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Free P2P In France?

cyberbian writes to tell us that earlier in the week the French Parliament voted to allow free sharing of music and movies on the Internet. This ruling puts them in direct conflict with both the Media companies and the rest of the French government. From the article: " If the amendment survives, France would be the first country to legalize so called peer-to-peer downloading, said Jean-Baptiste Soufron, legal counsel to the Association of Audionautes, a French group that defends people accused of improperly sharing music files. The law would be a blow to media companies that increasingly use the courts worldwide to sue people for downloading or sharing music and movie files. Entertainment companies such as Walt Disney Co., Viacom Inc. and News Corp.'s Fox say free downloading of unauthorized copies of TV shows and movies before they are released on DVD will cost them $5 billion in revenue this year."

5 of 190 comments (clear)

  1. Duplicate article by Antony-Kyre · · Score: 4, Informative

    It's a duplicate, same URL as before. I know because I saved the page from a few days ago.

    1. Re:Duplicate article by DrHanser · · Score: 4, Informative
      The funny thing is that the ruling is largely symbolic anyway, and still has to pass the French Senate. From this article:
      But despite reports, this does not mean that P2P is legal in France. The vote would still need to pass in the French Senate, and even before then, it will probably need a second reading in the lower house, because the first one was a sham. To put it bluntly, this is a publicity stunt. The bill, which passed last night by a vote of 30 to 28, saw the remaining 519 deputies absent from the vote. They weren't there.
      --
      What is humor if not pain tempered by time?
  2. What about Canada? by eMartin · · Score: 5, Informative

    "If the amendment survives, France would be the first country to legalize so called peer-to-peer downloading"

    I was under the impression that it's already legal in Canada.

    Or does Canada not count?

    1. Re:What about Canada? by k00110 · · Score: 4, Informative

      In the initial ruling they say "But the judge denied that request. In a far-ranging decision, the court further found that both downloading music and putting it in a shared folder available to other people online appeared to be legal in Canada. "

      Makes it available to other people imply uploading so it must be legal. I think some recording associations are trying to mess with the judgement.

  3. It's more about global licence by Pierre+Carrey · · Score: 4, Informative

    Just to be precise : the 2 amendments voted are first steps towards the introduction of a global licence for download of video and musical content. People will be able to download content legally if they pay somehow for it. The next step should be to introduce a tax in the internet access fees in order to make the download fully legal.
    BUT, that is if the amendements are really fully accepted. The government is trying to reverse the movement and cancel the amendments (the bill intended at first was supposed to forbid P2P and be a real pain in the a**). The debates should start over in mid january.
    (Sorry, no english links to provide, everything I wrote is from french sites (ratiatum.com, liberation.fr))

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    ... or not.