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posted by martyb on Saturday December 12 2015, @10:21AM   Printer-friendly
from the essential-feedback dept.

Noting the EU's horrible effort at providing a comment form, Mike Masnick and company have constructed their own page to help you tell EU legislators to not screw up the online world.

The Copia Institute is a new, digital-native think tank from Mike Masnick and the team behind Techdirt.

Don't Wreck The Net!

Europe is considering new regulations that threaten to undermine the internet as we know it.

The European Commission is asking the public critical questions about the future of our online world, but these questions are buried throughout a lengthy consultation survey that will probably make your eyes water. We need you to tackle the survey and make your voice heard. It's not easy, so we're here to help.

Go ahead, take a look at the public consultation. It's got five pages of oblique questions and too much smallprint for anyone's taste. But it's really all asking one thing: WHAT ARE THE ROLES AND RESPONSIBILITIES OF SERVICE PROVIDERS IN THE DIGITAL WORLD? Our survey survival guide helps you overcome the bureaucratic barrier and answer that question, because it's at risk of being ignored.

This isn't just for European companies--it impacts everyone online.

[...] Don't let a bad survey bore you into silence.

Thanks to one confusing and poorly-designed survey, the consultation is receiving very little response from the people most affected by this important issue--entrepreneurs, service providers, innovators, and the public. Don't let lawmakers shake the foundations of the internet without your input. The public consultation closes on December 30th.

Okay, are you ready? Take a deep breath, open up our survey survival guide, and make your voice heard.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 12 2015, @11:20AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 12 2015, @11:20AM (#275373)

    What actual threat is there here? Are they trying to censor the Internet, get rid of net neutrality, or something else? It seems like there would be some indication in the summary as to how, specifically, they're trying to screw up the Internet.