Three Strikes Rule May Sneak Into EU Law, Despite Earlier Rejection
from the never-let-your-guard-down dept
We've talked in the past about how the entertainment industry never gives up trying to push through its legislative agenda -- even after it is dealt setbacks. You may recall that the EU Parliament rejected a proposal to institute a "three strikes" law favored by the entertainment industry, that would kick people off the internet if they're accused (not found guilty, just accused) of unauthorized file sharing three times. The EU Parliament correctly noted that such a law would interfere with individuals privacy and civil rights. However, some academics have noted that another set of laws focusing on telco reform may backdoor in nearly identical three strikes language, requiring telcos to adopt such policies. The fear, obviously, is that this issue, buried in a big telco bill may not get very much attention and may be put into law without much debate, despite the EU Parliament's earlier rejection of such an idea.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Filed Under: eu, europe, telco regulations, three strikes
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Legislation
Earmarking and so on does need to stop. They need to be required to, flat out, vote on things on a per item basis. You don't make a Bill of Cyberlaw, you pass one item (such as unathorized access to a remote system is "hacking" and illegal) as a part of the "Cyberlaw Section".
None of this BS where stuff can "sneak in" to other bills. It will take longer, but face it. People are legislating TOO mcuh.
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Legislative Process
These are simply my opinions and I just felt like ranting.
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one thing
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LTS
In this rule, those that proposes legislation which is voted down three times, get kicked out of office.
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Re: LTS
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That's the American system already
But the DA and your attorney will CONVINCE you that the system doesn't care if you are guilty or innocent. The American system is set up that you are forced to plead guilty to at least one of the charges in exchange for dismissal of the others, even if you are innocent, because if you go to court on all three charges even if you are not guilty, the fact is that rarely does an American jury ever acquit a defendant who is, in fact, innocent. If the police arrested him, he MUST be guilty.
This is the same situation discussed above. If the RIAA has accused a person of illegal downloads, they MUST have done so. They never accept that sometimes teenagers use grandma's computer, or their boss's computer, or your computer or mine. Proof? All that is necessary is the ISP number appearing on some log, or proof of who the computer software is registered to.
Allegations are all that the Bush administration needs to detain and torture alleged terrorists for seven years, and continue doing so even after a federal judge orders their release. Why should the RIAA be held to any stricter standards than George Bush, who set the precedence that allegations are just as good as convictions?
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Re: That's the American system already
I like it when they accuse an HP laser printer of illegal downloads. Those pirate printers are the worst !
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it will not. the decision is against france' ruling
EU culture ministers yesterday (20 November) rejected French proposals to curb online piracy through compulsory measures against free downloading, instead agreeing to promote legal offers of music or films on the Internet.
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Sneaking stuff in is dishonest and should be illegal...
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