Page 1 of 1

Article 13 is almost finished – and it will change the internet as we know it

Posted: 14 Jan 2019, 00:18
by R_Head
https://juliareda.eu/2019/01/article-13 ... -finished/

Negotiations about the EU copyright reform lawhave resumed: After missing the original Christmas deadline, negotiators for the European Parliament and Council are now aiming to finalise the text on January 21, 2019.

The negotiators have reached agreement on the core of Article 13, which will change the internet as we know it: They want to make internet platforms directly liable for any copyright infringements their users commit.

What remains to be decided: Exactly what lengths will platforms need to go to to avoid or limit their liability? Just how much they will need to restrict our ability to post and share our creations online?


Let that stew for a min, think, what does it take to enforce that? Also, who rules what is a copyright violation? What other bits and pieces were added, burried, that we do not know.

Bad Yu-Yu I see ahead +1

Re: Article 13 is almost finished – and it will change the internet as we know it

Posted: 15 Jan 2019, 13:09
by viking60
Let us hope that it will not pass. The Digital rights are a bad excuse for heavy surveillance which the ISP's will have to do to avoid liability.

This is a sneaky way for governments to make others do the surveillance they cannot do themselves."Constitutions have principles so lets avoid them by using corporations... "

Germany and Italy have stated that they will vote against it so that makes this pretty dead as an European thing.

Poland seems to be for it though :think:

Re: Article 13 is almost finished – and it will change the internet as we know it

Posted: 15 Jan 2019, 14:40
by R_Head
Poland is sucking up to the US. A pitch that made me laugh was the suggestion to Trump to build a Military Base in Polland and called it Fort/Camp/Base Trump. Talk about sticking their heads on the US ass.

Poland's Gov Co is a big time globalist, so I would not be surprised if they vote for it.

This is "Net Neutrality" European Style ;)