the past that despite the fact that these fees are collected, users do not actually have *right* to fair use - so the industry is free to take it away through technical means. Maybe we should just pass a law that requires us to turn over all our money to the industry - that'd save us all a lot of hassle.

    --
    quidquid latine dictum sit altum videtur.
  67. Re: And overturn some of those messy mistakes... by tetsu96 · · Score: 1

    Cause we all know it went to hell when we allowed that pesky VCR and damn audio cassette tapes to be used for recording. There's nothing fair about fair use when it prevents the fat cats from getting theirs.

  68. Will make law making illegal by freqmod · · Score: 1

    If this proposal is passed then photocopiers, printers etc. will be illegal. They may be used for copying images and texts with copyrights. Then I wonder how the europeean commision will make their law proposals.

  69. Soviet Russia Land of the Free by obender · · Score: 1
    Does this mean that the only place left where we can still write P2P software without fear is the Russian Federation?

    This world is really upside down.

    1. Re:Soviet Russia Land of the Free by Eric604 · · Score: 1

      No, because in Soviet Russia P2P software writes you!

  70. It *is* software patents by the back door by NigelJohnstone · · Score: 1

    A crime is transnational in Europe. If you commit a crime in any country in the EU, you are not immune because you are not in that country. The bigger a multi-national you are the more markets you are liable in and the more opportunity to infringe.

    That means that any country (i.e. UK patent office) that decides to implement software patents will force them onto everyone for the whole of Europe.

    Anyone that wants a software patent for their smileys will apply in the UK and file criminal charges against the company that infringes in that country.

    The Commission really shows its colours here, its a straight grab for power even bigger than the Council & Parliament combined has.

  71. windows Xp illegal in EU by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    WinXp should be illegal. I can copy stuff with it.

    1. Re:windows Xp illegal in EU by Eric604 · · Score: 1

      Only if you know how to ctrl-drag or how to access the context menu. That's like 0.0000000001% of all users?? ... Lets make Mac illegal!!

  72. P2P piracy and piracy by infonography · · Score: 1

    It's not the act, it's the meothod of aquiring it. P2P makes for a lot of needs to purchase new gear to pursue such criminals. On the whole, its likely a Fund Raising Operation. There are these crooks there who we need to buy more computer gear to chase them. They will likely get their money and move up from Pentium 2 computers.

    --
    Sorry about the writing. Robot fingers, you know? Cliff Steele in DOOM PATROL #23
  73. Y'arr Matey!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    What be this electricity yee speak of?

    To do piracy, all I need is a bottle o rum, a shot across the bow, and a trusty cutlass at me side.

  74. Directive.. is not a law. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As always on Slash, people jump to conclusions and trolling before they've actually had the time to think about the issue.

    First of all, a directive is not a law. Period.

    Second of all, since it was 'spotted' this early on, it will most certainly be brought down before it gets approved or severely watered long before it gets anywhere.

    For those who do not know what a directive is:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Union_direct ive

    Lots of huff and puff about an issue that'll never materialize anyway.

  75. A very long procedure... by A+shadow+in+the+dark · · Score: 0

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Codecision_procedure
    This is just step 1 of the diagram :).

    You can follow the progress of the procedure here (it usually take mounths, sometime years :)):
    http://europa.eu.int/prelex/detail_dossier_real.cf m?CL=en&DosId=193131

  76. Slashdot needs a new topic: EU by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    With the increasing number of directives, laws and other measures disscused at European level, and with the increased number of the stupid ideas coming from the bureaurats in Bruxeles, I think that Slashdot needs a topic called "EU" and with logo the EU flag, similar to the one that currently exists about US. This way, I would be able to review more easily the subjects about this Union I live in, and help me better keep an eye open on the activity of the damn bureaucrats in Bruxelles.

    Thank you, an EU citizen

  77. Sue Adobe! by Rekrapt · · Score: 1

    How come the Feds haven't sued Adobe for enabling counterfeiters all over the world? Or the makers of color image scanners, for that matter.

    1. Re:Sue Adobe! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, you are an idiot. Will you please just stop posting so us adults can have a conversation without listening to your un-American bull-poop.

  78. Fools... by benow · · Score: 1
    They will only further undermine their judicial and leadership credibility. The correct action would be to ack the usefulness of p2p, not only for distribution of the popular, but also as a giant communications and learning tool for all of mankind. We should be harnessing such a tool and using it for the greater good, not condemming it due to a few dinosaurs. Such a move (further?) ties government and the entire political process to the shit-eating lobbyists and others who blindly refute the pervasiveness and efficacity of p2p networks.

    P2P does a better job than their thing based distribution networks, *and that isn't going to change* regardless of legislation. In fact, it's only going to get better (underground networked bittorrent servers, i2p networks, tunneled dynamic trust based distributed file and database server networks, etc). End result? final capitulation of government to the giant inept or perhaps, if we're lucky, public knowledge of this nonsense followed by mass boycott of those involved, but most likely, such actions will result in more and more public money funneled to public-good actions, with a good amount of that going right into the pockets of those who demonize the right way of doing things. Look at the war on X where X=[drugs,terrorism,etc]. Those getting rich are the ones who are spreading fear to the masses. Drumming up support for private interest under the poison mask of public good. This can't last much longer... surely we're smarter than that.

    I pay more now for media than ever before (and am getting more from it than ever before, but only due to good homebrew filter techniques). Perhaps it is our lot to filter out the worthy 5% from the rest of the dregs, be it on broadcast networks or in politics. It's too bad the percentages aren't higher and the will to move in the right direction takes a back seat to filling the pockets of the few.

  79. Fucking Commission indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    An unelected Commission has no place in an expanded Europe. When they were civil servants basically implementing Council decisions that was one thing, but now they're setting agenda different from the ones put to them by the Council. Playing Council members off against each other and against the Parliament.

    Thats very dangerous, you can't have a situation where the Commission is able to grab power from the elected bodies like this.

  80. I'd hate to be Cisco by midicase · · Score: 1

    Cisco was a target of a recent article for enabling the Chinese government to filter content. Using an extension of EU's reasoning, they could be hammered for allowing content to pass through.

  81. Soon by Rac3r5 · · Score: 1

    In the news...

    The European prisons are filled with 10-25 yr olds who were arrested for using P2P software to dl illegal versions of the top 10 songs on the music charts. I'm glad we got those evil ppl out of the way..

  82. Time Machine by iive · · Score: 2, Funny

    Today the famous inventor Johannes Gutenberg was sentenced to 200 years of hard labour for creating, distributing and using machine for massive copyright violations.
    Him so called "Printing Press" could produce hundreds and thousand copies of one book just for one week.
    Pirates have used it in enormous proportions to execute undreamed copyright violations.
    This had caused a big loss in book sells and SCWAA estimates them at 1 000 000 in gold.
    This evil invention had taken the work and bread of more than 10 000 script copy writers, letting them and their families live in misery.

  83. Re:GUNS! by nurmr · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Guns can be used to kill people, but you don't see people taking the arms manufacturers to court do you?

  84. Its much much worse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It covers patents too, yes patents.

    If Germany issues a patent to Siemens covering and invention and Netherlands issues a patent to Philips covering the same invention area, then the Siemens is guilty of a criminal offence in the Netherlands and Philips is guilty of a crime in Germany.
    Their executive officers can be held liable too, with a penalty up to 4 years in prison if they deliberately ignore the patent problem.

    Now expand that to 20-30 countries as Europe expands and it will be next to impossible to make anything in Europe without some little player setting patent mines for you.

    Trade marks too, I can register a trademark in a country and wait for a major player to launch their product using that trademark in that country and bingo, they are committing a criminal offence.

  85. BAN SEX!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    After all it's a p2p protocol with DNA as the exchange. ;)

  86. What About Windows? by Evil+W1zard · · Score: 1

    Doesn't Windows allow you to set up file sharing between different systems so would that make it illegal to use MS Windows?

    --
    News Reporters Make Tasty Polar Bear Treats!
  87. Bring it on. by DroopyStonx · · Score: 1

    The internet has been such a blessing. The power is in our hands now, and it's about fucking TIME.

    Governments don't like that. Corporations don't like that. It's all about control and power. Those who have it don't want to lose it. Those who have it often abuse it.

    Many people don't like the thought of that, but tough shit. Fact is, there isn't much anyone can do about it - and I LOVE it. We've had to endure tons of bullshit from corporations and governments throughout time, so it's time they take back a bit of what they dish out.

    Don't want us to download your product? Stop fucking treating us like sheep. Want us to respect your laws and the companies that fund your elections? Stop fucking treating us like sheep.

    Instead of learning from their mistakes and fixing what's wrong, they feel the need to create unnecessary laws. They're just digging their own grave.

    I say bring these laws on, because if P2P becomes illegal then that will just trigger the dawn of a new era in anonymous filesharing.

    What then? Oh, tsk tsk, utter loss for them.

    No matter what they do to us, what laws they make, or what control they try to impose, there will be consequences and repercussions for them.

    Remember that.

    --
    We have secretly replaced these Slashdot mods' sense of humor with a rusty nail. Let's see if they notice!!
  88. News just in... by NoMercy · · Score: 1

    The EU is being lobbied by the content producers to introduce laws which means european goverments have to pick up the tab for copyright inforcement.

    Bad bit is, it appears they don't realise it.

  89. What's so hard to understand? by Anonym1ty · · Score: 1, Insightful
    What's so hard to understand? A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.

    A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.

    A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.

    A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.

    A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.

    Seems very to the point to me.

    1. Re:What's so hard to understand? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How was parent modded Off-Topic when he was directly addressing a point made to the person he's replying to who wasn't modded Off-Topic? Seems the moderators let their political bias get in the way of their decision making.

    2. Re:What's so hard to understand? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How entirely convenient that you blithely (and repeatedly) ignore the first four words of that statement.

      The founding fathers gave us this right with the intent to provide for a civilian defense force, not to give carte blanche for Joe Fucking Sixpack to pick up a new .45 down at the local convenience store whenever the mood struck him.

      You are either brain dead or an insufferable dolt, and in either case I've already wasted too much time on you. But go do your goddamn homework (starting with the Federalist Papers) before you spew any more neocon gunfreak bullshit, you pathetic shitfaced brainless ass wad.

      Love & Kisses,
      Your Mom

  90. Yeah, I'm gonna start right now... by hackwrench · · Score: 1

    I'm going to do the task of torturing RIAA and MPAA employees and I expect to be paid for it! Better yet, I'm going to do the task of listening to whatever I feel like, and I expect to be paid for that too!

  91. Two things... by Singletoned · · Score: 1

    Two things spring to mind about this.

    1) It's not reasonable to attempt to prevent the distribution of something that is so easily and widely distributed.

    2) This might end up being a good thing. If we become entitled to trial by jury for copyright infringment then people stand quite a good chance of getting off. The beauty of trial by jury is that 12 good men are entitled to ignore laws that they disagree with and find people innocent.

  92. Simple progression of logic... by Maggott · · Score: 1

    Criminal prosecution is just the term we use to describe throwing someone in a cage. Just about the most direct and literal stripping of freedom that there could ever possibly be.

    Copyright infringement is just the term we use to describe someone who isn't giving money to a copyright holder, causing a percieved loss of profit.

    Since assumedly the damage of infringement will continue unless something is done, the simple choice is presented: Continue to allow piracy or throw people in jail instead. The government literally must choose between the wealth of it's citizens and the freedom of it's citizens.

    By choosing to prevent the monetary loss by throwing people in jail, the government makes a choice that money is more important to it than freedom.

    Just a bit of perspective.

  93. Information Economy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think all this nonsense stems from a massive misunderstanding of the nature of an 'information economy' on the part of just about everyone.

    The misunderstanding is this: people treat information as a valuable commodity. Value is driven by scarcity. Since 'information' is now reproducible and distributable at zero cost, it has zero scarcity, and therefore zero value. People attempting to capitalize on information IN ITSELF, by this nature of digital information, cannot.

    The solution to this is to gravitate towards service-driven business models. The small company that I work for creates data systems from cradle to grave for a sustainable fee. We make money by doing it faster, better, and more reliably than everyone else. We don't charge to license our software, and we won't in the future, as far as I know. We make code for people, who pay us for our time and energy. It works, and more people need to realize this.

    The problem that we have is that there is a huge infrastructure for content creation and distribution that has lost its cash cow. It needs to find another one, and fast. The old one is gone, and there's nothing to be done about it. Adapt or die. That being said, the people who stand to lose the most from these revolutions also are in the best position to embrace them and get more out of them. They have the resources to rebuild or reuse their infrastructure in ways that individuals, even large groups of developers, could not. Their goals should be to create standards and services (servers and such), and charge for the services while promoting greater interoperability so that more people will be able to benefit from their services.

    Now, we understand this. Why can't they?

  94. P2P or organized piracy -- which is it? by Some+Guy+in+Canada · · Score: 1

    The headline says "P2P piracy," but the summary says "organized piracy." But peer-to-peer is not organized; it is ad-hoc by definition. So which is it that the proposal is referring to?

    I support P2P to some extent, but I really see no problem with cracking down on organized piracy. Unfortunately the summary's ambiguity makes it difficult to decide if I should be in opposition to the proposal.

    --
    "The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits." -Albert Einstein
  95. Don't Forget by 00+Agent+Kid · · Score: 1

    That ruling was only against companies who advertised the fact that you could download illegal material (like Grokster did). If your product doesn't advertise the swapping of illegal files, you can't be held responsible (legally, anyway).

    This also brings back the old argument: Don't arrest the gun company for making the gun that killed a man.

    --
    INACTIVE ACCOUNT
  96. To borrow a phrase by AnalogDiehard · · Score: 1

    To borrow the phrase "guns don't kill people, people kill people" I think it's fair to say that "software doesn't infringe copyright, people infringe copyright.

    --
    Eternity: will that be smoking, or non-smoking? I Corinthians 6:9-10
  97. Media and Bunners by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Might as well outlaw CDRW's and CD Burners...

  98. Intention is a legal minefield by panurge · · Score: 2, Interesting
    No law should ever be based around intention. Proving intention makes lawyers rich, but does little for justice. As an example, consider the difference between murder, manslaughter and involuntary manslaughter.

    Intention per se is essentially unprovable without documented evidence, and any law based around intention just results in business via conversations in remote places.

    --
    Panurge has posted for the last time. Thanks for the positive moderations.
    1. Re:Intention is a legal minefield by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Intention per se is essentially unprovable without documented evidence, and any law based around intention just results in business via conversations in remote places.

      Intention really does matter, though. There's a world of difference between shoving someone off a pier to make them to drown, and shoving someone off a pier to get them out of the way of an oncoming truck. One is attempted murder; the other is an attempt to save a life, and the law recognizes the distinction.

      I personally think there should be two distinct classes for all crimes; accidental, and intentional.

      Where tangible documented evidence (forensics, DNA evidence, videotapes, etc.) prove conclusively that the crime was intentional, the sentence is automatically set to execution for deliberate treason against the law of the land. That is, it's a crime to deliberately break the law.

      Where no documented proof can be established, the act is deemed accidental, and fines and/or jail time apply normally, as punishment for incompetence. It's a crime to be so incompetant as to hurt others, as well.

      In my world, I wouldn't have many laws at all. But no one would dare break 'em.
      --
      AC

  99. Yeah, go on: penalize knives, by piotru · · Score: 1

    cars, cigarettes, earthqakes, white gloves... Actually, sueing for an earthquake could be tricky... :D
    Anyone with a round, black object to use against barbarians in emergency? And believe me, abuse of common sense the emergency might well make.

  100. Re:GUNS! by hanshotfirst · · Score: 1
    Guns can be used to kill people, but you don't see people taking the arms manufacturers to court do you?

    It's not that people haven't tried. The NRA owns more politicians than the other side. It worked with the tobacco industry, though.

    --
    Why, oh why, didn't I take the Blue Pill?
  101. Re:GUNS! by dlefavor · · Score: 1
    you don't see people taking the arms manufacturers to court do you?

    Actually, you do. What you don't see is anybody winning those cases except the manufacturers.

    City of Chicago v. Beretta USA Corp is but one example. There are a couple of dozen other municipalities in the US who have sued. I'm not going to look them up, but there must be hundreds of private citizen lawsuits against gun manufacturers, typically filed by victims of gun-toting, trigger-happy criminals.

  102. So if... by AlphaBrav · · Score: 1

    ..I use Excel to track my money laundering activites, will MS be held liable?

    Uh... not that I launder money. Really. I don't. I do, however, launder clothes, which probably puts me in the minority on /.

  103. Broadcast Flag Considered Helpful by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

    I want something like a "broadcast flag" embedded in files that tells me whether someone asserts a copyright on the material. If it says so, I can use it fairly, but I can't otherwise give a copy to someone else. A useable flag would point at some kind of "proof" that the asserter has the copyright, like a crypto hash of the file in a dated list that other people can challenge. With stiff national penalties for fraudulently asserting copyright on files not controlled by them. The flag must be informational, not enforceable automatically (like in a player chip), to prioritize fair use over fraudulent copyright assertion. So when I copy a file, I can't say I wasn't warned, but I can check it out and ignore it - and report it - if it's fraud. Probably it should be a URL to the copyright status page of the object, hosted by the owner.

    Otherwise, we'll never know what the status is of the media we're consuming. We'll hold back on media we can share, and copy material we don't know we shouldn't. The vast majority of people sharing media want to do the right thing, to obey the law, to ensure the producers are compensated, that we're not ripping anyone off. Until we get an easy way to know whether we're doing that, we'll keep haphazardly doing both.

    --

    --
    make install -not war

  104. NO!!! by piotru · · Score: 1

    No!!!, I read the PDF and it's just too much. If this fuckup becomes law, the law I will have in disregard. Screw it.
    There is a level of corruption behind which people don't respect the law. Welcome Banana EU!

  105. Crack down on illegal aliens by boy_afraid · · Score: 0

    How about cracking down on a bigger problem. ILLEGAL ALIENS.

    ** DISCLAIMER **
    I am of Mexian decent and live in Texas. I'm a "Beaner" so don't go accuse me of being a white red-neck racist.

    No, not "undocumented immigrants" or "migrant workers" or any PC-bullshit name you want to give it to soften the image. Errect a f*ckin wall to halt this invasion.

    I don't mind "legal" immigration, no problem, in fact I'll give you bus fare to get somewhere. We don't need people that will be a burden. I know people come here for the "OPPORTUNITIES" that they don't have in their home countries. It's too bad that those places do not provide the same opportunities, but they need their own revolutions to kick the bad-asses out of office and do something for thier own people and not themselves. Yes, I know we have the same idiots here, but we at least try to keep them in check (even though we still get stepped on).

    Example: Mexico. Lots and lots of natural resources (oil, lumber, gold, ores, etc) great vacation places, and tourist attractions (pyramids) and history. What keeps them down: Greedy and corrupt politicians and businesses that keep the money and power to themselves. Keeping the poor away from education and opportunities. Otherwise Mexico could be a great rich prosperious nation that would rival Canada and other great western countries.

    Wow, can you imaging Canada, US, and Mexico with that much clout, freedom, and opportunities?! Eat your heart out China, Pussy French, Sauer Kraut Germans and then rest of you liberals. KEEP TAXES LOW!! Don't tax me to death.

    Simpsons: "Democrats: Tax and spend, tax and spend!"

    (too bad the republicans have turned into the democrats and the democrats have turned into communists)

    Now, let the flaming begin.

  106. Reality check : Federal Sentencing Guidelines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Federal Sentencing Guidelines in the US remove a LOT of the discretionary power of judges, and place an inordinate amount of power in the hands of prosecutors.

    The reality is that ( if you are found guilty ) when the sentencing phase arrives, there may as well be a computer behind the bench, instead of a human judge. In other words, your only chance is if the jury declares you "not guilty".

    In case some of you cannot figure this out, this places the federal courts in the US a lot closer to fascism than any courts in western Europe.

    Some of you aren't lawyers ( I am ) and you may, in the fine Slashdot tradition, be compelled to make comments though you
    don't know much about the Guidelines. Go ahead, but you cannot change the truth that the US edges closer to
    a police state with every passing day.

  107. we really need to do something... by xtracto · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Man... I think we really need to make something.

    I have read some of the comments in this thread... I can see we are all pissed off about the way things are going but we are all whinging in slashdot without anything else to do...

    I have read some recommendations about 'voting with your money' or 'Talking to your representative' but I think that is *really* not making any difference...

    We must find a way to make the government hear us. Governments are supposed to represent the people in our countries not to serve as big companies servants allowing them to profit... We need real actions, movements, people, we need to fight again for our rights, not in UK or France or USA, but in all the world, we have the Internet which is one of the best communications tools which can be useful for us...

    Big companies are using the globalization to get more and more of the markets, meanwhile squeezing the goverments are making they take our rights.

    I am sure this will continue until there is something more severe, this will end in a kind of civil war but between consumers (us) and big companies... I see this as the next big war, but as they always say it will be a war of information , it will be a 'revolution' to get again our freedom, once, we fought other countries to get freemod (like Mexico from Spain or US from UK or UK from Germany)... now all the world will have to join to fight the big corporations, to get our freedom.

    The sad thing is that it is a system a big system which everyone of us is making work, because it is in those big corporations where people like you and me work. Although there are just like a thousand people that controls the 80% of those and it is of they most interest to make the system work smooth, that is what we need to change, we need to break that system and install a new system a new freedom for information, all kind of information.

    But then again I am here, siting in my desk just about to press the submit button and then I will continue reading the next story and then I will read my email and then I will just go to sleep waiting for tomorrow to go to work again... although my soul is shouting to go liberated... can we do somehting?

    --
    Ubuntu is an African word meaning 'I can't configure Debian'
    1. Re:we really need to do something... by ta+ma+de · · Score: 1

      I hope you get modded up. to bad your post is late. I think you are on to it. Slashdot community has power and doesn't know it. The community is not poor either. Slashdot open up a donation for political action so that we can have our own slashdot-paid lobby. If we each kick in 100 - 1000, that would be like a bazillion dollars or something. We could make it happen.

    2. Re:we really need to do something... by slothman32 · · Score: 1

      What we need is a few assemblies, not the violent kind, to get on the news. Most people don't even know of the extreme, i.e. worse than murder, illegality of copyright violation.

      --
      Why don't you guys have friends or journals?
    3. Re:we really need to do something... by xtracto · · Score: 1

      You got a point there... we need to let the general people George-6Paints to know what is this is about and how will it affect him in the future... we need to create a general conscience that the things that are happening are INDEED BAD!!!

      --
      Ubuntu is an African word meaning 'I can't configure Debian'
  108. Other apps should be considered too then by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Other programs such as Internet Explorer, Firefox, and Usenet or other program should also be considered guilty. IRC, FTP, etc, etc the list goes on. All of those have legit uses but can also be used for pirating movies, games, apps, songs, as well as for distributing child porn, etc, etc. You can't just target one group (the P2P) without taking into account the larger, "more accepted" tools we use to transfer files.

  109. Bongs! by GusChiggins · · Score: 1

    Now seriously how can they bust the P2P software vendors when companies such as Graphix have been making and selling bongs and other drug paraphenelia unabated for years.

    Not that I jump up and down when a head shop is closed.. but which is contributing more to the moral decay of society, pirating music or drug use?

    --
    That's why they call it dope bro

    --
    Shut the smurf up mothersmurfer!
  110. I am FOR this, and all laws like it by gosand · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I am starting to think that I want these laws passed. I want the DMCA, I want the Patriot Act, I want record companies to be able to send people to jail for years. I want all this. Because slow change is NOT happening. Our rights are continuously being violated, our governments have over the years been taken over by those in power who can afford to purchase laws.

    I think the only way it will stop is that they go too far, and there is some kind of revolution. Let's get on with it...

    --

    My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

    1. Re:I am FOR this, and all laws like it by kcbrown · · Score: 1
      I think the only way it will stop is that they go too far, and there is some kind of revolution. Let's get on with it...

      Revolution? When they (the governments) have all the guns (and really nasty ones at that)? Good luck, you're going to really, really need it.

      And if you don't believe me, then name just one successful revolution in the last 50 years by the civilian population against a government with a modern military, when the civilian population didn't have a lot of external military aid.

      --
      Use 'slashdot stuff' in the subject line in any email you send me if you want to get past the spam filter.
  111. How stupid! by polyp2000 · · Score: 1

    Piracy is illegal by definition. Why make a specific law regarding P2P? piracy is illegal whatever method is used. Why should one form of piracy be worse than any other?

    --
    Electronic Music Made Using Linux http://soundcloud.com/polyp
  112. then, rule out guns too!! by gamelux · · Score: 1

    If we are going to prohibite technologies that could be used for illegal as well as legal purposes, then rule out guns (and so many other things).

  113. What about smtp, http and ftp? by theolein · · Score: 1

    Since just about any extant technology can be used to share data, such as downloading a file via http or ftp or sending attachments vial email, where exactly does this end? If a pirated music file is sent as an attachment with an email, does it suddenly make email illegal too?

    P2P is simply a more convenient form of file transfer. That's all. This measure must be opposed!

  114. Something is very wrong with the EU... by An+Ominous+Cow+Erred · · Score: 1

    ...and it's called the European Commission. It's no wonder so many people in EU nations hate the concept of the EU -- its executive branch is made up of officials that A) Aren't elected, B) Can pass legislature on their own as if they WERE the legislature -- and instead it's the legislature's job to vote DOWN European Commission directives! (se e the whole software patent case where the EU Parliament saved our butts repeatedly)

    The whole EU model needs to be scrapped and rebuilt from the ground up. =/ Either have an elected presidency or a prime minister or SOMETHING as the executive branch... ...not a bunch of oligarchs.

  115. Google is next? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Google and all search engines are inherently file-sharing tools. I have a file (a webpage) and they help me share it with others.

    Search for "doom3 filetype:torrent" on Google and the third link will get you a pirated copy of the game.

    Should Google be liable now for being a file-sharing tool that is ultimately used for piracy?

  116. Re:Reality check : Federal Sentencing Guidelines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The reality is that ( if you are found guilty ) when the sentencing phase arrives, there may as well be a computer behind the bench, instead of a human judge. In other words, your only chance is if the jury declares you "not guilty".

    In case some of you cannot figure this out, this places the federal courts in the US a lot closer to fascism than any courts in western Europe.


    Why is consistancy in sentencing a bad thing? You claim to be a lawyer, but you haven't presented your case in a convincing manner. What, besides inflamatory rhetoric about a so-called "facism" and "police states" do you really object to in these regulations?

    You argue that a computer making consistant decisions is somehow worse than a biased judge: I'm not at all sure I agree. An unbiased judicial process is inherently a good thing, is it not? It's not the place of a judge to argue with the law; it's his job to enforce the statues as written.

    I think sentencing has gotten way too lax: I'd require that the minimum sentence for all crimes to be 3/4 of the maximum sentence. I understand that some people think that there should be degrees to punishment, but I think that consistancy in law enforcement is important. Judicial bias is a flaw in the system; minimizing it is vital to a fair and balanced legal system.
    --
    AC

  117. Added to TODO list by AigariusDebian · · Score: 1

    I just contacted my government to start discussing this directive. Thanks for the warning.

  118. Some misconceptions by antientropic · · Score: 2, Interesting

    What the hell is it with this unelected bunch of goons? First they do their level best to introduce patents across the EU, despite the will of the (elected) parliament, now they're sticking their noses into another area they know bugger all about.

    You seem to be confused about how the EU works. The commission only proposes legislation. But nothing happens unless the Council agrees with it. That means a sizeable majority of the governments of the member states. So if bad legislation is passed in the EU, you should probably be complaining to your own government.

    Of course, the same ministers who approve things in the Council then turn around and tell their peoples that unpopular decisions are "Europe's" fault, thus covering their own asses.

    And they wonder why people across the EU are jumping at the chance to say NO to the EU constitution, which cements the Commission into place...

    The Commission has existed in this form since 1967 or so. I'd say it's quite "cemented" already. And the rejection of the constitution means that its current powers stay exactly the same.

    How on earth did we get this bunch of cretins foisted upon us

    Probably because our respective democratically elected parliaments decided to join the EU.

    and why aren't we the people of the EC allowed to say "actually, no, we don't want them, we never have"?

    Spare me the victim mentality. You're not living in North Korea. You have elections, you know.

  119. Re:Messy? Unclear? by ultranova · · Score: 1

    If you distribute copyrighted stuff from your computer without any formal agreement with the copyright holder to perform such distribution, you're liable. If you distribute non-copyrighted stuff -- public domain, creative commons, or (gods forbid!) something you've created yourself, -- you're okey doke.

    The problem is this part of the summary: "If the directive is adopted, developers who create software for file sharing that is then used for illegal ends could potentially be criminally liable in EU member countries." Under this definition, making a web servers would be a criminal offense - web server are programs that give access to certain resources (usually files) through HTTP protocol. Web browsers aren't in the clear either, since they can certainly be used to distribute copyrighted content - for example, I could include lyrics from some song in this comment.

    So either this law is interpreted literally, leading to a horrible mess of absurd lawsuits, or it will be interpreted different than it is written, which makes it unclear (since apparently even its makers didn't realize what they were doing - at least I hope they didn't and did this out of stupidity and not malice).

    This is a poorly thought out and detrimental to the general public law, and therefore will propably pass.

    --

    Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

  120. Everything is now illeagl by Mallaien · · Score: 2, Informative

    With the brilliance that come from making somthing illeagl just because of its potentil to cause harm would mean that any software can be illeagl. For instance, TCP, HTTP can be used to send pirated copies of software and child porn, should we now start arresting the IT people? Al Gore better watch out cause he claims to have invented all this. Its a bad day when it becomes a crime to make, build, or design anything that could be used for crime, but a good day for criminals. Criminals naturally dont follow rules, its only the law abiding that wll suffer.

  121. PirateBay! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Arrrrrrrrrrrrrrr, 'matey! I be smelling dar PirateBay be moving then!

  122. What are we doing about it? by Simonetta · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Actually, it would appear that we are doing quite a bit. According to Rolling Stone magazine, sales of prerecorded CDs are falling about 5-7% a year. This is happening despite various superstar's hot new albums and mass purchases of must-have new releases. And despite that so many teeny-boppers have so much of their parent's money to spend and no political awareness whatsoever. Plus the audience of young people continues to grow worldwide and there is generally more money available for the purchase of recordings. The number of recorded music sales should be growing each year, but it is not.
        Perhaps it is because we are effectively disseminating the message that there are alternatives to purchasing RIAA product on their terms and on their demanded price levels.
        As for doing some kind of symbolic political action that attempts to presuade American politicians to consider a particular course of action? Forget it, symbolic political actions like marches, petitions, demonstrations, have no effect on the political process in the USA any more. You'll just end up getting sunburned, maced, tazered, arrested, and laughed at on the Murdoch-Clear Channel new outlets.
        Keep quietly downloading, copying, and trading music and movies with your friends, and spending less and less on RIAA and MPAA product. It will take another 15-20 years, but eventually they will come to us to negotiate their continued existance on our terms, regardless of what stupid laws that they get their purchased politicians to pass.
        These guys are having a real hard time understanding that this is the beginning of the information age and the age of the nation/state corporate or communist control of the economy is passing. In the information age, the people who create and guide the technology that distributes information have more power than the people who are able to control the systematic application of violence.
        This is a long and slow transformation, but it is irreversable. Eventually the RIAA and MPAA will be on the side of the P2P designers and decentralized information distributers. They have no other real place to go. However, it's going to take a long time and there are going to be a lot of people put in prison for listening to music during the transistion. Do try not to be one of them.

  123. Did you think the **AA's would allow europe to be by plasmacutter · · Score: 1

    ... different on the MGM v grokster ruling? The posters modded "insightful" have this the wrong way around. It is not something which "will" pop up in the us, this is something which HAS popped up in the us by megalomaniac judges who were legislating from the bench. The proposed EU directive is designed to implement what hollywood "THOUGHT" it received from the ruling, meaning a very overbroad implementation of MGM v. Grokster.

    --
    VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
  124. Is this? by Karem+Lore · · Score: 1

    Is this the way things are going because our western economy are starting to struggle to keep shareholders happy thereby causing the little man to pay every penny they own to get the latest CD from HMV that they will listen to about 5 times cause they can't use the same CD on their car MP3 player?

    --
    When all is said and done, nothing changes...
  125. Liability? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In a legal battle, it could be argued that the operating system software itself technically allowed the users to commit the acts of piracy as well, or maybe even the network driver software. Where does the buck stop? Who here would like to see Billy Gates in a cell for authoring software which could be used to commit copyright infringement?

  126. Re:Funny, I thought piracy was already a criminal by KillShill · · Score: 1

    one would then have to consider that perhaps there was an alternate reason for establishing "hate" laws.

    --
    Science : Proprietary , Knowledge : Open Source
  127. First copyright battle led to thousands of deaths. by PGillingwater · · Score: 1

    According to various Irish historians, St. Colmcille borrowed a psalm book from St. Finian and secretly copied it. Someone told St. Finian and he demanded the copy. St. Colmcille refused. The high king said "to every cow its calf and to every book its copy."

    St. Colmcille still refused, and so a battle was fought in 561 A.D. The armies clashed at Cooldrumman and over 3,000 men were reputed to have been slain. Colmcille built a monastery and then exiled himself in repentance.

    This represents the earliest European edict in regard to copyright -- so let the battle cry ring out:

    To every cow its calf, to every book its copy!

    --
    Paul Gillingwater
    MBA, CISSP, CISM
  128. Let's end the internet then.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Al Gore should be held responsible for Internet Piracy, as you all know, he created the internet.

    The Apache Group is also guilty, for providing means to download piracy over the web.

    But the real mastermind behind piracy is, in fact, IBM. They created that "winchester" thing that is used until today to, you know, archive piracy.

    SHAME ON YOU ALL.
    "rolls eyes".

  129. The Bonus by shareme · · Score: 1

    The Bonus is one fell swoop they outlaw US military operatiosn in EU due to US Military actually using P2p in its infrastructure.. Genius!

    --
    Fred Grott(aka shareme) http://mobilebytes.wordpress.com
  130. Commercial Infringement by Mendy · · Score: 1

    "This Article obliges Member States to consider all intentional infringements of an intellectual
    property right on a commercial scale as a criminal offence." (emphasis mine)

    from skim reading the linked pdf it looks as if it's aimed people violating copyright in order to make money, and isn't infact going to make criminals out of teenagers using kazaa.

    1. Re:Commercial Infringement by cranos · · Score: 1

      Define commercial. This is the problem, it could be argued that somebody sharing a file out to the however million users of the various P2P systems is doing it on a "Commercial" scale just due to the size of the potential download market.

  131. Oh please.... by Eric+Damron · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "As much as you seem to think that sadaam is a fun-loving guy that should be invited to everyone's graduation party..he killed 100's of thousands more than the U.S. invasion. But protesters seem to always forget this part."

    That is so much bullshit. NOBODY likes Saddam. What a lot of people are pissed off about is that we were mislead into an unnecessary war. Iraq is NOT about terrorism. It was suppose to be about weapons of mass destruction but the Bush administration takes every opportunity to say that our troops are being attacked by "the terrorists." We invaded their fucking country and a lot of Iraq people are pissed off about that. Those Iraq people who are fighting us are NOT terrorists so let's stop justifying a war that was planned way before 9/11 and impeach the dumb son of a bitch that is the cause of over a thousand of our fine American men and women who faithfully followed the really stupid and evil orders of this administration.

    --
    The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
    1. Re:Oh please.... by utexaspunk · · Score: 1

      Well, actually, most of the people who are fighting us in Iraq ARE terrorists- even Al Qaeda (tm) terrorists. The thing is, they weren't there before we went in and fucked everything up.

      Saddam may have been a bad guy, but he ruled his country with an iron fist and kept things under control. Some might even suggest that Saddam's despotic methods are the only way a country with such disparate and opposed factions as Iraq can be controlled.

      In any case, the war was sold to Americans on a big string of lies, and then when the UN didn't buy it (I don't think the administration seriously wanted UN support anyway) we "went it alone" with the few friends that we could bribe into going with us. We didn't have enough troops to secure the peace after Saddam's regime fell (cut to shots of looting and general lawlessness) which gave the Al Qaeda folks time to get in and establish a foothold, the troops that we DO have are ill-equipped for the job (see 14 marines killed the other day in an AMPHIBIOUS craft in the middle of Iraq) and the fact that it was clearly a US action and not a UN action just helped stir up the regional extremist ant pile with regard to terrorism recruitment.

      Indeed, nobody liked Saddam or was opposed to removing him from power, but the way we went about doing it was so completely idiotic that we've created a big mess for ourselves for years to come.

      Alas, all my bitching about it is for naught. Nobody ever changes their minds...

    2. Re:Oh please.... by Eric+Damron · · Score: 1

      It seems to me that the sticking point is the definition of "terrorist." I'm sure that what the Bush administration did has created a breeding ground for hate groups and that we will see more terrorist activity because of it. However, we should not paint every attack with the terrorist brush. Many attacks, if not most, are from angry Iraq citizens who want to kick the infidels out of their holy lands. But Monkey Boy takes every opportunity to call any forces fighting us "terrorists" so that he can morph his evil little war into something that can be justified.

      If I have anything to say about it George Bush AKA Monkey Boy is NOT going to warp history. History is going to rightly condemn him for his actions and the actions of everyone who shoved this war down our throats. I also have bitched and warned and told people that there were no WMDs before we attacked Iraq but nothing could have prevented it because the mental midget in the white house had decided to attack no matter what. Also there was profit in it for companies who have connections in the White House. (A bit of an over simplification but more than a grain of truth.)

      Before this war started I asked who will be held accountable when we find no WMDs. Apparently I was correct not only in my assertion that there were no WMD but that no one would be held accountable, least of all Monkey Boy.

      --
      The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
    3. Re:Oh please.... by utexaspunk · · Score: 1

      Well, a good portion of the insurgents might actually qualify as "terrorists", although they'd probably be living normal lives if the war hadn't happened. My understanding is that a good majority of the insurgents are people who, fueled with anti-American rage and brainwashed into desiring martyrdom, sneaked in from Saudi Arabia, Syria and Iran after we invaded, and are being directed by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, who actually is affiliated w/Al Qaeda. The administration seems to think "better they attack us over there than over here", but the people attacking us wouldn't likely be Al Qaeda recruits in the first place if we hadn't invaded Iraq.

      And while I agree with the sentiment that Bush is a monkey boy, I think calling him that repeatedly is rather immature and lends weight to any Republican counterargument that you're just a brainwashed Bush-bashing liberal. Always be the civil and mature one in the argument, and you will have the upper hand against anyone who wants to reduce it to name-calling.

    4. Re:Oh please.... by Eric+Damron · · Score: 1

      "And while I agree with the sentiment that Bush is a monkey boy, I think calling him that repeatedly is rather immature and lends weight to any Republican counterargument that you're just a brainwashed Bush-bashing liberal. Always be the civil and mature one in the argument, and you will have the upper hand against anyone who wants to reduce it to name-calling."

      Born out of pure frustration.

      --
      The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
  132. How does it affect WebDAV? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hello SlashDotters,

    I have a piracy ring that trades zero-day softwarez using WebDAV and a couple perl-scripts. How would this law affect us?

    I don't think we're breaking any law, since we're not using P2P. Downloads on WebDAV using perl glue-scripts are much faster! Almost twice as fast!

    w3bd4v 1nt3rn4t10n4l p1r4cy r1ng!

  133. asdf by tirefire · · Score: 1

    Oh, goody!

    That is all.

  134. This is GOOD!..... by Soothh · · Score: 1

    Now MS can be sued.... due to that phishing email being written in Outlook!!!!

    --
    We have seen that living things are too improbable and too beautifully "designed" to have come into existence by chance.
  135. Re:Reality check : Federal Sentencing Guidelines by deanoaz · · Score: 1

    >>>The reality is that ( if you are found guilty ) when the sentencing phase arrives, there may as well be a computer behind the bench, instead of a human judge. In other words, your only chance is if the jury declares you "not guilty".

    >>>In case some of you cannot figure this out, this places the federal courts in the US a lot closer to fascism than any courts in western Europe.

    Didn't history's great fascist regimes have ways of making sure an accused was found guilty?

    In the U.S. that is up to the jury and the jury always has the power to find a defendant not-guilty, no matter what the facts.

    If the punishment phase is consistent, the jury ends up taking this into account as well. For instance I've seen a jury refuse to bring in a guilty verdict on a particular charge because the likely penalty seemed too severe for the circumstances.

    With the U.S. Jury system in place there is not so much need for Judicial leeway.

    "We have a criminal jury system which is superior to any in the world; and its efficiency is only marred by the difficulty of finding twelve men every day who don't know anything and can't read."
      - Mark Twain

    --
    If 'the people' in Amendment 2 are 'the state' then Amendments 1, 2, 4, 9, and 10 benefit the state, not you.
  136. I propose by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I propose that we bomb europe into the mud.

  137. that's life by Flunitrazepam · · Score: 1

    "It gets really messy, because it is unclear what is legal or not legal, and it is problematic to operate with such abstract terms"

    Gee, kind of like morality in general, huh?

    --
    1) Your analysis is based on bad assumptions so your result is way off. 2) You're a sick bastard for fucking a horse.
  138. Re:First copyright battle led to thousands of deat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The armies clashed at Cooldrumman and over 3,000 men were reputed to have been slain

    Indeed. But it is important to note Colmcille's side WON THE BATTLE and that particular High King was, ahem, removed from office.

    Colmcille built a monastery and then exiled himself in repentance.

    You leave out what he did in those monasteries (he founded a network of monasteries): Set up an organisation of scribes tirelessly copying any books they came across.

    Columcille's "repentance" was for the loss of life due to the battle, and his "repentance" consisted of making sure to copy and redistributing as many books and scrolls his monks could get hold of :-)

    Colmcille's network of monasteries are credited with preserving large amounts of Classical (i.e. Roman era) literature through the dark ages.

    If that "battle cry" rings out, it will be the forces of darkness once again using it.

  139. Time to march? by King_TJ · · Score: 1

    Nah, I don't think so. Seriously, the sit-ins, the protest marches, etc. etc. What did they *really* accomplish, other than a lot of "feel good/I did my part!" stuff for those involved in all of it?

    Back in the days of Vietnam, the country still went to war and got all those folks killed anyway. All that high-profile protesting and burning of draft cards didn't change a thing in the govt. policy of the day.

    They only quit when they decided for themselves, as military leaders and political figures that they had no way of winning and it wasn't accomplishing any "good" for them anymore.

    The best you can do is educate as many people as possible about what's going on around them, so at least they don't let things slip past them, completely unaware. In the case of technical concepts, your most receptive audience is the minority of people who write the software, use the software, and follow technology trends. That means, web sites like Slashdot, Ars Technica, etc.

    I've said time and time again, short of election of an independent political party with fresh, radically different ideas of a direction to take the nation - everything else amounts to little more than "going through the motions" anyway. Do I expect the Bush presidency to pay a lick of attention to me if I gather up even 50,000 people interested in p2p sharing rights and march on the lawn in D.C.? Nope... because we're not the ones lining the pocketbooks of the senators, congressmen, and other political figures like the companies are that fund the opposing viewpoints.

  140. This is pushing it too far by marco13185 · · Score: 0

    I support companies rights to protect there property, but this is too far. I, and every other entity, has the right to create whatever application I care to. The use of such an application is not my concern at all. The people who do illegal shit with my software are responsible for there own actions. This is stupid. Software is like a gun. A gun is only a tool, it is harmless and safe. A gun is not a killer, criminals, soldiers, and marines are killers. My software is not a hacker or software pirate. People that use it for illegal reasons are.

  141. Al Qaeda announces new jihad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Al Queda announced today that they will focus all their energy into digital piracy. Once there is free music, free software, and free movies to anyone who wants them, the entire western economy will crumble like a house of cards. "It is all your fault for making vapor worth more than things that actually exist," said Omar Ibn Al Maktoum. He went on to add, "Allah Ackbar!"

  142. Just like gun registry... by grumpyman · · Score: 1

    ...we can have legal users register with the government for legal use, and leave the illegal users to conduct their business underground!!

  143. Freedom wears out only when you don't use it. by Nirgal+the+druid · · Score: 1

    Private copies are legal (Berne convention).

    You have the right to record braodcasts, to copy CDs for your own use. Just do it more. And encourage it more.

  144. Re:Funny, I thought piracy was already a criminal by Eightyford · · Score: 1

    Alternate but flawed. If someone murders me (a white, straight, atheist, Canadian male) they should get the same punishment as someone who assaults a black, gay, jewish, Saudi woman. Right?

  145. Re:Funny, I thought piracy was already a criminal by Eightyford · · Score: 1

    Actually, the moment I hit submit I regretted it. Ideally I think my above statement is correct, but realistically if I saw a lynching I would want everyone involved to fry.

  146. Re:First copyright battle led to thousands of deat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Next time you tell your little anecdote about the first copyright law, you might want to supply a bit more information.

    That account misses some important points:

    Columcille's side won the battle and the High King Diarmaid soon became an ex-High King, for starters.

    If you are reading this and wondering wtf a priest was doing with a thousands-strong army, it helps to know Colum O'Donnell (Columcille was his nickname because he was associated with the church (cille) was a prince from a very powerful clan (he was a descendant of Niall of the Nine Hostages)), and thus himself potentially in line for the throne before he gave up his title and joined the church.

    And Columcille didn't just "build a monastery and exile himself" - he travelled around the islands of Britannia and Hibernia, founding monasteries such as Iona dedicated in part to the preservation of ancient literature by its transcription (i.e. rampant copying :-) ).

    That "battle cry" does represent the first recorded instance of a copyright law in Europe. And it is nothing to be proud of. The thing to be proud of is that Columcille spotted and defeated the nascent tyranny of the first copyright law.

    Look also at Columcille's defence of the Bards - does that sound like a man who "repented" of his opposition to copyright??? No - Columcille repented the great loss of life in the battle with the High King's forces, but did all he could to oppose those who would stifle the free flow of information.

    Columcille was made a saint. But he was a scholar first and foremost, and a truly good man who quickly saw what I ("even" as an atheist) consider a real evil and defeated it. His legacy made Ireland a beacon of knowledge and hope in the Europe of the Dark Ages after the fall of the Roman empire, a legacy then carried to continental europe by St. Columbanus (easily confused with Columba, but a different guy...)

    People think I'm crazy when I say there might yet be another war about copyright. But there might have to be, or we might not ever escape its tyranny.

  147. no juries by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No juries in the fed district courts. Just judges. And those are usually very important cases. You have grand juries which can offer to indict, but that's it, no sitting juries for the case itself. In lesser cases and courts (states/counties/municipal), any number of people have been persecuted by malicious judges and DAs if a juror tries to use jury nullification of the law.

    The US court system is more corrupt than not, it's the main phony legitimizing influence of "the system". It's a racket, same as the legislative and executive branches, and they use their mercenaries with badges as the muscle to keep themselves and cronies in power. There are exceptions of course, but the rule is as outlined.

  148. EU Proposing to Make P2P Piracy A Criminal Offense by Lobi+Wan · · Score: 2, Informative

    I almost always go back to first principles when hearing such stuff and it seems to me that this would set a fundamental precident such that, for example: the inventor of the kitchen knife will be liable for all the murders done using his creation. This makes the creator liable for the actions taken by anyone using his creation and NOT the perpetrator him/herself. Presumably, one could then do anything one damned well pleased with no consequences to oneself so long as one used something created/invented by someone else. Lobi Wan

  149. RE: by rupert0 · · Score: 1
    developers who create software for file sharing that is then used for illegal ends
    Why not sue Sun,Borland,Microsoft,etc....at the end it's made with the tools they've developed ? Quite stupid hah ?
    --
    RUPERT! I TOLD YOU TO WATCH THE BAGS! You were looking at the boys again, WEREN'T YOU.
  150. What happened? by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    Simple, though i cant tell you when it happened..

    Now, if you stand up for your rights, you risk being jailed, detained, or just plain 'taken to the cleaners'.

    The ability for the common man to rise up has been severely throttled as of late..

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  151. Re:Beer! The other p2p by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Won't somebody think of the children!

  152. I downloaded some warez with IE... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    how liable is Microsoft?

  153. It's called a strike by zogger · · Score: 1

    ...unions have done it forever. "IT" people in general hold the keys to the modern way of life. IT makes the whirrled whirl. IF there was a general interest and IF you could get enough IT people to particpate, they hold more power than all the industrial labor unions combined, and then some. I have used an analogy before because it fits. Imagine a worst case y2k crash scenario. It is *possible* to approach that level merely by shutting things off, not going to work, walking away from the screen, the terminal, the control panel.. you get the picture. A "strike", a plain vanilla old fashioned work stoppage, just on a large scale, and against critical infrastructure, both utilities and business. Think about all that power. The "man" would be near powerless to do anything except bluster. What would happen if wall street ceased to function one day? The telcos? The electric grid? Public utilities, shipping, etc, etc? It's GEEKS who actually run all that stuff, NOT the bosses, NOT the politicians, NOT the CEOs, NOT the stock traders, NOT the banksters. GEEKS.

    Stay apart and squabble=no power, politically impotent. This is how it is now. bitch, moan, complain,then back to the videogame.

      That's why nothing ever gets fixed.

        Organize to the point that you could pull off a major strike over a few key issues,(P2P, software patents, DRM, ridiculous copyright extensions, etc) then you would get noticed. They would have to deal with you because they don't have any backups.

        24 hrs with civilization mostly shutdown would get you some power and respect.

    That is about all that would work I think. I have thought about it a lot. it's not perfect, but everything else is a worse idea. Everything else, as has been pointed out, has failed. You STRIKE. When things get to the point that it appears you have no other options, STRIKE. Refuse to particpate in "business as usual". They can't call your bluff because THEY can't do the things necessary to even do that, let alone run everything else.

        On a small scale, sure, some people here and there can be replaced, even in a no notice emergency situation. But on a nation wide (or continent wide) scale, NOPE, da *man* couldn't replace you, and they can't do the work and they depend on the work being done to stay in power.

  154. Film business by hernyo · · Score: 1

    Most of the Slashdot members say that P2P SHOULD be legal. Let's see how somebody working in the film industry sees this.

    A VERY low budget film costs around one million euros / dollars, whatever. 5 million is still low budget. Of course every film has a pretty good income, let's say our film has 100 million euros income. Around 65% remains at the exhibitor (the cinema operating company). There is 35% (35 mil) going to the distributor. 50% of this goes to the sales agent (17.5 mil) and around 85% of this goes to the producing companies (~15%). So around 15% of the gross box office reaches the producing companies, which is not that much! It is VERY rare that a 1 mil budget film has 100 mil GBO (100:1), companies are glad even with 1:1. Of course there are other income sources, such as TV sales, DVD rental and sales and many other.

    The fact is that most of the European films would mean sure bankruptcy without government's subsidies. In the UK the film industry is subsidied from lottery money, in France from taxpayer's money; every country has different sources and strategies to subsidie the "seventh art".

    How is this related to P2P? Don't tell me you don't know. Everbody want to watch / own their favourite films without paying a freaking buck. Divx, Xvid formats are suitable both for quick downloading, storing (6 movies on a dvd), both for home screening (computer, tv, digital projector).

    It would be obvious that conclude that P2P and piracy creates the possibility that people watch all the movies at home and don't go to cinema / don't buy dvds, but... last month we released a two year old film, you could find it everywhere on the illegal market (including p2p), it was aired AT THE SAME TIME on TV and...it had pretty good addmissions! This (among other things) led us to the conclusion that people do not go to cinema to see THIS film but to go spend their free time, to go somewhere else than home. Just like coffe or beer: you can drink it at home (with or without your friends) and you can go to a much more expensive cafe or bar to drink it. And don't tell me that bars would have a lot more clients if you couldn't buy beer for home: only the number of beers drank would be much lower.

    Sometimes P2P and piracy drives me mad that we have less addmissions, sometimes it makes me glad that people who wouldn't otherwise go to cinema have the possibility to watch that gorgeous film.


    - yeah, i know, my englisk sucks

    ...my english also

  155. "intentional" by PurpleWizard · · Score: 1
    I'm not a fan of the way we treat copyright and have general contempt for the areas labelled IP. However...

    My big worry with this EU proposal was that it would not have "intent" as part of it thus making it a crime merely to do it by accident. Which in my opinion would have made the offense be treated as something more serious than murder because even for that intent must be proven to the jury.

    Article 3 does I am glad to say have intentional in its current drafting. How that will translate into national laws through Europe though is another question.

    Unfortunately they do refer to intellectual property and as far as I know that is quite an undefined term hence RMS getting so upset about its use as a term.

  156. Flawed premise for the law? by PurpleWizard · · Score: 1
    The "Justification for the proposal" includes the following: "Counterfeiting and piracy, and infringements of intellectual property ... since they are a serious threat to national economies and governments."

    It suffers from the appalling abuse of piracy for one. But worse to me is the unsubstantiated argument that it is a serious threat to economies and governments. It might be but I really would like to see them cite a justification rather than justify something by pulling a statement out of the air and pretending that it is self evident.

  157. No worries by Dreamwalkerofyore · · Score: 0

    Guys, guys, no need to fret. The french will just veto it. Again. You see, vetoing is like striking, and as such is something we are naturally proficient at. We just do what we do best.

    --
    I am a viral sig. Please copy me and help me spread. Thank you.
  158. That's what I get for hitting post too soon by Safety+Cap · · Score: 1
    for most US courts, "threatening" means that your life is in danger
    Not in Texas.
    A person is justified in using deadly force against another to protect land or tangible, movable property
    (2) when and to the degree he reasonably believes the deadly force is immediately necessary:
    (A) to prevent the other's imminent commission of arson, burglary, robbery, aggravated robbery, theft during the nighttime, or criminal mischief during the nighttime;
    -- Texas Penal Code, Sec. 9.42.
    --
    Yeah, right.