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The EU's Controversial Copyright Law Has Been Rejected -- For Now (bbc.com)

Members of the European Parliament have voted to reject a controversial copyright law in its current form, deciding to return to the issue in September. From a report: The law would have put a greater responsibility on individual websites to check for copyright infringements. But the web's inventor Sir Tim Berners-Lee and others had expressed concerns about the proposed rules, which they said threatened internet freedom. Opponents greeted the decision as a victory. Julia Reda, a Pirate Party MEP who had campaigned against the legislation tweeted: "Great success: Your protests have worked! The European Parliament has sent the copyright law back to the drawing board." BPI Music, which represents UK record labels, had supported the bill and tweeted: "We respect the decision... we will work with MEPs over the next weeks to explain how the proposed directive will benefit not just European creativity, but also internet users and the technology sector."

4 of 70 comments (clear)

  1. Bullshit ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    BPI Music, which represents UK record labels, had supported the bill and tweeted: "We respect the decision... we will work with MEPs over the next weeks to explain how the proposed directive will benefit not just European creativity, but also internet users and the technology sector."

    Lies, damned lies, and the public statements by the assholes in the copyright cartels.

    This will benefit nobody but the copyright people, and greatly harm everyone else.

    So much bullshit.

    1. Re:Bullshit ... by Faluzeer · · Score: 3, Informative

      Whilst I mostly agree with you, I believe it will also benefit the politicians as they will no doubt receive financial incentives to help change their votes when this is next debated.

  2. It was a proposed law with two bad elements in. by Sique · · Score: 4, Informative
    It was not just about turning platform providers into preemptive Copyright cops. There was a second provision: the Ancillary Copyright for press publishers. Similar laws were tried in several EU countries (e.g. Belgium, Spain, Germany), with not much success, as the belgian law is withdrawn, the german version is still enforced, but for EUR 3 million in ligitation cost, it made so far around EUR 20,000 for press editors, and the spanish version caused Google News to no longer listing any spanish publications.

    It was always argued that the large U.S. based internet companies like Google and Facebook would profit from being able to list snippeds of online press articles in their search results, news aggregations and timelines, and thus they should pay the press publishers for the priviledge to get those snippets. As it turned out, the true priviledge was for the press publishers to be listed, because as soon as Google delisted press publishers demanding payments according to the Ancillary Copyright, their traffic numbers plummeted. So Belgium withdrew the law, and in Germany, all press publishers gave Google a free license (and with lawsuits managed to drive all competing news aggregators out of business).

    Now they attempt the same in the whole EU, hoping to get a critical mass large enough to get Google to agree into payments for the little snippets.

    --
    .sig: Sique *sigh*
  3. Re:Europe by sjbe · · Score: 3, Informative

    Please notice the TFA is about the EU.

    Doesn't make a difference. The only thing that changes is which sound bites work. There is no evidence to suggest that EU voters are substantially let vulnerable to sound bites and lazy journalism than those in the US. Not as if Europe hasn't had their share of breathtakingly horrible leaders within the last century either. Personally I think England and the US voters keep trying to outdo each other in a contest to see who can do the dumbest thing possible.

    GB: "Let's exit this EU thing at huge cost to our economy"
    US: "Hold my beer..." *elects Donald Trump*