Member of the European Parliament Julia Reda writes an update to what has been going on with with proposed changes to copyright law as they make their way from the European Commission and over to the European Parliament:
Ever since the European Commission presented its hugely controversial proposal to force internet platforms to employ censorship machines, the copyright world has been eagerly awaiting the position of the European Parliament. Today, the person tasked with steering the copyright reform through Parliament, rapporteur Axel Voss, has finally issued the text he wants the Parliament to go forward with.
It's a green light for censorship machines: Mr. Voss has kept the proposal originally penned by his German party colleague, former Digital Commissioner Günther Oettinger, almost completely intact.
She walks through the following points to notice in the so-called compromise:
She closes with encouragement that it's not too late to stop the Censorship Machines:
Now it's time to call upon your MEPs to reject Mr. Voss' proposal! You can use tools such as SaveTheMeme.net by Digital Rights NGO Bits of Freedom or ChangeCopyright.org by Mozilla to call the Members of the Legal Affairs Committee free of charge. Or look for MEPs from your country and send them an email. But most importantly, spread the words! Ask you local media to report on this law. The Internet as we know it is at stake.
Source : Green light for upload filters: EU Parliament's copyright rapporteur has learned nothing from year-long debate
See also : Proposal for a Directive on Copyright in the Digital Single Market : Draft compromise [sic] amendments on Article 13 and corresponding recitals (warning for PDF)
(Score: 2) by bzipitidoo on Saturday February 24 2018, @06:16AM
Saying education is just an "excuse" is too trivial a way to put it. Education absolutely does imply copying. Copying is the primary mechanism by which education is accomplished. A great deal of the material students study should not be subject to intellectual property law because they are facts of nature that are not patentable, or because they are mere collections of data, or because they are far too old for any limited time monopolies to still be in effect. Yet the patent office is in the habit of granting overly broad patents, and the scope of copyrights and patents have been greatly expanded, so that education is under some threat. Textbook publishers have been gaming public education for decades, needlessly churning textbooks to sell more copies which also conveniently keeps the copyrights fresh. "Exemptions" isn't enough to stop the greedy publishers from extorting money from students.
> my life would be immeasurably poorer if several "professional" authors hadn't completed their works.
See, you too are infected with irrational fear of loss. You're thinking of what you might have lost, rather than what you might have gained. Maybe some works wouldn't have been made, but if instead a lot more, and better works were made, it's a worthwhile trade.
The infection has seriously warped our thinking. For instance, the fictional Star Trek technology known as the transporter, the transfer booths and stepping disks in Niven's Ringworld (1970 Nebula Award winner), the transfer machinery in in Zelazny's Lord of Light (1968 Hugo Award winner) to achieve immortality by moving people from their old bodies to fresh new young adult bodies, and a whole lot of other SF stories suffers this severe blind spot. Which is, that the same machinery that can magically move a person could as easily or more easily create a copy of the person. Even Kiln People shies away, positing clones that are inferior to the originals in that they live only a short time. We like to think we're unique, loving the idea of teleportation while hating the most reasonable method such travel might be doable, which is to create a perfect clone at the destination. This is so endemic that the entire SF genre of our time is the worse for it, pandering to our egos on that matter rather than challenging us.
> Patreon ... wouldn't work in a free copy society. ... I don't think it takes a huge stretch of the imagination to conclude that a majority of that funding will dry up
That's speculation. Patreon is only one site. Even if Patreon and Kickstarter do not work out, crowdfunding still could. What do you think the National Endowment for the Arts is?
> I am totally happy to have my hard earned cash go to Virginia Heinlein,
I'm not. She died 15 years ago. You pick one of the most objectionable features of current copyright law, which is that we never meant for artistic endeavor to become valuable heirlooms so that the grandchildren of famous artists need never work a day in their lives. That kind of compensation is so far in the future and so rare that it is a poor motivation for living artists.
> We have a system the WORKS today.
Does it?
> we have never produced creative and technical works at the rate we do today.
And you believe intellectual property law is responsible, rather than the massive increase in world population and the technological advances that have made recording, playback, and broadcast even possible?
> You know what I find funny, by definition an extremist is almost always someone who would insist that it is not they but you who is the extremist
Did I say I wasn't an extremist on this? I know my position is radical, even further out than most of the Pirate Party wants to go.