MEP Julia Reda writes in her bog about upcoming censorship legislation in the EU and a call to action for those most affected [juliareda.eu], specifically the Free Software community.
The starting point for this legislation was a fight between big corporations, the music industry and YouTube, over money. The music industry complained that they receive less each time one of their music videos is played on a video platform like YouTube than they do when their tracks are listened to on subscription services like Spotify, calling the difference the “value gap”. They started a successful lobbying effort: The upload filter law is primarily intended to give them a bargaining chip to demand more money from Google in negotiations. Meanwhile, all other platforms are caught in the middle of that fight, including code sharing communities.
The lobbying has engrained in many legislators’ minds the false idea that platforms which host uploads for profit are necessarily exploiting creators.
The fight affects both sides of the Atlantic because once bad rules are enacted on either side, calls for "harmonization" come from the other.
Earlier on SN:
Mulled EU Copyright Shakeup Will Turn Us Into Robo-Censors [soylentnews.org]
EU Parliament’s Copyright Rapporteur Has Learned Nothing from Year-long Copyright Debate [soylentnews.org]
European Commission Hides Copyright Evidence Again [soylentnews.org]