French Politicians Pushing To Ban Linking To Any Website Without Permission
from the you-fail-at-the-internet dept
Apparently two French Parliament Members are on a mission to ban linking to websites, unless you first have permission. In short, they're looking to undermine one of the key features of the internet itself.The idea was proposed but rejected by the Legislative Commission, but it is brought back again. Socialist Karine Berger and Valérie Rabault once again tabled their Amendment #843 to Axelle Lemaire’s Bill for a Digital Republic, which would actually prohibit by default a large quantity of hyperlinks in France.Now, it's fairly obvious that you're dealing with two politicians who think they're somehow proposing a solution to "piracy" on the internet. But it's really yet another attempt at punishing Google. Similar to efforts in Germany, Spain and even the European Parliament, very, very shortsighted Google haters think that a way to "punish" Google is to make it pay money to sites that it links to (mainly when it comes to news aggregation). The two French politicians admit flat out that they're trying to help copyright maximalists:
This device aims at amending the Law for Confidence in the Digital Economy and hold ISP and hosts criminally responsible as soon as they “allow public access to works or objects protected by the copyright code, including through automated means.”
The amendment states “users are required to obtain authorization from concerned rights holders”. The two MPs demand that “such authorization covers actions by users of such services when transmitting to the said users the protected works or objects, in order to allow use as stated in the fist paragraph inasmuch as such users are not acting on professional purposes”.
The amendment is intended to “protect the creation of authors and define the scope of their rights on hyperlinks”, according to the two MPS’ rationale. “The amendment aims at reinstating protection on these hyperlinks, in favour of the authors and rights holders of the links’ target content.”But linking isn't and should never be infringement. It's a reference and it takes you to the original content, which is beneficial. And yet, of course, it all comes back to politicians thinking that just because Google is successful while linking to others' content, Google must be somehow bad.
“Just look at Google’s referencing procedures: they are based on hyperlinks, and links that lead to copyright-protected works on their publishing site are precisely what allows Google to create any added value whatsoever”, said MP Karine Berger in her plea for the amendment.Yes, Google creates value for itself in linking to websites. It also creates value for users. And for the websites it links to. That's why there's a massive search engine optimization business in which sites purposely try to get ranked better on Google, because sites that are linked from Google get tremendous benefit out of it.
“In other words, some commercial Internet operators benefit from the value of some copyright-protected cultural goods and services without ever paying for using them. The amendment, by raising the question as to whom is responsible for collecting value through hyperlinks, aims at overturning jurisprudence of the Court of Justice of the European Union. It is a paramount legal and economic issue.”
I have a hard time understanding any kind of logic wherein you have a setup in which everyone basically benefits... and a politician still wants to come in and complain because one of the parties in the setup is doing well.
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Filed Under: copyright, france, internet, karine berger, licenses, linking, open internet, valerie rabault
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tabled
This is in contrast with the US usage of the same word which means to "leave on the table and not discuss at this time."
http://english.stackexchange.com/questions/96961/tabled-us-vs-uk
E
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Nuke 'em
2) All search engines should detect french users, and for all search queries return a screen "no linking allowed in your country."
History shows that the French population is pretty good at revolutions - it may be time for another one.
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Re: Nuke 'em
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"Copyright-protected" - that would be, ummm, the entire website, right? I've benefited from visiting websites "without ever paying for using them", so I guess I'm guilty as charged. Stick my fiber connection into the guillotine, Madame!
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Replace all results with we'd show you stuff but they insist we pay for making it easier for you to find things. They don't want you to see their content, so we've respected their wishes.
How long until the public screams loud enough to be heard over the corporations who keep demanding more and more special rights even when they are nonsensical.
It can be the ultimate right to be forgotten, your government is this hostile so we've forgotten you all exist.
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Google must not be sharing their profits with the politicians, and so they need to be made to transfer their profits to a company that will share.
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Re: Nuke 'em
If this idiocy becomes law everyone should start filing copyright lawsuits against everyone else.
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Directions
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But then I recoil in horror to think they might try to build this backwards philosophy predicated on publicity rights....
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Re: tabled
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Re: Nuke 'em
Despite their unjust and undeserved "Cheese Eating Surrender Monkey" tag, the French are notorious for not putting up with any kind of crap from their governments. So I find the last few years very perplexing...
Take bread, sacred to the French, but even they've been succumbing to the evil British Chorleywood menace. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-13670278
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*sigh* It's all Napoleon's fault.
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Re: Nuke 'em
History shows the French population is horrible at revolutions. They don't call the aftermath of the last one "The Reign of Terror" for nothing; it was one of the darkest points in the country's history.
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Witnessing the early stages of a falling empire
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Easy solution....
The advantage to this is that you will have extra time to enhance your site without the bother of all of those pesky customers calling.....
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Re: *sigh* It's all Napoleon's fault.
WWI was started by Serbia and Austria-Hungary being unable to find a peaceful resolution to a political crisis precipitated by an assassination of an Austrian nobleman by a Yugoslav nationalist. How does France have anything to do with that?
Also, how does France (later) sending tons of soldiers to the killing fields reduce their population of smart people, when the best and brightest disproportionately tend to find ways to avoid serving on the front lines?
Nothing you just wrote up there makes any sense.
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The war on footnotes
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Re: Re: Nuke 'em
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Re: Nuke 'em
Another is to remove the hyperlink HTML tag and just display the URL(or short URL) so the user can copy and paste into a new tab/window.
This will create opportunities for new browser plugins to re-instate the hyperlink on the client side.
Technology will route around the issue.
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There's this little thing called...
Learn how to use it, or stop whining about search indexing.
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Circular reasoning...
Heretic , rebel, a thing to flout.
But love and I had the wit to win:
We drew a circle and took him In !
All links to .fr go into the circular
link rabbit hole...
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a minister in Japan has just resigned over bribery charges to do with TPP, those involved in this need checking! the internet is the best distribution medium invented so far. obviously the movie industry wants it, but just for their own use! why else would they keep trying to get more harsh sentences for file distribution? why else would they keep plying Congress and the courts with contributions?
can you imagine an internet that is run by an industry that relies on 'make believe' to earn money? no one and nothing would be allowed to use it unless paying the industries.
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There's two sides to this coin
If lawmakers would require rights holders to register their proven claims into a global database, with a single contact, and with the caveat that any IP not registered (or inquiries not responded to within a reasonable time frame) be considered public domain, then there might be something to talk about.
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Re: Re: Nuke 'em
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Physical addresses too.
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Talk about the web going dark...
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Re: Re: Re: Nuke 'em
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Socialismo!
This is 21st century socialism: that is, socialism for the rich, who probably are the leading contributors to the socialist cause!
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As soon as the French learn the internet has collapsed in on itself, some will buy VPNs and others will throw up their hands in discuss and terminate their internet accounts. Any site that allows discussion and doesn't expressly forbid urls will be liable to so good bye to sites such as this one or a forum of any nature.
Yet maybe this is a good thing when everyone starts blocking .fr in the firewalls. I would think it would drive the exact opposite into being of hyperlinks in and of themselves are not infringing and contain no infringing material. They are merely locator notations.
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Change the google homepage for France to a picture of the two politicians and add contact email addresses.
Then see how long those two remain in power....
Hey presto! no more stupid laws in France regarding URLs being 'piracy' (for a while)
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Re:
It's technically illegal under French Copyright law to take photos of the Mona Lisa and other Da Vinci works, presumably to encourage the dust in his tomb to make more stuff..
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Therefore because of 'publicity rights' no one should mention ANY celebrities name, movies they are in, upcoming films, books OR albums.....
The screams from LA would be heard in Jakarta....
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Re: Talk about the web going dark...
This IS France we're talking about after all.......
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First, one of the supporters of the bill tried to bs her way out by stating that she's not trying to "prohibit" anything, but to create "permission" to link to sites.
That's such an obvious lie that it reminds me of the comparison with data caps in US: being "friendly" is not helping someone back on his feet... after you first punched him to the ground.
Second, Berger doesn't even seem to listen to herself speak... "and links that lead to copyright-protected works on their publishing site are precisely what allows Google to create any added value whatsoever". Yes, Google creates value. That's the whole point: Google creates value for the public, the original site owner... and Google himself. What's the problem there?
Third, there is already a way to authorize or deny permission to Google. It's called robots.txt. Funny enough, most sites already explicitly allow Google. And most other implicitly do the same. What need is there for a law as long as most respectable crawlers respect the instructions there?
Finally, most people used to pay to get advertisement. And most sites are currently paying to optimize their SEO. Being on Google is valuable, and everyone should be glad that Google is doing it (mostly) for free. Funny how some country don't understand the basics of economy here.
Not that Google doesn't have some abusive behaviors, but that is definitely not something I'd bother criticizing them about.
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Re: Socialismo!
Virtually nothing??
At best the academics do all the editing work and peer review work without pay, and get published for free, and at worse they also have to pay page charges to get published.
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Re: Nuke 'em
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Fundamental
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Re: Re: Nuke 'em
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Keep going
Let's go into the library and rip out the card catalog system because that's obviously pointing people to books without the book owner's permission.
If this is an absurd comparison, then have the politicians explain the real difference between Google and a card catalog? Oh, right, one is done "on a computer".
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Re: Re: Nuke 'em
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Not all linking is equal
1) using an html link in the text of your web page, linking to someone else's content.
and
2) using an html link in (eg) an image tag, effectively using content hosted on someone else's system as your own.
Entirely different things. Don't mix them up.
Now, discuss. Could the proposed law be reworded to include case 2 without including case 1? Would such a law still be objected to?
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Re: Talk about the web going dark...
When all you have to do is put a Robot.txt file at your web site to be complete ignored by Google and others. They of course seem to want it both ways. If France wants to go back to the middle ages let them.
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Re: Fundamental
They want it both ways though. They want Google t link to them and PAY them money to do so!!!
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This isn't unique
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Serverless in France
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Re: Re: Nuke 'em
I have to disagree. To my mind the French in Haiti and Indochina, and perhaps also their treatment of their other colonies such as Algeria and Morocco was far darker...
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Re: Re: Talk about the web going dark...
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New social rule
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Re: Not all linking is equal
How do you see these as different?
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The trouble with using the language of scarcity ("consuming content") and ownership ("protection, rights") is that it cedes the narrative to the maximalists and puts us on the back foot. Ownership presupposes the right to control the owned item. The trouble with letting the maximalists frame their arguments in terms of property ownership is that they won't give ground on anything, however gracious we ourselves are.
Techdirt does an awesome job of pointing out that this is bunk and that other business models exist. Let's push harder to expose the lie: copyright is NOT property. Belief that it is fuels the rationale behind this nonsense over linking so we need to kick it down.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Nuke 'em
Do you still like the idea of having a violent revolution where you live, JoeCool? I wouldn't recommend it.
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Re: Re: Re: Nuke 'em
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Dear France,
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Dear France,
Nutters.
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Re: Not all linking is equal
OK.
There is no ethical difference between the two. A link is just a pointer to a parcel of data somewhere else. There is no more of a moral or ethical issue to linking to anything anywhere than there is to pointing to a physical place and saying "it's over there".
From the point of view of a site operator, there are simple mechanisms that prevent the sort of deep linking that you're talking about (inline images, etc.) If this is a big deal for a site, they can stop it easily already with existing tools. I do exactly this on my own websites to prevent anyone from inlining images, so that I'm not paying for bandwidth that is really being used by a different site.
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Re:
I didn't notice any enforcement at all - I took photos of it and a bunch of other stuff at the Louvre without being hassled or anything.
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Re: tabled
That is odd because for once Canada uses the same meaning as the US. We generally track more closely to the Brits' style (favour vs. favor, behavior vs. behaviour, etc).
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Re: Re: Nuke 'em
Truth really is stranger than fiction.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Nuke 'em
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Re: Re: Re: Nuke 'em
If you take the time to read the historical accounts of that era, pretty much all of those colonial powers at the time were every bit as despicable as all the rest. Even otherwise nice and benign Holland acted atrociously.
I'm glad enough managed to survive it. Just imagine the kind of mindset that can bring itself to believe that Native Americans were little better than vermin. Eww ...
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Re: Re: *sigh* It's all Napoleon's fault.
That only makes sense if you equate "best and brightest" with "rich." I don't. You don't need to be very smart to inherit a fortune. You just need to have the right parents.
Even in the US' Civil War, the rich could pay some poor bugger to serve for them.
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Re:
No, the bribery had to do with a construction company, not TPP. It was just a coincidence that he was the guy handling TPP for Japan. Or, maybe to handle TPP, you need to be corrupt so obviously give the job to him.
My theory is they're very stupid in important areas and completely divorced from reality. How can it make any sense to blow a fortune on lawyers to win a judgement nobody in his right mind would expect would ever be paid?
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Re: Talk about the web going dark...
URLs? More like going back to the days before some smart cookie (Paul Mockapetris; I'm surprised I've never heard of him) invented DNS. Imagine the typical Twitter or Facebook addict trying to deal with dotted quads.
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Re: Re: Talk about the web going dark...
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Re:
The problem is money. We can scream until we're blue in the face educating the Universe as to what's right and wrong, but while they still have the money to buy politicians and we keep electing bribable politicians, they'll keep on winning.
About all we can do about it is try to make a boycott work, and seldom do they. Your typical twenty-something millenial hates it when all their friends are talking about something they haven't yet seen themselves, spoiling the sweet surprise ending for them. Somebody here only a few days ago used "Spoiler Alert" before they started mentioning Gattaca. What is that, ten, fifteen years old? I found out over the weekend that one of my friends had never heard of it. I was shocked.
Sigh. :-P
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Re: Re: Re: Talk about the web going dark...
I'm not sure I understand the question, but would you rather got to 104.25.104.28 or techdirt.com? They're the same thing of course, but one's in a much more human manageable form, obviously.
I think the point I'm trying to make is they wouldn't stop working, but they would become unusable for most people. The typical non-geek has likely never even heard the term "dotted quad."
I'm not sure either where you got "DNS stop working" from what I wrote. I meant it to mean a time before DNS was invented (didn't yet exist), and things like "techdirt.com" wasn't possible even if 104.25.104.28 was.
I hope I didn't completely screw the pooch on that. Sorry for the misunderstanding if so. It was a fairly busy long weekend (well, for me anyway), and I may be suffering from creeping senility, ya never know. :-)
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Re:
It's just entropy in action leading to the heat death of the Universe. They're just goin' with the flow, or the natural order of things. No, there will not be a Big Crunch and everything starts over. It'll all just keep on evaporating away and getting colder until universal equilibrium is reached at zero degrees Kelvin and *everything stops*.
On the bright side, it'll be a long time by human reckoning before it gets there. We'll be long extinct well before that, so not our problem.
Enjoy every sunrise you get! :-) Have fun.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Talk about the web going dark...
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Talk about the web going dark...
Remember, that's what I was replying to.
I get what you're saying about what the story's about, but there's more than one thread going on here. I was just commenting on what they said/wrote. If silly French politicos want to tell us what we can do with URLs, they're really telling us all we can actually rely on is dotted quads, as in pre-DNS.
Yeah, these nitwit clueless French politicos want to break the web if they can't get the vig for their masters, but they're (obviously) not seeing the whole picture. Human readable links == DNS. If they're objecting to human readable links or what we do with them, I interpret that to mean going back to before the days DNS existed, leaving us with dotted quads, not human usable URLs. I could handle that, but my late mother wouldn't have been able to.
I think it would be very helpful for all of us to assume the average politician is just an idiot savant. They only know enough to be dangerous to others or themselves.
I hope that's clearer. Or, maybe I should concede defeat. You may have the high ground, I don't know. No biggie.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Talk about the web going dark...
If silly French politicos want to tell us what we can do with URLs, they're really telling us all we can actually rely on is dotted quads, as in pre-DNS.
It seems like you're jumping too far. Nothing in this law (if I understand it right) would prevent me from typing a domain name into my browser, therefore there would be no need to fall back to IP addresses. There's a difference between a link and a domain name.
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