Funky Papa
FUNK-Y-PPA-4
Newsflash: Oettinger continues to be a right cunt.
Without much fanfare, the EC has finally laid a comprehensive reform of the EU's copyright rules. This is probably going to turn into a complete mess, as the proposal is nothing but a love letter to old media conglomerates signed by Commissioner Oettinger, who has absolutely no business being anywhere close to a computer, copyright laws or just plain policy making.
Unsurprisingly, most mainstream outlets are being purposefully obtuse, making hard to understand what this is about and why the news are so damn hated by start-ups and smaller outlets. The Financial Times has published a rather aseptic article under the title "Old media hopes to benefit from new EU copyright rules", while The Guardian has made a mockery of journalism with its piece, "New EU copyright rules could boost media groups". You need to look for the proposal's critics in order to get a fuller picture of the situation. As per usual, Julia Reda (rapporteur of the Parliament's review of 2001's Copyright Directive) has done a bang up jub summarising the issue while calling out Oettinger for being a corporate puppet.
Commissioner Oettinger is about to turn EU copyright reform into another ACTA
Remember the universally mocked Google tax enacted by Spain? Oettinger and his minions want it to be Eurowide. Axel Springer demands it. On steroids.
Do you enjoy streaming music from the internet? Too bad.
Fuck.
So what about geoblocking and the freedom to enjoy multimedia content across the EU? That was in the cards, right? Well, fuck you too.
And of course, there's more.
Meanwhile...
Fuck you too, buddy.
There's already a campaign against the proposal, which is expected to become a much fiercer battle than the fight for net neutrality ever was. On the plus side, this still has to go through the Parliament (which is not amenable to the idea and hosts a hardcore group of detractors) and the council of ministers, and you can count with European start-ups raising a massive stink across the Union. On the negative side, many politicians across Europe will bend over backwards to curry the favour of powerful media groups, so expect this to become a very nasty, very politicised issue over the following months, specially with Google facing some extra scrutiny and some actors interesting in conflating both issues as if they were the same.
Without much fanfare, the EC has finally laid a comprehensive reform of the EU's copyright rules. This is probably going to turn into a complete mess, as the proposal is nothing but a love letter to old media conglomerates signed by Commissioner Oettinger, who has absolutely no business being anywhere close to a computer, copyright laws or just plain policy making.
Unsurprisingly, most mainstream outlets are being purposefully obtuse, making hard to understand what this is about and why the news are so damn hated by start-ups and smaller outlets. The Financial Times has published a rather aseptic article under the title "Old media hopes to benefit from new EU copyright rules", while The Guardian has made a mockery of journalism with its piece, "New EU copyright rules could boost media groups". You need to look for the proposal's critics in order to get a fuller picture of the situation. As per usual, Julia Reda (rapporteur of the Parliament's review of 2001's Copyright Directive) has done a bang up jub summarising the issue while calling out Oettinger for being a corporate puppet.
Commissioner Oettinger is about to turn EU copyright reform into another ACTA
Oettinger’s insistence that end users sharing links will not be affected is an attempt at misdirection. Links posted to social networks today automatically include a snippet from the linked article, which the proposal would undeniably make subject to licensing for 20 years after publication. No exception is provided for individuals. Accordingly, this proposal would make posting a link to an article from 1996 to Facebook illegal without a licence.
Remember the universally mocked Google tax enacted by Spain? Oettinger and his minions want it to be Eurowide. Axel Springer demands it. On steroids.
Even worse, Oettinger is not just trying to extend a failed idea to all of the EU – he’s proposing to extend its scope even further: The new copyright would force not only news aggregators to pay when they show excerpts of information from news sites, but also any other web service that comes in contact with online news like social networks and search engines. Germany decided that such extra copyright on news content (which loses its commercial value within days) should last for one year – but now Oettinger is planning to extend it to 10 years, and even lists up to 50 as an option!
Do you enjoy streaming music from the internet? Too bad.
Service providers like YouTube currently have the obligation to act on reports of copyright infringement. Oettinger is looking to turn this principle on its head and legally force them to proactively negotiate with the music industry to acquire licenses for (or reach other agreements on) anything their users upload, as well as to build systems that continuously monitor uploads and scan for copyrighted content.
Here, the music industry did not get all they wanted: Originally, they demanded that YouTube should be directly liable for anything their millions of users upload. That would have given the industry an excellent bargaining position to demand more money – but the Commission rejected the idea.
That leaves us with a great irony: YouTube, the target of these actions, has already been voluntarily implementing these ideas for years. So the Commission’s response to complaints about YouTube is… to force all providers to act like YouTube.
Fuck.
So what about geoblocking and the freedom to enjoy multimedia content across the EU? That was in the cards, right? Well, fuck you too.
At the behest of the film industry, Oettinger has given up plans to abolish geoblocking. He is refusing to propose the action that would reduce geoblocking significantly overnight: Stopping forcing video services to turn away customers from the “wrong” EU country. Industry contracts will continue to force services to discriminate between Europeans and turn away paying customers – artificially limiting the audience of VoD services and European films and cementing the dominance of Netflix.
And of course, there's more.
Meanwhile...
Fuck you too, buddy.
There's already a campaign against the proposal, which is expected to become a much fiercer battle than the fight for net neutrality ever was. On the plus side, this still has to go through the Parliament (which is not amenable to the idea and hosts a hardcore group of detractors) and the council of ministers, and you can count with European start-ups raising a massive stink across the Union. On the negative side, many politicians across Europe will bend over backwards to curry the favour of powerful media groups, so expect this to become a very nasty, very politicised issue over the following months, specially with Google facing some extra scrutiny and some actors interesting in conflating both issues as if they were the same.