EU Moves Forward With Agreement To Fundamentally Change The Internet From Open To Closed

from the closing-down-the-internet dept

Despite the fact that even the staunchest supporters of Article 13 were asking for it to be dropped from the final version of the EU Copyright Directive, that didn’t happen. In the final trilogue negotiations between the EU Council, the EU Commission and the EU Parliament, it appears that the agreed upon “compromise” is basically as bad as we feared. It will fundamentally change the entire nature of the internet. And not in a good way. As we recently discussed, the only way this makes sense is if the goal is to have the law be so bad that big internet companies feel forced to pay their way out of it.

And it appears that’s what we’ve got. MEP Julia Reda’s summary of the final deal highlights many of the problems with both Articles 11 and 13. Here’s the mess with Article 13:

  • Commercial sites and apps where users can post material must make ?best efforts? to preemptively buy licences for anything that users may possibly upload ? that is: all copyrighted content in the world. An impossible feat.
  • In addition, all but very few sites (those both tiny and very new) will need to do everything in their power to prevent anything from ever going online that may be an unauthorised copy of a work that a rightsholder has pointed out to the platform. They will have no choice but to deploy upload filters, which are by their nature both expensive and error-prone.
  • Should a court ever find their licensing or filtering efforts not fierce enough, sites are directly liable for infringements as if they had committed them themselves. This massive threat will lead platforms to over-comply with these rules to stay on the safe side, further worsening the impact on our freedom of speech.
  • And with Article 11:

    The final version of this extra copyright for news sites closely resembles the version that already failed in Germany ? only this time not limited to search engines and news aggregators, meaning it will do damage to a lot more websites.

    • Reproducing more than ?single words or very short extracts? of news stories will require a licence. That will likely cover many of the snippets commonly shown alongside links today in order to give you an idea of what they lead to. We will have to wait and see how courts interpret what ?very short? means in practice ? until then, hyperlinking (with snippets) will be mired in legal uncertainty.
    • No exceptions are made even for services run by individuals, small companies or non-profits, which probably includes any monetised blogs or websites.

    If this becomes law, I’m not sure Techdirt can continue publishing in the EU. At the very least, it will require us to spend a large sum of money on lawyers to determine what our liability risk is — to the point that it might just not be worth it at all. Article 13 makes a commenting system untenable, as we simply cannot setup a filter that will block people from uploading copyright-covered content. Article 11 potentially makes our posts untenable, since we frequently quote other news sites in order to comment on them (as we do above).

    This is, of course, the desire of those supporting both bills. It is not just to close the (made up, mythical) “value gap.” It is to fundamentally change the internet away from an open system of communications — one that anyone can use to bypass traditional gatekeepers, to a closed “broadcast” system, in which key legacy gatekeepers control access to the public, via a complicated set of licenses that strip all of the benefits and profits from the system.

    Not only will this do great harm to the general public’s ability to communicate freely over the internet, it will do massive harm to artists and creators — especially more independent ones, who will be effectively blocked from using these platforms to connect directly with their fans. Rather they will be required to go through “licensed” intermediaries, who will demand a huge cut of any money. In other words, it’s a return to the pre-internet days, where if you wanted to become a professional creator, your only options were to sign away all your rights to giant conglomerate record labels/studios/publishers.

    It is incredible — and incredibly disappointing — that the EU is moving towards bringing back such a world, but that is what the latest agreement means.

    There is still a chance to stop this from becoming law, though it will take a lot of effort. As Reda explains:

    We can still stop this law

    The Parliament and Council negotiators who agreed on the final text now return to their institutions seeking approval of the result. If it passes both votes unchanged, it becomes EU law, which member states are forced to implement into national law.

    In both bodies, there is resistance.

    The Parliament?s process starts with the approval by the Legal Affairs Committee ? which is likely to be given on Monday, February 18.

    Next, at a date to be announced, the EU member state governments will vote in the Council. The law can be stopped here either by 13 member state governments or by any number of governments who together represent 35% of the EU population (calculator). Last time, 8 countries representing 27% of the population were opposed. Either a large country like Germany or several small ones would need to change their minds: This is the less likely way to stop it.

    Our best bet: The final vote in the plenary of the European Parliament, when all 751 MEPs, directly elected to represent the people, have a vote. This will take place either between March 25 and 28, on April 4 or between April 15 and 18. We?ve already demonstrated last July that a majority against a bad copyright proposal is achievable.

    The plenary can vote to kill the bill ? or to make changes, like removing Articles 11 and 13. In the latter case, it?s up to the Council to decide whether to accept these changes (the Directive then becomes law without these articles) or to shelve the project until after the EU elections in May, which will reshuffle all the cards.

    If you’re an EU citizen, this next bit is important. Now is the time to start speaking up:

    This is where you come in

    The final Parliament vote will happen mere weeks before the EU elections. Most MEPs ? and certainly all parties ? are going to be seeking reelection. Articles 11 and 13 will be defeated if enough voters make these issues relevant to the campaigns. (Here?s how to vote in the EU elections ? change the language to one of your country?s official ones for specific information)

    It is up to you to make clear to your representatives: Their vote on whether to break the internet with Articles 11 and 13 will make or break your vote in the EU elections. Be insistent ? but please always stay polite.

    Together, we can still stop this law.

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    Comments on “EU Moves Forward With Agreement To Fundamentally Change The Internet From Open To Closed”

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    230 Comments
    hij (profile) says:

    How do you not publish somewhere on the internet

    How do you not publish in a different country when you are putting something on the web? Does this mean you will actively block a request from the EU? The idea of borders for an internet based publication is kind of quaint, but it also seems a bit onerous that a website based in a different country has to be the one to be aware of all the laws across the world and abide by all of them.

    PaulT (profile) says:

    Re: Re: How do you not publish somewhere on the internet

    "That is where geoblocking comes in."

    …and also where VPNs and other ways of circumventing geoblocking come in. So, the next round of this will be them trying to work out a way of banning consumer VPNs without accidentally destroying the ones depended upon by every modern business.

    Fun. So much better than making sure people actually understand what they’re asking for when passing laws…

    Anonymous Coward says:

    Re: Re: How do you not publish somewhere on the internet

    I’m not sure Techdirt can continue publishing in the EU

    That is where geoblocking comes in.

    To add to this discussion (hopefully) and because I’m honestly curious how this would work as well, how exactly does this work? Like hij, I don’t understand how merely putting up a website automatically makes you subject to the laws of every country on the planet and why you would have to geoblock other countries from reaching your site?

    I mean, if I put up my own blog site here in the US, I wouldn’t even consider checking to see if I comply with laws in some other country. Not my problem unless maybe I’m selling something. Now maybe if I bought top level domains controlled by other countries, then I could maybe see an argument that I was "publishing" in their country. But to put up a .com blog site and suddenly be limited by laws from a country I don’t live in and doesn’t host my site, I don’t understand this. Can someone explain this to me?

    I mean, even Google, who doesn’t abide by Chinese laws, can’t be sued by China for stuff on their site, as long as they don’t have any legal/physical presence in China. If they could, then China would be able to control what everyone in the world sees in Google search results, and that’s just not the case. Google would just give them a big "F you" and move on if they tried.

    Anonymous Coward says:

    Re: Re: Re: How do you not publish somewhere on the internet

    as long as they don’t have any legal/physical presence

    That’s the key. Google and other large internet content providers typically do have a presence in the EU. To avoid liability in the EU they would have to shut down those locations and lay off all of those employees.

    TD won’t be affected by this unless they have a satellite office in the EU.

    I can only see this as a good thing. The EU will witness the damage they themselves wrought, as Spain did, and hopefully see fit to undo the damage. Of course the fiscal repercussions will take quite a while to unravel but they did, after all, ask for it. Something needs to happen to pound some sense into their heads.

    Bergman (profile) says:

    Re: Re: Re:2 How do you not publish somewhere on the internet

    Well, kinda sorta unaffected.

    The EU would be unable to sue TD and win in a US court because EU laws have no power here. The EU could try in an EU court, but would have trouble collecting damages because US laws shield against US companies having to obey foreign court judgments that would violate the US Constitution.

    But, and there is always a but, there is the criminal law side to consider. The US generally won’t extradite a US citizen over something that is constitutionally-protected in the US, but it’s not unheard of — people have been extradited from the US to Germany for saying things to Germans that violated German laws.

    And if anyone who works for TD ever travels to the EU or to a country that has an extradition treaty with the EU, they could be subject to arrest and prosecution for what TD publishes that violates EU law, even though TD has no EU presence.

    PaulT (profile) says:

    Re: Re: Re: How do you not publish somewhere on the internet

    I suspect that the issue is just complicated because, like the GDPR, nobody really understands what the impact will be, especially not the people who wrote it.

    In Techdirt’s case, while they don’t directly publish in the EU, they do utilise some tech with an EU presence (e.g. Cloudflare) which could leave them exposed, and it’s certainly a risk given the inability of some courts to understand what a CDN is. Even if any legal issues coming their way are utter rubbish, it still costs money to ensure you’re not liable.

    Anonymous Coward says:

    Re: Re: Re:2 How do you not publish somewhere on the internet

    I can’t imagine that simply using Cloudflare would automatically make you subject to another country’s laws. Cloudflare themselves might be subject to some of them, and I suppose you could say TD is the user and Cloudflare the host, therefore Cloudflare would be responsible for any infringing content TD posts, but oh man would there be a shitstorm if that was the case.

    Even if any legal issues coming their way are utter rubbish, it still costs money to ensure you’re not liable.

    That’s kind of my point though. Blog sites operating and hosted in the US don’t have to worry about legal issues coming from other countries at all because it’s another country. The US would just say "you have no jurisdiction, pound sand" and that would be that.

    PaulT (profile) says:

    Re: Re: Re:3 How do you not publish somewhere on the inte

    "I can’t imagine that simply using Cloudflare would automatically make you subject to another country’s laws."

    It probably won’t, but what Mike is saying is that he would need expert legal advice to be sure and it could be more cost effective just to block. Same with with the GDPR – it’s so confusing that some people would rather block than have any potential liability, no matter how small.

    btr1701 (profile) says:

    Re: Re: Re:2 How do you not publish somewhere on the internet

    The U.S. Congress needs to address this directly as it did with Britain’s ridiculous defamation laws. There Congress passed a law saying the US won’t recognize or enforce any UK defamation judgment against a US citizen for speech that would be protected under US law.

    They need to do the same thing with this EU abomination and make it clear that US citizens and business are not required to implement upload filters and will not be held liable for the comments of their users. We have our own laws– flawed though they may be– on this subject and the EU doesn’t get to preempt them and put its own in their place.

    Bergman (profile) says:

    Re: Re: Re:2 How do you not publish somewhere on the internet

    The GDPR’s civil law side portions that exceed US privacy laws probably don’t apply to US citizens and US companies located in the US that lack an EU presence — US federal law shields US citizens from court judgments in foreign countries that would violate the US Constitution.

    But it’s possible to be criminally charged under the GDPR, and the US has a criminal extradition treaty with the EU. The US has extradited people to the EU for things that are constitutionally protected in the US but criminally (not civilly) illegal in Europe.

    And most countries don’t have that protection the US does.

    So people all over the world are complying with the GDPR even when they probably don’t need to, just to be on the safe side.

    Anonymous Coward says:

    Re: Re: Re:3 How do you not publish somewhere on the inte

    The US has extradited people to the EU for things that are constitutionally protected in the US but criminally (not civilly) illegal in Europe.

    Do you have links to reports of these incidents? Because frankly I find that hard to believe. Unless said "crime" was committed in the actual country and not on US soil, I’m not sure how that can be true. If that was the case, the US would be extraditing half of its population for criminal trials because we say and do things every single day that would be considered "crimes" under other countries’ law.

    I find this especially hard to believe in regards to speech. Freedom of speech is possibly the most hard protected right of US citizenry in the US. For the US to then go and extradite someone based on the fact that they said something online/over the phone/text/etc… while still being on US soil and it was legal in the US but a crime in another country would fly in the face of that right.

    btr1701 (profile) says:

    Re: Re: Re: How do you not publish somewhere on the internet

    But to put up a .com blog site and suddenly be limited by laws from a country I don’t live in and doesn’t host my site, I don’t understand this.

    That’s because it’s not true. Merely putting up a website doesn’t subject you to the laws of every country on earth.

    If a country doesn’t like your site for whatever reason, they can block it, but you’re under no legal obligation to do anything.

    Bergman (profile) says:

    Re: Re: Re:3 How do you not publish somewhere on the inte

    Generally, so long as TD writers never set foot in a place with an extradition treaty with the EU, the new law and the GDPR don’t apply to TD.

    The problem is, the US does have an extradition treaty, it just doesn’t apply to civil court judgments that would be unconstitutional in the US.

    The problem though, is it’s possible in the EU to be charged criminally for violating the GDPR and this new law, and US law won’t protect against that. In countries that do allow civil law extradition or will enforce foreign civil judgments, the problem only gets worse.

    Mason Wheeler (profile) says:

    Re: Re: Re:4 How do you not publish somewhere on the

    is it’s possible in the EU to be charged criminally for violating the GDPR and this new law, and US law won’t protect against that

    Are you sure? According to Wikipedia,

    Double criminality is a requirement in extradition procedures from the United States, as extradition is allowed only for offenses that are alleged as crimes in both jurisdictions.

    Michael Riendeau says:

    The EU is losing all legitimacy and credibility as a Democracy

    I would gladly see the EU be dismantled should the Parliament approve of these fascist legislation. It is becoming an undemocratic and hateful Institution, showing nothing but contempt towards the people. The process that has been going on have made The Net Neutrality Repeal more democratic in comparison. Despite Ajit Pai’s own contempt for public opinion, our fight is still continuing and we have one of the only two political parties in control of Congress on our side.

    Anonymous Coward says:

    Re: The EU is losing all legitimacy and credibility as a Democra

    The EU never had any legitimacy or credibility as a democracy. It was deliberately designed to minimize public influence.

    Any arguable claim to legitimacy went out the window years ago with the attempted "EU Constitution" (later renamed lisbon treaty to hide what they were doing), when the EU decided that Ireland has to vote as many times as necessary to get a positive result.

    Scary Devil Monastery (profile) says:

    Re: Re: Re:2 The EU is losing all legitimacy and credibility

    "I don’t think this is Britain’s problem. But it could be the trigger for the next country."

    Yes and no. Farage’s xenophobic diatribes catered to a great many isolationists while riding the coattails of fiascos of public service.

    But the fact that the EU has become a new iteration of a holy roman empire run by a neo-feudal aristocracy in the form of unelected bureaucrats no doubt helped the UK to make the decision to exit.

    At which point, had the EU even intended to be reasonable and fair, they would at least have put a rollback to the old schengen agreement on the table. instead, predictably, the EU aims to crucify the UK in as painful a way as possible as a warning unto others.

    If you have true reason to FEAR leaving a union then that is, in my book, a VERY good reason to consider leaving.

    XcOM987 (profile) says:

    Re: Re: Re:3 The EU is losing all legitimacy and credibil

    The thing is the UK was never part of the schengen agreement, the UK is the only country within the EU to not be a part of it, the Northen Ireland aspect is oddity in that there is no border between Northen Ireland and IRE, but there is between Northen Ireland and the UK.

    In the world of trading you must secure your borders for trade agreements to function effectively, you can not allow products to simply enter a country un-tracked or un-customed, failure to do so undermines the entire system, it’s a basic requirement and is written in to pretty much every trade agreement with every country that there will be a customs border and items going in/out will be subjected to it.

    Even WTO requires that a border be enforced and that is applied to all 120+ bodies of the WTO.

    The EU is only doing what is best for the remaining 27 member states, should the shoe be on the other foot, and another country leaving, would you like to see that one country get special treatment, if undermine all previous trade agreement?

    What is more worrying is that we currently have 1 trade agreement ready to go live which is worth £10 Billion and that’s it, South Korea and Japan are asking for more concessions from the UK before they will even consider a deal, and other countrys are asking for the UK to lower their standards for a trade deal to be considered, such as some from the US are lobbying for the UK to lower standards to allow the sale of products that otherwise don’t meet the EU food standards that we adopted, or some existing trade partners that we have agreements with via the EU that will be cut off post brexit are asking for human rights to be lowered: “Some countries have said that they didn’t like, for example, the human rights elements that were incorporated by the EU and they would like us to drop those in order to roll the agreements over,” , Why would they want human rights to be lowered?

    PaulT (profile) says:

    Re: Re: Re:4 The EU is losing all legitimacy and cred

    "The EU is only doing what is best for the remaining 27 member states"

    That the thing that needs to be remembered by the Little Englanders. The EU didn’t choose this, they have historically given preferential treatment to the UK and once this goes through their prime concern is the wellbeing of the remaining EU along with EU citizens who might remain in the UK. Of course they’re going to make it difficult for the UK to leave, if giving them what they want makes the citizens the EU is responsible for worse off.

    Furthermore, news today is that the Bank Of England estimates the whole shitshow to have ALREADY cost the economy 80 billion, and the UK haven’t even decided how they’re going to ferry in all the goods that will have to go through the borders they forgot would need customs checks, given that the last deal with a company that didn’t have any ferries fell through.

    PaulT (profile) says:

    Re: Re: Re:6 The EU is losing all legitimacy

    "Ah yes, the 17.4 million ‘Little Englanders’"

    Yes, all of whom voted on a non-binding referendum, and of whom many have realised they were either lied to or that the government’s interpretation of what the vote meant differed greatly from their own. Not all the Leavers were Little Englanders, of course, but there were enough of you who voted based on jingoism and fiction for the general theme to stick.

    I do also love the way that the Leave brigade always bring up the absolute number of votes, though. Saying 51.9% of the ~50% of the population who voted doesn’t give you the emotional response you want, does it?

    Wendy Cockcroft (profile) says:

    Re: Re: Re:9 The EU is losing all

    What PaulT says.

    I’m Irish with family in France, an end-user of the NHS and my employers get supplies and services from the EU. Basically, Brexit will eff up my life so no, I’m not in favour of it.

    Do Brexiters care? Nope. "We’re British, we will muddle through." They forget that Dunkirk was about people caring enough about each other to be willing to sacrifice themselves if that’s what it took to get Our Boys home. It was not about "Screw you, it’s not A problem till it’s MY problem."

    PaulT (profile) says:

    Re: Re: Re:10 The EU is losing

    "Basically, Brexit will eff up my life"

    It will screw everybody. It would have been a very difficult transition has there been a properly debated plan in place before triggering article 50 and everybody spent the following 2 years working tirelessly to make it as smooth as possible.

    There is no way it won’t be destructive for everyone in the current state – ironically especially for some of the biggest Brexit supporters. In fact, it already has with it recently reported that it’s already cost the UK economy an estimated £80 billion.

    That One Guy (profile) says:

    Re: Re: Re:12 The EU i

    Yet the Brexiteers keep pushing it. The latest line is, "We must respect the referendum result whether it was a con or not."

    … do any of the people pushing that rot have the self-awareness to understand how incredible stupid that argument is, and thereby makes them look? ‘Doesn’t matter if they were tricked, it still counts!’ is the kinda thing you’d expect from a con-man trying to defend their actions.

    Scary Devil Monastery (profile) says:

    Re: Re: Re:4 The EU is losing all legitimacy and cred

    "The thing is the UK was never part of the schengen agreement, the UK is the only country within the EU to not be a part of it, the Northen Ireland aspect is oddity in that there is no border between Northen Ireland and IRE, but there is between Northen Ireland and the UK."

    The UK has maintained an opt-out option of schengen yes.
    So all they’d need is to opt-in once again. That would leave the trade agreements only. The UK would lose the inner market, yes, but that in itself isn’t a death knell for the economy, i believe.

    "The EU is only doing what is best for the remaining 27 member states, should the shoe be on the other foot, and another country leaving, would you like to see that one country get special treatment, if undermine all previous trade agreement?"

    I stopped believing that the EU did "what was best" for anyone, least of all the member states, ever since the four freedoms turned into "federalization for all".

    The salient point is that neutral zones with an entry/exit into a trade zone have existed ever since borders started being drawn on maps. It’s not a new phenomenon, least of all in europe. The EU has other solutions than the one they currently propose – which is one rendering the exit as painful as possible for the UK.

    "…some existing trade partners that we have agreements with via the EU that will be cut off post brexit are asking for human rights to be lowered…"

    Why am I thinking "Turkey" right now?
    Human rights are not an issue like trade where compromise is desirable and necessary, to begin with. Leave that part aside.

    That said the EU has very little room to speak of human rights with the "Right to be forgotten" – (censorship/information control) and the "Terrorist content" (censorship which won’t prevent terrorists from being online but WILL prevent legitimate civil uprisings from public exposure) laws. Not to mention the hilarious shit-show which is article 11 and 13 (removing all news and online information for everyone save from state-governed and multinationals).

    Fact is the EU already goes beyond old East Germany in surveillance of the common public and beyond the old USSR in its proposed lists of what sort of information is considered "undesirable". The governing bodies calling the shots are unelected bureaucrats primarily interested in serving themselves and the internal corruption is so intense that until now no auditing company has agreed to sign off on the EU budget because billions of euro end up unaccounted for each year.

    We already have plenty of examples where the EU commission has tried to swear the PM’s to secrecy over trade treaties in direct defiance of the EU charter and shadow rapporteurs have resigned over the commission and council actively trying to deceive the parliament. This shit-show, had it been run in any single member state, would have consigned said state to rogue status and a place of dishonor among the G20.

    But the EU is, apparently, too big to fail in the face-saving community of politicians who’ve rammed the construct down the throats of their electorate and intent on remaining that way until the last vestiges of democratic drops off its crumbling facade.

    Scary Devil Monastery (profile) says:

    Re: Re: Re:5 The EU is losing all legitimacy and

    "Or the version commonly attributed to Josef Stalin: "It’s not who votes that counts, it’s who counts the votes.""

    Is this the place to quote Mikhail Gorbachev’s views on the EU once again?

    "The most puzzling development in modern politics is the apparent determination of Western European leaders to re-create the Soviet Union in Western Europe."

    Terry Unterdrucker-Heimholzernmitshoenenfliegebit says:

    Re: Re: Re: For any new readers: "morganwick" has ODD 6 year gap...

    after first comment way back in 2009. Yes, its 2nd comment was in 2015!

    And it’s not the only "account" with 6 year gap: are at least 10 with that length, dozens with 3-4-5.

    ODD accounts are typical on Techdirt, and the dozens such persisting for years now — even after I’ve been exposing them — conclusively show astro-turfing.

    So beware! This site is not as seems.

    Gwiz (profile) says:

    Re: Re: Re:4 For any new readers: "morganwick" has ODD 6 year gap

    One of my favorite books growing up. It was "required" reading in my family after my Dad did a sociology paper on it when he was advancing his education in the middle of his career. Before he died, he made sure all of his grandchildren had hard-bound copies of it.

    XcOM987 (profile) says:

    Re: Re: Re:2 For any new readers: "morganwick" has ODD 6 year gap...

    Can you work out my gaps please? I can’t be bothered to trawl through my own posting history let alone others.

    Don’t forget the one where I got editor’s pick of the week:
    https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20180129/07532839106/trumps-fcc-pats-itself-back-historically-stupid-year.shtml

    https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20180211/10573239203/funniest-most-insightful-comments-week-techdirt.shtml

    frank87 (profile) says:

    Re: Re: The EU is losing all legitimacy and credibility as a Dem

    The EU is a union of governments. The European Parliament is added to it to suggest influence of the citizens.
    The real power lies with people who are elected by people the citizens elected (in most European countries the government is elected by parliament).

    Scary Devil Monastery (profile) says:

    Re: Re: Re: The EU is losing all legitimacy and credibility as a

    "The real power lies with people who are elected by people the citizens elected"

    Actually…no.¨
    The european commission, which holds disproportionate power, has, in practice, no democratic input what so ever. Any safeguards rely exclusively on the national governments of the EU actively choosing to disapprove the new commission as a whole when it’s implemented.

    Although on paper it’s theoretically possible to ensure a democratic process in reality that’s as true as making a claim that all you need to empty lake superior is twenty volunteers with buckets. It’s true, as long as you ignore the individual effort and time involved.

    Scary Devil Monastery (profile) says:

    Re: Re: Re:3 The EU is losing all legitimacy and credibil

    "But our national government (I’m Dutch) always claims they have to do stuff because it’s obligations in Europe."

    Correct. Every member nation conveniently hides all accountability as soon as it can be blamed on the EU – because the trail of public accountability ends dead and cold right there.

    And of course, if the EU council needs to approve the new commission for the next five years it will do so even if the new commission has been stuffed with every politician or bureaucrat member states found too much of a crackpot to suffer at home.

    The commission is a cross between a nepotistic network of good ole boys, cronyism, and a place of cushy exile for sock puppets and fall guys. And it holds, by the rules, most of the legislative power.

    Wendy Cockcroft (profile) says:

    Re: Re: The EU is losing all legitimacy and credibility as a Dem

    Not a mad EU-phile but both of these comments are nonsense.

    It was deliberately designed to minimize public influence.

    Citation? Seriously, just stop. Irish people are smart; they weren’t happy with the option provided to them the first time around and after it had been amended they voted again.

    Anonymous Coward says:

    Re: Re: Re: The EU is losing all legitimacy and credibility as a

    "How, precisely, is it Trump’s example"?

    • That was a response to the post to which it replied and that post claimed, among other things, the following:

    "The EU is losing all legitimacy and credibility as a Democracy"

    Are you now claiming that Donald has not contributed any more than prior presidents toward the diminishing status of the US with respect to legitimacy, credibility and democracy?

    Such claims require data, evidence .. you know, that sort of thing.

    Scary Devil Monastery (profile) says:

    Re: Re: The EU is losing all legitimacy and credibility as a Dem

    Leave Trump out of it. The man’s a proven pathological liar and a grand-standing narcissist with a long record of treating women and ethnic minorities as objects. Has been for some 40 years.
    But that’s it. He’s mainly a symptom that US polarization may just be a few race riots shy of another civil war.

    The EU contains people far, far worse than trump in decisionmaking power. Unlike Trump they’re ideologically bent on rendering as much as they can of the EU into a continent-wide control network. They are completely protected from accountability by a lack of transparency which is only broken when conscientious parliamentary members choose to reveal facts to their electorate. And thanks to the "right to be forgotten" their names are quick to stop gracing google search in the EU.

    Anonymous Coward says:

    Whats good for the goose is good for the parliamentarian

    So, lets assume that reason will not prevail and that this idiotic measure becomes law.

    There is only one way to "fix" it (or force the parliament to amend it) and that is the courts. Thus, we need to create some cases. People smarter than me could work out "nice ways" to do this. Here’s a shitty one:

    Identify a big content player and an EU news agency. From each choose a juicy piece of content. Next identify all members of the EU parliament who voted to approve this monstrosity and find out which of them have web sites that allow community feedback. Then, using whatever tricks you want (careful here, this could be illegal) like one day email addresses, register at said parliamentarian’s community feedback site and spam the copyrighted content with an associated message saying things like "you are preventing me from commenting on this content because of <insert formal reference to the passed Copyright Directive".

    Wait and watch 🙂

    Anonymous Coward says:

    Re: Whats good for the goose is good for the parliamentarian

    Just wait and see what happens when people cannot publish baby and holiday movies and pictures for their friends and family to admire, because that is what this legislation leads to. That is when politicians are likely to receive the message that they have got it very wrong.

    Anonymous Coward says:

    Re: Re:

    Remember last week’s Techdirt podcast, talking with a journalist who tried cutting herself off from the major tech companies for a week and found just how difficult everything became because so much of the Internet relies on them?

    If Microsoft, Google, and Amazon–the three major providers of Internet infrastructure–agreed to geoblock all of Europe if this passes, on all of their services including their cloud infrastructure, it would bring the Internet grinding to a halt over there. Would anyone else enjoy seeing that happen?

    That One Guy (profile) says:

    Re: Re: Re: Re:

    Every company needs to take Google’s ‘beta test’, a page to highlight just what they’ll look like to people in the EU if this passes, and run with it for a few days. Let the general public know just what’s in store for them if this train-wreck of a pair of laws pass, in a visible, impossible to ignore manner.

    Anonymous Coward says:

    Re: Re: Re:

    I thought one of the major arguments was for local startups and initiatives and search engines to "survive". Which, it was claimed, they couldn’t do because of Google and Amazon. So what’s the problem? Let them develop and survive.

    Unless you mean all of those who were pushing for Article 13 were lying, but that couldn’t possibly be the case, right?

    PaulT (profile) says:

    Re: Re: Re:

    "If Microsoft, Google, and Amazon–the three major providers of Internet infrastructure–agreed to geoblock all of Europe if this passes"

    …then they would still be very much bound by EU law for all of the stuff they run from inside the EU.

    It’s a shitshow, but don’t pretend it’s as easy as putting up a few blocks, even if those companies were willing to jettison hundreds of millions of customers.

    That One Guy (profile) says:

    Re: Re: Re: Lose 1 million, or risk losing 100 million...

    …then they would still be very much bound by EU law for all of the stuff they run from inside the EU.

    For as long as it takes to pull all assets out of the area, and take steps to block access to those in the area, thereby removing themselves from EU jurisdiction

    It’s a shitshow, but don’t pretend it’s as easy as putting up a few blocks, even if those companies were willing to jettison hundreds of millions of customers.

    Given the alternatives, I suspect that more than a few companies, them including, will very seriously consider jettisoning hundreds of millions of customers to be the safer bet. It’ll be one hell of a hit to be sure, but between ‘license everything or else‘ and ‘if someone uses your platform to infringe and we decide you ‘didn’t try hard enough’ you’re on the hook for it'(which, given how insane copyright fines can be could result in massive penalties on a regular basis), it might simply be cheaper to cut the losses and remove service from the EU entirely.

    PaulT (profile) says:

    Re: Re: Re:2 Lose 1 million, or risk losing 100 million...

    "For as long as it takes to pull all assets out of the area, and take steps to block access to those in the area, thereby removing themselves from EU jurisdiction"

    No offence, but you seem to have a rather simplistic idea of how these things are being run. There’s a huge infrastructure investment in numerous different ways.

    "it might simply be cheaper to cut the losses and remove service from the EU entirely"

    Or, it might as well not be.

    There’s a huge number of options between the all or nothing, and no company is going to pull out of Europe just to make a point. Bearing in mind that these are companies who have been quite willing to abide with draconian demands in China and the Middle East to maintain local presence, it’s not going to happen here.

    I understand the sentiment, but let’s discuss things that are realistically going to happen.

    Anonymous Coward says:

    Re: Re: Re:4 Lose 1 million, or risk losing 100 million...

    I agree. End result will be companies the EU is whining about being too large and anti-competitive will be handed an even bigger club as any competition they may face will have to invest millions in filtering just to avoid liability too. So in addition to killing user generated content they also cream competition. Good job everyone!

    PaulT (profile) says:

    Re: Re: Re:4 Lose 1 million, or risk losing 100 million...

    "What could and most will happen is all the big players will put in upload filters that will edge on the side of caution, small companies or hobbiests won’t survive."

    Except that won’t work when the damn servers are already located in that country. Like I said, if someone thinks this is a realistic idea, they have no idea what’s actually involved in the way thse companies are set up.

    XcOM987 (profile) says:

    Re: Re: Re:5 Lose 1 million, or risk losing 100 million...

    What wouldn’t work?

    The likes of Google, Youtube, Facebook, Twitter, Etc, Etc will have the financial, technical and legal clout to impose some sort of upload filter, not saying this will good, rather I implied it would be very bad as the filters would edge on the side of caution and reject loads of uploads, posts, Etc, Etc because they want to be extra careful they aren’t infringing.

    No doubt something will get through, and then the new laws would be put to the test to try and hold Google, Youtube, Facebook, Etall liable for the infringement, and that will be an interesting test

    Small sites, won’t have the resources to do this, and as such would just shut their doors rather than be held liable, thus entrenching the current big players.

    The idea of where the servers are located doesn’t fall in to this anywhere when it comes to the upload filters.

    I will admit there is quite a bit of this new copyright law I don’t understand, but I have tried to take the time to understand Article 11 and 13, and I work in the Managed Compute IT industry so have a fairly good understanding of Tech and don’t mix it up with Magic like a lot of these politicians seem to all the time.

    PaulT (profile) says:

    Re: Re: Re:6 Lose 1 million, or risk losing 100 million..

    The issue seems to be confused here. I’m addressing the people who think that it would be trivial for those sites to simply block the EU, I’m pointing out that there’s a massive investment that makes it not going to happen.

    "The idea of where the servers are located doesn’t fall in to this anywhere when it comes to the upload filters."

    It really does. Jurisdiction would vary depending on physical location.

    "Small sites, won’t have the resources to do this,"

    Funnily enough, it would be far more trivial for a small site to, say, move their site from Ireland to the US on their AWS hosting than it would be for Amazon to move their data centre. We’re not merely talking about filters here.

    "don’t mix it up with Magic like a lot of these politicians seem to all the time."

    Sadly, the rest of us have to attempt to comply with their expectations of magic, even though we’re telling them all along that it’s impossible.

    Scary Devil Monastery (profile) says:

    Re: Re: Re:5 Lose 1 million, or risk losing 100 million...

    "Except that won’t work when the damn servers are already located in that country."

    And then the server farm simply moves.

    True as you say, no company is going to pull out of europe just to make a point.

    But when basic legislation guarantees any business run in europe will be run at a loss? That’ll move them out, no problem.
    It’s a different situation than with China where all google needs to do is allow the state to insert a filter the state maintains.

    Mason Wheeler (profile) says:

    Re: Re: Re:3 Lose 1 million, or risk losing 100 million...

    I understand the sentiment, but let’s discuss things that are realistically going to happen.

    Every great achievement the human race has made, every leap forward that has made things better for mankind, has started with someone courageous enough to ignore exactly that idea.

    That One Guy (profile) says:

    Re: Re: Re:5 Lose 1 million, or risk losing 100 million...

    And if they were doing that ‘to prove a point’ you might have a point. My point on the other hand is that with the massive liability they’d be facing, between the protection racket they’d have to sign up for and the possibility that if they miss something it could come back to bite them bad, the better option long-term could very well be to pull all assets from the EU so that they are no longer under it’s jurisdiction.

    Would pulling out of the EU be a huge pain in the ass, costing significant amounts of money and customers? Absolutely. On the other hand, paying to an extortion racket, even if it’s small now, will add up(and almost certainly grow), and the uncertainty of having the very users you’re trying to entice also act as potential liability magnets painting a target on your back could very well be enough to convince companies that it’s simply not worth the risk or costs.

    Anonymous Coward says:

    Re: Re: Re:5 Lose 1 million, or risk losing 100 million...

    Risk vs rewards.
    No ones going “or able” to filter and check every word on the internet like this thing says to do just so they won’t get sued by someone becuase some high living aristocrat in Europe with rich friends passed something to help them like he was elected to do.

    XcOM987 (profile) says:

    Fair use

    I have contacted all my local MEP’s both for and against, asserting points as to why they should be rejecting Articles 11 & 13.

    Hopefully they get enough pressure to get them to vote according to what is best for the general public and to stand by them, rather than standing with the few companies that are pushing for these laws.

    I really hope that if these do go through, that companies go full nucular and just block all EU IP’s and all news sites such as news.google.com just shut the doors to the EU, it would be interesting to see how long it takes before the EU changes course, all it would take is someone like Twitter, or Facebook to stop people comments or uploading, there would be hell by lunch time.

    rangda (profile) says:

    Re: Fair use

    Stopping comments wouldn’t be good enough. Even with view only access it’s entirely possible that someone outside the EU posts copyrighted content which could then be viewed in the EU. Lacking a magic copyright filter which cannot exist, the choices for someone like twitter appear to be:

    1) Leave everything as is and roll the dice that you won’t get fined. Funnel some cash to appropriate parties to help ensure this outcome.
    2) Block any IP from the EU from viewing any and all content that has not been approved by a content filter. For this to have any real shot you have to have a pretty high confidence level in the filter.
    3) Block EU IP’s from accessing your site entirely.
    4) If you’re really paranoid, block all EU IP’s from accessing your site. Block any link where the IP is in the EU. Completely shut down all EU operations. Executives avoid ever entering an EU country.

    The problem is that #3 doesn’t even fully solve the problem, non-EU users could post EU content and even though you aren’t showing it you could be found to be infringing and be penalized (assuming you still have any EU operations and thus the EU has a way to get at you). For example, google has a data center in Ireland, even if they just block all EU IP’s from google news, what happens if an EU link gets through the cracks and gets posted? The EU could still hit them with fines even though no EU user can see it, and since they have a business in the EU (even though it’s unrelated) that gives the EU a way to get at them. The only way to really avoid fines is to go full nuclear and use #4 and totally and completely abandon the EU.

    As for what would happen, I expect major services that already have pretty good content filters (like youtube) would go with option #2. Just block the content until it passes the filter. The problem is that they may just decide to do that for everybody instead of just for EU IP’s since that would be easier. I think small sites like enthusiast/hobby forums would go with #1 counting on the fact that they aren’t the target of the law and nobody would bother with them. For a major site that lacks good content filtering like twitter I’m not sure what they would do.

    Anonymous Coward says:

    Re: Re: Fair use

    I expect major services that already have pretty good content filters (like youtube)

    YouTube filters only cover audio, and article 13 also requires them to cover video, text and images. In other words filtering is almost impossible, leaving blocking all user uploads or buying a license as the only option.

    This law is so badly worded that it hands control over the Internet to the entertainment industries.

    Anonymous Coward says:

    Re: Re: Re: Fair use

    But buy a license from whom? Absolutely anything could be uploaded. Does YT have to seek out every person on Earth to license anything they might have produced just in case it gets used in an upload?

    Even if they "only" have to license content that does get uploaded, it’s now up to YT to try and figure out what content, if any, in any given video might have been produced by someone other than the uploader and then try to identify who actually created that content, track them down and license it? Do you know how many hours of video are uploaded to YT every second of every day?

    It’s an impossible task. Even if it were possible, it’s impossibly expensive.

    Anonymous Coward says:

    Re: Re: Re:2 Fair use

    It’s an impossible task. Even if it were possible, it’s impossibly expensive.

    Somebody is thinking that only the legacy publishers own copyright, and they are the ones who will benefit from these laws. They are possible right with respect to the last point, as self publishers do not wish to destroy their route to an audience.

    By the way FidoNet is stall active is some parts of the world, and could make a resurgence amongst geeks,

    Scary Devil Monastery (profile) says:

    Re: Re: Re:2 Fair use

    "It’s an impossible task. Even if it were possible, it’s impossibly expensive."

    And this is something quite well realized by the politicians who currently all pretend they can’t understand or won’t acknowledge the that.

    Article 13 exists only to protect the current media giants from competition. And EU politicians in France and Germany have realized it could easily be adapted to remove that protection from anything competing with the ailing at-home culture production as well. Which is my take on why the EU is suddenly pushing for an article 13 even the RIAA and MPAA don’t want.

    Anonymous Coward says:

    Re: Re: Re:3 Fair use

    And EU politicians in France and Germany have realized it could easily be adapted to remove that protection from anything competing with the ailing at-home culture production as well.

    Except they will make it too expensive for ailing at home culture production to use the Internet. Block all infringement, with the hope that licensing agreements can be made, hand all the power to the the US based legacy industries and their European associates.

    Anonymous Coward says:

    anyone who thinks this whole shbang is nothing to do with the entertainment industries must be living in cloud cuckoo land! it has been these industries aim for decades to get complete control of the internet and have it as their own. using it as a media distribution service, which will cost next to nothing but will rake in a fortune is exactly what they want! while doing this and having people have to get permission to upload/download, at a cost, is again just what they want. and dont forget that Japan has just implemented a new law that locks people away for 2 years, just for downloading pirated media etc. and the internet takeover is nothing to do with these industries? you gotta be fucking kiddin’ me! dont believe a thing they say! ans it’s gonna get worse for everyone, believe you me!! all these industries want to do is make a fortune. the powerful and famous, however, who are backing these moves, are more than happy because it keeps their escapades, lies and 2 faced activities out of the public eye too

    That One Guy (profile) says:

    'Pretty please put the gun down?'

    Be insistent – but please always stay polite.

    While I certainly wouldn’t suggest that people start swearing the MEP’s out, I’m thinking polite isn’t going to cut it without some firm ‘if you’ve no interest in serving me, I have no interest in keeping you on the public dime’ language.

    By pure luck the vote for this is apparently mere weeks before major elections, and I’d say that provides a hefty bit of leverage to use. Make clear that if they aren’t interested in serving the public, and are in fact willing to screw over their constituents on such a major issue, then anyone else who runs against them will get your vote instead.

    ‘If you vote for this, I’m not going to vote for you, and I will go out of my way to convince everyone I know to vote against you come the next election as well.’

    Anonymous Coward says:

    Forum posts, picture sharing and all kinds of information sharing over the internet prevents YOUR Government, legally elected by the people, from being effective at governing not just the people and your comrades, but governing information. Without your elected government carefully choosing the news you need while filtering out harmful "fake news", your elected government can not effectively govern you!

    David says:

    When the site becomes liable for content I upload...

    Who keeps me from composing some poem in the comment section and then suing the site for publishing my content without my permission? Since the site is responsible for publishing copyrighted content I upload in violation of my user agreement, why should that be different when I created that content in the first place?

    XcOM987 (profile) says:

    Re: When the site becomes liable for content I upload...

    If you publish your own works, at your own free will, then there is an implied licence in that you’ve uploaded it yourself, otherwise it would be a honeypot and I am sure there are laws against that.

    Not EU based but I am sure that’s one of the things that Prenda got caught up in when they uploaded the original file to create a honeypot to start there extortion business.

    Anonymous Coward says:

    Re: When the site becomes liable for content I upload...

    Maybe we will see some more thuggish EULAs, "hereby posting on this site you relinquish all copyright to us, no takebacks!!"
    Although perhaps a forcing into posting under creative commons wouldn’t be so bad, completely stomping the entire give-me-copyright-or-give-me-death crowd into a puddle of quivering jelly

    XcOM987 (profile) says:

    Re: Re: When the site becomes liable for content I upload...

    90% of the time, the sections giving over licence to the item or post is simple there to allow them to store said post/item/upload or whatever it may be, most of the time there is nothing nefarious behind it, it’s just them trying to protect themselves from things like these laws.

    David says:

    Re: Re: When the site becomes liable for content I upload...

    Maybe we will see some more thuggish EULAs
    It doesn’t matter if it is the site rather than the user who is responsible for heeding copyright of uploaded materials. Obviously it is also the site that is responsible for me uploading my own material and redistributing it without license.

    Anonymous Coward says:

    This is absolute hysteria. Techdirt could even become a VIDEO blog (why does Mike hide behind print when video is available?) on YouTube, be monetized, and Google would take care of compliance issues (which won’t bother them because of revenue from people like Mike). I doubt he’d even have to stop EU users from visiting because he’s based in the US.

    The user agreement for this and other sites should give the platforms the ability to sue users who infringe as they harm the site.

    I can still publish without a problem under this law but I don’t do UGC.

    Anonymous Coward says:

    Re: Re: Re:

    I publish for those who want to find the work. Sometimes it’s free, sometimes it has a tag. My main income is from advertising and patronage, with some sales. The e-book market is crap, basically hourly labor for authors who want to promote. Video is the future of high-income internet sites.

    Anonymous Coward says:

    Re: Re:

    This is absolute hysteria.

    Not really. The internet is a technical system with certain set rules on how it works that can’t be changed. These bills fly in the face of those rules and how the internet works. Meaning: "this will break the internet", at least in the EU.

    Techdirt could even become a VIDEO blog…

    What does that have to do with anything?

    on YouTube, be monetized, and Google would take care of compliance issues

    But see, that’s the point. Google shouldn’t take care of the compliance issues because they aren’t the responsible party. Mike would be the one who would potentially violating the law, not Google. That’s the whole point of this law, it shifts liability away from the ACTUAL RESPONSIBLE PARTIES on to an intermediate third party who didn’t actually do anything wrong. It’s all just a money game. Instead of going after actual responsible parties, they have decided to go after innocent parties, solely because they are easier to find and extort money from.

    why does Mike hide behind print when video is available?

    Huh? So you’re saying any printed material is just made by a bunch of cowards? Wow, way to insult the book and newspaper authors of the world.

    I doubt he’d even have to stop EU users from visiting because he’s based in the US.

    Now this is a valid question. Why would a US based site have to comply with laws in a different country when there is no legal/physical presence in said other country?

    The user agreement for this and other sites should give the platforms the ability to sue users who infringe as they harm the site.

    They can and do. But that’s not what A11 and A13 are about now, are they? They are all about making the sites 100% liable for anything their user base does.

    I can still publish without a problem under this law

    True. But you better make sure you don’t use any content from any other site/author. According to the text of the bills, even a few words, maybe a quote is enough to land you in hot water.

    Sok Puppette (profile) says:

    It would be easy to work around that and make it unenforceable… in a truly decentralized system using open protocols with multiple independent implementations. On the other hand, systems structured as feifdoms, like YouTube, Facebook, etc, would be seriously burdened and maybe destroyed.

    So with any luck we’ll get a good outcome for all the wrong reasons.

    ysth (profile) says:

    EU Move To Fundamentally Change The Internet from Open to Closed

    Despite the fact that even the staunchest supporters of Article 13 were asking for it to be dropped from the final version of the EU Copyright Directive, that didn’t happen. In the final trilogue negotiations between the EU Council, the EU Commission and the EU Parliament, it appears that the agreed upon "compromise" is basically as bad as we feared. It will fundamentally change the entire nature of the internet. And not in a good way. As we recently discussed, the only way this makes sense is if the goal is to have the law be so bad that big internet companies feel forced to pay their way out of it.

    And it appears that’s what we’ve got. MEP Julia Reda’s summary of the final deal highlights many of the problems with both Articles 11 and 13. Here’s the mess with Article 13:

    Commercial sites and apps where users can post material must make “best efforts” to preemptively buy licences for anything that users may possibly upload – that is: all copyrighted content in the world. An impossible feat.
    In addition, all but very few sites (those both tiny and very new) will need to do everything in their power to prevent anything from ever going online that may be an unauthorised copy of a work that a rightsholder has pointed out to the platform. They will have no choice but to deploy upload filters, which are by their nature both expensive and error-prone.
    Should a court ever find their licensing or filtering efforts not fierce enough, sites are directly liable for infringements as if they had committed them themselves. This massive threat will lead platforms to over-comply with these rules to stay on the safe side, further worsening the impact on our freedom of speech.

    And with Article 11:

    The final version of this extra copyright for news sites closely resembles the version that already failed in Germany – only this time not limited to search engines and news aggregators, meaning it will do damage to a lot more websites.

    Reproducing more than “single words or very short extracts” of news stories will require a licence. That will likely cover many of the snippets commonly shown alongside links today in order to give you an idea of what they lead to. We will have to wait and see how courts interpret what “very short” means in practice – until then, hyperlinking (with snippets) will be mired in legal uncertainty.
    No exceptions are made even for services run by individuals, small companies or non-profits, which probably includes any monetised blogs or websites.

    If this becomes law, I’m not sure Techdirt can continue publishing in the EU. At the very least, it will require us to spend a large sum of money on lawyers to determine what our liability risk is — to the point that it might just not be worth it at all. Article 13 makes a commenting system untenable, as we simply cannot setup a filter that will block people from uploading copyright-covered content. Article 11 potentially makes our posts untenable, since we frequently quote other news sites in order to comment on them (as we do above).

    This is, of course, the desire of those supporting both bills. It is not just to close the (made up, mythical) "value gap." It is to fundamentally change the internet away from an open system of communications — one that anyone can use to bypass traditional gatekeepers, to a closed "broadcast" system, in which key legacy gatekeepers control access to the public, via a complicated set of licenses that strip all of the benefits and profits from the system.

    Not only will this do great harm to the general public’s ability to communicate freely over the internet, it will do massive harm to artists and creators — especially more independent ones, who will be effectively blocked from using these platforms to connect directly with their fans. Rather they will be required to go through "licensed" intermediaries, who will demand a huge cut of any money. In other words, it’s a return to the pre-internet days, where if you wanted to become a professional creator, your only options were to sign away all your rights to giant conglomerate record labels/studios/publishers.

    It is incredible — and incredibly disappointing — that the EU is moving towards bringing back such a world, but that is what the latest agreement means.

    There is still a chance to stop this from becoming law, though it will take a lot of effort. As Reda explains:

    We can still stop this law

    The Parliament and Council negotiators who agreed on the final text now return to their institutions seeking approval of the result. If it passes both votes unchanged, it becomes EU law, which member states are forced to implement into national law.

    In both bodies, there is resistance.

    The Parliament’s process starts with the approval by the Legal Affairs Committee – which is likely to be given on Monday, February 18.

    Next, at a date to be announced, the EU member state governments will vote in the Council. The law can be stopped here either by 13 member state governments or by any number of governments who together represent 35% of the EU population (calculator). Last time, 8 countries representing 27% of the population were opposed. Either a large country like Germany or several small ones would need to change their minds: This is the less likely way to stop it.

    Our best bet: The final vote in the plenary of the European Parliament, when all 751 MEPs, directly elected to represent the people, have a vote. This will take place either between March 25 and 28, on April 4 or between April 15 and 18. We’ve already demonstrated last July that a majority against a bad copyright proposal is achievable.

    The plenary can vote to kill the bill – or to make changes, like removing Articles 11 and 13. In the latter case, it’s up to the Council to decide whether to accept these changes (the Directive then becomes law without these articles) or to shelve the project until after the EU elections in May, which will reshuffle all the cards.

    If you’re an EU citizen, this next bit is important. Now is the time to start speaking up:

    This is where you come in

    The final Parliament vote will happen mere weeks before the EU elections. Most MEPs – and certainly all parties – are going to be seeking reelection. Articles 11 and 13 will be defeated if enough voters make these issues relevant to the campaigns. (Here’s how to vote in the EU elections – change the language to one of your country’s official ones for specific information)

    It is up to you to make clear to your representatives: Their vote on whether to break the internet with Articles 11 and 13 will make or break your vote in the EU elections. Be insistent – but please always stay polite.

    Look up your representatives’ voting behavior at SaveYourInternet.eu
    Call or visit your MEPs’ offices (in Brussels, Strasbourg or their local constituency)
    Visit campaign and party events and bring up the topic
    Sign the record-breaking petition and spread the word, if you haven’t yet

    Together, we can still stop this law.

    David says:

    Easy fix.

    Article 13 makes a commenting system untenable, as we simply cannot setup a filter that will block people from uploading copyright-covered content.

    Just treat user replies as search terms into a corpus of all sentences in works known to be in the public domain. The user can then mark the sentence best matching their sentiment and you republish that.

    Is "me too" still under copyright?

    Scary Devil Monastery (profile) says:

    Re: Re: Re: Easy fix.

    "So why wouldn’t Google offer content filtering as a service and make even more money?"

    They probably will, which is why youtube has presented an ambiguous stance on article 13.

    However, Youtube knows full well that after a filter sufficiently trigger-happy to satisfy article 13 is implemented, youtube is deader than it was when GEMA was all over it in Germany. It won’t really cost them anything not to geoblock, as long as any youtube visitor is met by the "smiley sad-face" on 3 out of 4 videos.

    Nate P Cilver says:

    Brexit Circle Jerk

    I see we essentially have a Brexit Circle Jerk here. The bigots on Techdirt are using this issue as a way to undermine the magnificent European Union.

    For those of us who support justice and equality we need to support our diverse brothers and sisters in the EU and let the haters know we will not tolerate their attacks on the democratically elected officials that run the EU.

    Terry Unterdrucker-Heimholzernmitshoenenfliegebit says:

    You mean change from pirate thefts to protecting creators.

    Gee, this TOO has turned out as I expected, not just that it’ll pass, but to put in place what I wish to hamper and punish content thieves.

    Seems that MOST legslators agree with me: no one has any real substantive right to upload someone else’s content.

    By the way, Masnick, your last big rant at me involving the similarly out-dated and wrong-headed protections of Section 230 is now proven to be exactly just ranting.

    When US legislators focus on the actuality of what Section 230 enables — and that it’s being used by corporations to stilfe the very free speech that it was intended to promote — THEN that’ll be changed.

    I’ve won on this topic, and will again when Section 230 is changed or over-ridden or clarified.

    And you’ll be WRONG FOREVER, Masnick.

    Terry Unterdrucker-Heimholzernmitshoenenfliegebit says:

    Re: Re: You mean change from pirate thefts to protecting creator

    You know how many times I have called you out on your bullshit, I have won every one of those arguments against you!!!!

    Really? You’re right that I go on without noticing!

    Kid, it doesn’t even matter that you think you won, or even if you did! Because the people who make laws agree with ME, as this very piece proves.

    You pirates will be hampered and eventually locked up if can’t keep your paws off other people’s content.

    Oh, and by the way, Mr Winner: why not at least state your "account" name and claim victory?

    TFG says:

    Re: Re: Re: You mean change from pirate thefts to protecting cre

    Oh, and by the way, Mr Winner: why not at least state your "account" name and claim victory?

    Why don’t you, Mr. Winner?

    I mean, literally anyone can do what you do. Guess what, Mr. Never The Same Name twice, I’ve won!

    I’ve said it to be so, so clearly it is so. I am the winner, forever and ever, and you will always be wrong! Always! You will never be right ever!

    Let’s put it another way. The people behind Article 13 may agree with you. That just means they also wrong. That just means they are also liars. That just means they are also extortionists. You throw your hat in with them, that means you are a terrible person, just as they are.

    Terry Unterdrucker-Heimholzernmitshoenenfliegebit says:

    Re: Re: Re:2 You mean change from pirate thefts to protecting

    Oh, and by the way, Mr Winner: why not at least state your "account" name and claim victory?

    Why don’t you, Mr. Winner?

    Er, I’m not "Mr Winner".

    But I’ll assume you want me to use a REAL name so that you can better attack me, and that’s WHY I don’t, silly. Anyone giving personal details in this cesspit is a fool.

    Now, you are TOTALLY OFF-TOPIC, so I know you’re a true TD fanboy — a rather recent screen name, always supportive of the site and attackive of any dissent, so probably yet another like "Gary" actually run by Timothy Geigner, aka "Dark Helmet", whom Masnick dubbed "Techdirt’s comment enforcer", as that’s certainly what you’re doing here, instead of ON-TOPIC substance.

    Terry Unterdrucker-Heimholzernmitshoenenfliegebit says:

    Re: Re: You mean change from pirate thefts to protecting creator

    This doesn’t punish the uploaders. It punishes the platforms. And you’re far too stupid to understand the difference.

    It’s a good point — though didn’t need clarifying.

    Give it time, "AC", and "uploaders" and "downloaders" plus site owners will ALL be put in jail where belong for STEALING CONTENT.

    Anonymous Coward says:

    Re: You mean change from pirate thefts to protecting creators.

    put in place what I wish to hamper and punish content thieves.

    As others have pointed out, this will not do anything to hamper and punish actual thieves. It will only hamper and punish legitimate sites on the internet.

    Seems that MOST legslators agree with me: no one has any real substantive right to upload someone else’s content.

    Agreeing with you doesn’t make them right. Besides, if the owner of said content says it’s ok to upload their content, then isn’t that a realy substantive right to upload someone else’s content? And yes, people do give out this right.

    your last big rant at me involving the similarly out-dated and wrong-headed protections of Section 230 is now proven to be exactly just ranting.

    Oh? I wasn’t aware EU laws had any bearing on US laws. You might want to stop commenting while high and/or drunk.

    When US legislators focus on the actuality of what Section 230 enables

    Websites where users are held accountable for their own content and actions instead of blaming people and sites who had nothing to do with it.

    that it’s being used by corporations to stilfe the very free speech that it was intended to promote

    Try enabling said free speech. The only "free speech" it’s stifling is libelous and defamatory accusations against people and sites who didn’t actually do the things they are accused of.

    THEN that’ll be changed

    Well, actually, it’s doing exactly what it’s supposed to do and everyone seems to agree it’s working well except you and legacy entertainment industries. So that will be never?

    I’ve won on this topic

    You’re definition of winning is a bit odd then. If by winning you mean the legislation got passed? Well, we’re not there yet. If by winning you mean you got some politicians to agree with you? Yeah sure. But the fallout from actually passing and enforcing this legislation is going to make the entire world wonder why the hell anyone ever listened to a word you said. Maybe it’s a good thing you stay anonymous.

    Anonymous Coward says:

    Re: Re: Re:3 Re:

    Sorry, my point was that he was referencing not using Google’s services such as search, email, youtube, etc… Not the analytics scripts many sites use to enhance their websites or track users or serve up ads. I wouldn’t consider any of those "using Google" for end users, and I don’t think the AC or anyone else would either.

    Besides that, that still does not make Google a monopoly. No one is forcing any site owner to use Google scripts, embeds, fonts, etc…

    Thad (profile) says:

    Re: Re: Re:4 Re:

    Besides that, that still does not make Google a monopoly. No one is forcing any site owner to use Google scripts, embeds, fonts, etc…

    The definition of a monopoly isn’t "you’re forced to use it"; it’s "if you wish to use this particular type of service, then this company is your only option".

    I would argue that Google is, at minimum, a near monopoly in terms of large-scale analytics and advertising, which is the company’s primary business.

    Which I suppose is pretty far afield of the point of the article, and I certainly didn’t mean to agree with the whiny-butt who shows up in every article to whine about Section 230.

    Anonymous Coward says:

    Re: Re: Re:5 Re:

    The definition of a monopoly isn’t "you’re forced to use it"; it’s "if you wish to use this particular type of service, then this company is your only option".

    Poor wording on my part then. By that I meant there are other options besides Google for those same scripts, etc… Yes they may not be as good as Google but there are other options.

    I would argue that Google is, at minimum, a near monopoly in terms of large-scale analytics and advertising

    To be honest I don’t know in that specific area. I don’t follow the business of large-scale analytics and advertising, but I can’t imagine Google is the only player out there. They may be the best player, but it’s hard to imagine them being the only one, or even one of a very few.

    which is the company’s primary business.

    I would debate that. Is it the company’s primary source of revenue? Yes. But that’s not their primary business. Google’s primary business is the consumer products they release such as their search engine, Android, gmail, Chrome, gdocs, etc…

    CloudedJudgement says:

    Re: Uhh - are you mentally challenged?

    Google does NOT have a monopoly, is not monopolistic.

    Google only has as much control or power as we (the people) grant them.

    If the majority of the people in the world didn’t want Google to have what sway they do have, they’d stop using their products and the advertising dollars would leave them.

    If you hate Google having the power you think they have, then look at yourself, it’s YOUR fault because you (and billions like you) choose Google.

    Google only dominates because it is The Will of the People that they do so.

    ECA (profile) says:

    well...this is fun

    "Commercial sites and apps where users can post material must make “best efforts” to preemptively buy licences for anything that users may possibly upload –"

    Commercial? And now comes 1 Corp that gives license to make snippets.. WOW, sounds like the RIAA/MPAA, and every other agency in the USA that License Jukeboxes..

    Reading thru… we could forget the WWW and HTTP..
    techdirt.com works..but not http://WWW.techdirt.com
    Its that little preview window they seem to be bitching about.

    I also think this will hurt everyone, NOT just newspapers.
    Music creators, Game developers.. Try to advert for the people WHO WANT it to spread.

    But news papers have not gotten the BIG HINT… The small agencies wont get anything. as local news isnt 90% of news. Its the Big guys that do international news that will get the money…and Even the Big guys can CRAP on the little guys now.. The little guys didnt FIND the news and publish it…The little guys will now PAY MORE..

    ECA (profile) says:

    Re: well...this is fun

    let me add….
    That NOW anyone in the world can ABUSE the EU.. just to link to an article from Anywhere in the world..

    I can see Google/MSN getting license direct from the big guys..and being able to be the MAJOR aggregator..
    Insted of sharing the news, it now becomes NEWS for money..and you will need to goto the big corps to find it.

    Something funny about this tho..the ISP’s trying to develop there OWN systems and news agencies..Privatizing NEWS..

    Anonymous Coward says:

    If you are plwnning to travel to Europe, just set up your own vpn server on your home computer before you go, so you can bypass geo fencing that is sure to come in.

    Doing thie using your own home computer will make ir look like you are coming from your house in the usa or whatever and nobody will be the wiser. And bypasssing geo fencing does break any laws in the usa or any EU country.

    When i had an online radio station, and travelled the world, I would do this so that I could access my SiriusXM and iHeart subscriptions while travelling abroad. Contary to what some might say, I did not break any US laws doing this, nor the laws of just about any country I travelled to.

    What we used to do is similar to what BeoutQ did, only it was on radio and no video, going to events and broadcasting on internet radio, briadcasting a lot of tennis and figure skating mostly.

    Using a VPN to bypass geoblocking to listen to iHeart or SiriusXM did not break either US law or the laws of any country I travelled to except Qatar.

    Anonymous Coward says:

    What’s Europe’s actual perspective?

    To hear the usual trolls, Europe is a continent that could never deliver desirable content, which is why the most consumed products are Hollywood and American. This is the rationale they use to rubbish claims that places with less harsh copyright enforcement have thriving culture, or as a "counterargument" to artists who criticise copyright like Dan Bull.

    Until Google gets involved, of course, then all of a sudden Europe is a realm of untapped potential, troubled artists and creators, just waiting to be let loose if only, oh if only the big evil Google didn’t exist on their shores.

    Europe could be nuked from orbit tomorrow and the copyright knuckleheads would still be trying to sell them the new blockbuster sequel. Or trying to sue their corpses. Whichever pays more. Probably the latter, given the scourge of Prenda-style trolls in Sweden.

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