#save the internet

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mostlysignssomeportents:

The EU’s on-again/off-again Copyright Directive keeps sinking under its own weight: on the one side, you have German politicians who felt that it was politically impossible to force every online platform to spend hundreds of millions of euros to buy copyright filters to prevent a user from infringing copyright, even for an instant, and so proposed tiny, largely cosmetic changes to keep German small businesses happy; on the other side, you have French politicians who understand that the CEOs of multinational entertainment companies won’t stand for any compromise, or even the appearance of compromise, and so the process fell apart.

That is until Chancellor Merkel and President Macron sat down to broker a deal, in which Merkel caved on every single measure that even looked like it might protect small businesses, co-operatives, nonprofits, and individuals, ending up with a deal that guarantees that every existing small platform will be destroyed and no new ones can be started, leaving Europe in the hands of US Big Tech – forever.

Under the new deal, any platform where the public can communicate will have to buy copyright filters to intercept all public communications and compare them to a database of so-called “copyrighted works” (which anyone, anywhere, can add anything to), and then block anything that appears to be a match. Not only will these cost hundreds of millions of euros to develop and maintain, they will also block mountains of legitimate speech – speech that uses copyrighted works but falls under fair dealing, speech that is incorrectly identified as containing copyrighted works, speech that is deliberately suppressed by trolls, censors and frauds who deliberately claim ownership over works in the public domain, or works that other people hold the copyright to.

The “compromise” that Merkel has agreed to is this: platforms don’t have to add the filters until they have been in business for three years, or until they make €10m in a single year. That means that every single existing online forum that has been in operation for three years or more must immediately buy filters, even if it’s a small online community run by volunteers, or a commercial site with a tiny niche – like this little, longstanding community for people who like to fish. Even Patreon – which exists solely to get artists paid! – would have to buy filters or pull out of Europe.

But it gets even worse: under the terms of this deal, once a platform makes €5,000,000 in a year, it will be obligated to implement “notice and staydown” – that is, copyright filters by another name.

And it gets even worse: the new deal requires that every site, no matter how small, noncommercial, or public spirited, must demonstrate that it has taken ‘best efforts’ to license anything their users might conceivably upload, which means that any time a rightsholder offers you a license for content your users might use, you are obliged to buy it from them, at whatever price they name.

This is the end of the internet as we know it, and the beginning of an era in which all our communications, all our familial relations, political engagements, educational activities, employment-related work, romantic questing, everything, is subordinated to turning the internet into a cable TV system, where the only materials available are those that multinational entertainment corporations approve of. Remember when cable operators promised a digital future where “500 channel universe” of entertainment options were on tap? It’s arrived. We just had to kill the web – the “two billion channel universe” – to get it.

All is not lost: the next step will be a rubber-stamp where national negotiators for EU member states approve the deal, and then it will go for a vote in the European Parliament, who will have the final say, right before they stand for re-election in European elections this May.

In other words, of all the times that a catastrophic plan could come before Parliament, this is the best (or the least-worst): the moment at which Parliamentarians are most sensitive to their constituents’ wishes.

What’s more, Europeans hate this: so much so that the petition opposing it is now the the largest petition in European history, and within spitting distance of being the largest petition in the history of the human race.

There’s lots more to come on this, getting people to contact their MEPs ahead of the vote. This is a terrible state of affairs, but at least it is now so obviously, visibly terrible that it’s gotten a lot easier to explain to people on the sidelines. Mobilise your friends and family now: the future of our planetary-scale, species-wide electronic nervous system is at stake.

Article 13 is back on – and it got worse, not better [Julia Reda]


https://boingboing.net/2019/02/05/death-sentence-for-the-web.html

savenetneutrality:

mcbitchtits:

odinsblog:

Deregulation strikes again.

“Free market” capitalism does NOT care about raging forest fires, it does not care about endangering firefighters, it does not care about people dying due to lack of healthcare insurance. Unregulated capatilism cares only about making profits, apparently at any and all costs.

Californians! The state’s Net Neutrality bill just left committee (8/22) and went to the Assembly floor. Contact your Assembly member and tell them to vote yes: https://twitter.com/Celeste_pewter/status/1032469352501501952

the article: https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2018/08/verizon-throttled-fire-departments-unlimited-data-during-calif-wildfire

Remember this whole thing if you or anyone else ever starts thinking we don’t need net neutrality and ISPs are responsible enough to keep themselves in line.

dontbugmeimantisocial:

I’m American. I live right in the southwest and let me tell you, it’s hell over here right now, but it will become a lot worse if Article 13 is passed. 

You’ve probably heard about Article 13, and if you haven’t, go watch this video right now. Whatever you’re doing can wait for sixteen minutes and two seconds, because a second-long vote could destroy everything online.

Whether you’re from Europe or not, this law could affect you, so you should care Article 13 because it is going to destroy the online lives that you have built. No more posting memes, no more remixes, and no more YouTubers from anywhere. 

Jacksepticeye will no longer be able to upload. 

Markiplier will no longer be able to upload. 

MatPat won’t.

Thomas Sanders.

Dan and Phil.

How to Basic. 

All of your favorite content creators are at risk of losing their jobs because people want stricter laws on copyright, which will support the larger media companies but kill smaller creators. And because of this, we may lose everything online. 

So spread the word! Reblog this, reblog other people’s posts, find petitions, write your own posts! If you’re in Europe, contact your MEP’s and get them to understand how it will affect the people who use the internet. 

Please. 

#savetheinternet. 

 Senators are planning a vote to save Net Neutrality NEXT WEEK! Take action now to tell your senator

Senators are planning a vote to save Net Neutrality NEXT WEEK! Take action now to tell your senator to take action to ensure a free and open internet  ➡️ https://bit.ly/2Iz4Kex


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 The FCC just voted to repeal net neutrality—and the impact on reproductive freedom will likely be d

The FCC just voted to repeal net neutrality—and the impact on reproductive freedom will likely be devastating.


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Heyo amazon.

I just

I know y’all already got that um.

That deal that’s gonna get us through this whole net neutrality shit right?

Like.

You guys wouldn’t let your profits go down the drain right?

You do have someone ready to push the button that initiates the way around this mess,,,,,,,

RIGHT


Like idk something along the lines of

“Hey guys. Get amazon prime. We don’t block the FUCKINH internet. Eat a dick Pai.”


R I G H T

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