EU Court: ISPs Can't Be Forced To Monitor All Traffic
mmcuh writes "Back in 2004, Belgian copyright group Sabam managed to get a court order forcing the ISP Scarlet to filter out filesharing traffic. Scarlet took the case to a national appeals court, which in turn asked the European Court of Justice for an opinion. The opinion was delivered today: 'EU law precludes an injunction made against an internet service provider requiring it to install a system for filtering all electronic communications passing via its services which applies indiscriminately to all its customers, as a preventive measure, exclusively at its expense and for an unlimited period.
[...] It is true that the protection of the right to intellectual property is enshrined in the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the EU. There is, however, nothing whatsoever in the wording of the Charter or in the Court's case law to suggest that that right is inviolable and must for that reason be absolutely protected.'" An anonymous reader adds a link to the ruling itself, but notes "The ruling is not quite as broad as I would have liked, since it only pertains to filtering 'which applies indiscriminately to all its customers; exclusively at its expense; and for an unlimited period.'"
Complainant asks the court to require the ISP filter out content X for all customers, at its expense, for the next 20 years. (P.S.: See you in 20 years when we plan to re-file a duplicate of this request.) *
* See also U.S. Copyright duration.
We know where leadership by an anti-intellectual "strongman" who scapegoats minorities and likes boisterous rallies goes
Great, so, can we stop pretending that copyrights are more important than free speech now?
Palm trees and 8
The ruling is not quite as broad as I would have liked, since it only pertains to filtering 'which applies indiscriminately to all its customers; exclusively at its expense; and for an unlimited period."
That seems like a perfectly adequate compromise position.
This ruling places the onus for detection back on the rights holder, where it belongs. They are tasked with identifying violations and informing the ISP.
Then, if this holds up, the ISP places filters for a time less than infinite on that account. This does not limit that account to any other non-infringing use, nor does it limit any of the ISP's other customers.
Quite frankly, this sounds like the most logical solution to the "problem" I've seen to date. It's certainly much better than disconnection from the internet, and frankly I suspect this is much easier to implement as well.
Does anyone have a good counterargument?
Most of these cases and problems all step from piracy. The Respective authorites trying to "fix" a broken system. Copyrights, patents, trademarks, they just wont ever work for all parties when it comes to intelectual property and digitally stored media. Instead of running around, putting pots and pans down to catch leaking rain water, we need to fix the roof. Until then, there will be countless, pointless conversations about Moral vs Legal aspects. Each of which are vague and ever-changing. Every story I read about Authorities trying to tackle piracy, or tackle Internet related issues in general, I die a little more inside. Having said that, I don't thin we're in for any revolution anytime soon...
Although this ruling is a win for our rights and freedoms, given the deciding 3 terms: "indiscriminately, exclusively at its expense; and for an unlimited period", its clear the ruling is based on the rights of the ISP to not have to face additional undetermined expenses, rather than anything to do with protecting the internet or free speech.
Its been clear for decades if not centuries that the US government is so sold out that it prioritises big business profits above its own constitution, however its sad to see the same is apparently now true of the EU.
What they are saying is that there are cases where you could "violate" the copyright, some of them are even already defined, like in libraries for example, and some are not, but it would be up to the defendant to prove it.
You're thinking of the EU parliament not the EU Courts or council. Common Daily Fail reader problem.
Okay. we'll give you EUR 1 toward costs, duration will be the duration of our copyright, and you can exclude 193.108.12.60 from your searches. Thank you.
>exclusively at its expense
That little phrase is what it is all about, a company has no right to force another company to spend money, to the detriment of (the competitiveness of) its service, to enforce the law.
What. The. Fuck?
There is no such thing as "intellectual property". It's an oxymoron. It's nonsense. Let alone a "right to...". That's like saying "a right to live north of north pole". THAT DOESN'T EXIST, YOU IDIOTS!
It is a lie, spread by organized crime, namely the media reproduction and artist extortion Mafia*, to vaguely justify their nasty protection racket.
As long as the EU has this in their official documents, they are part of organized crime, and everyone of them who doesn't fight it deserves to be hunted down and shot like a dog.
* Note: No second "a", because they are not just "like" a Mafia. They are a Mafia. Including things like drug habits, and buying/bribing the cops.
Suppose they were successful in their monitoring and subsequent control of file sharing. It's not like the problem that are trying to address would be solved. I have a 250 GB external usb hard drive. For argument's sake lets just suppose I fill it with movies and music and MAIL IT TO YOU. You then fill the same hard drive with 250 GB of content that you have pirated and you mail it back to me. We are still sharing pirated content but just not over the interwebs. Ultimately, someone is going to have to come up with a way to stop people from pirating their content because there is no advancement in the overall legal situation by simply making it inconvenient for morons to share files.
if your life is such a big joke then why should I care?
I wonder if this gives BT chance to appeal against the News2bin rulings against it?
Donte Alistair Anderson Roberts - hi son!
Karma: Chameleon
Reading comments till now, I think it is good to understand the nature of this procedure. In this judicial procedure, which is described in the EU treaty, any judge in a member state can ask, and sometimes must, judgements on questions of EU law. The court answers the question. And nothing more than that.
In this case the referring court of appeals asked, als required, a specific question based on the case. Unlike most of you I don't think the european court is not broad enough in it's judgement. It is very specific on the balance between ownership rights and otter rights. In this case the human rights of the internet and the ownership rights of the ISP.
In it's judgement this court did what it could do, and it gave plenty of ammunition to lawyers defending against demands like the onze in this case. The importance can not easily be overestimated.
Today, most major trackers (bittorrent) support SSL connections, TOR was always encrypted, most filehosters (megaupload, hotfile, rapidshare, fileserve, filesonic, wupload etc.) also support SSL and then there's VPN...
There's simply no way filtering would hamper serious file sharers, not the common leecher if portals and tracker links silently used SSL. It's only effect would be higher bills (due to investments in computing power to perform the filtering) and slower traffic. It would not do anything worthwhile in the area of file sharing.
"For every complex problem, there is a solution that is simple, neat, and wrong." -- H.L. Mencken (1880-1956) --
..what happens, if these filters would to be placed, when a record company tries to sends it stuff from the studio to the cd-pressing company? :)