European Parliament Rejects IFPI Plan To Make ISPs Copyright Cops
from the good-for-them dept
There’s been a huge lobbying campaign going on throughout much of the world to get local governments to put pressure on ISPs to require them to kick those accused of file sharing off of the internet. It had been worrisome that these efforts actually seemed to be getting some traction in both France and the UK despite vehement opposition from many people. It appears that the opposition has started to get its point of view across. The EU Parliament has now rejected a plan to criminalize file sharing and to implement a “three strikes and you’re off the internet” policy. The vote itself isn’t binding, but suggests how the EU Parliament feels. While France has already put in place such a law, there was some feeling that France would push to make similar laws enforced European-wide. This vote should put a damper on those plans.
Filed Under: copyright cops, europe, european parliament, france, ifpi, isps
Companies: ifpi