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EU votes and it very well will change the internet as we know it.
Very very ugly news concerning copyright laws and the future of the internet as we know it.
I just grabbed one of the first articles I saw... https://www.theguardian.com/technolo...ol-for-control personally I usually read some of the less ..um..."dramatic" articles from other news .... and even they were pretty grim in the coverage.... |
Re: EU votes and it very well will change the internet as we know it.
100% agreed Dave....
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Re: EU votes and it very well will change the internet as we know it.
a few of the other media articles speak of a database that copyright content is weighed against...
geez ..what a nightmare... wikipedia...youtube...internet archive..wayback machine... SOOO many valid places... So much info, and data... There will be a ton of "blank" spaces everywhere... and the cost of implementation of these laws.. for small fries... will not help...it will hurt I am sure... |
Re: EU votes and it very well will change the internet as we know it.
Hey wait...
... so Paul McCartney backed the new law? Where is Justin Bieber? -- |
Re: EU votes and it very well will change the internet as we know it.
welll....
thanks catbus... there is an "upside" I never saw... less Bieber everywhere... hopefully less Kardashians everywhere too... |
Re: EU votes and it very well will change the internet as we know it.
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Seriously, Dave, in this day and age, things are sooooo easy to look up. |
Re: EU votes and it very well will change the internet as we know it.
I suggest we get rid of copyrights all together or put a cap on how much you can make off something you copyright.
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Re: EU votes and it very well will change the internet as we know it.
Canada has an interesting take on copyright...
Say....you purchase a movie ...a music album...a game... whatever... you do not have a right to disseminate the product you bought ...share it...that is...or profit from it... but ...say you lose or your copy is destroyed...allowing one to get another copy is allowed... Paying over and over and over again for something one has already purchased ....is truly criminal... Respect of copyright laws is important... But there are extremes that are too much... If stringent enforcement is the end result... then ... eventually ... no one will be able to sing "Happy Birthday..." it is copywrit after all.... and that is just the beginning... stringent enforcement could result in ...say... you bought a film..or an album...or a song. you as in "you"... watching / listening to it with others who did not pay for it ...in the privacy of your own home... could be construed as copyright infringement through illegal dissemination of content... the extremes it can be taken to are not pleasant... |
Re: EU votes and it very well will change the internet as we know it.
Putting a cap on copyright will help reduce the disparity of wealth in society.
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Re: EU votes and it very well will change the internet as we know it.
Copyright and patents were designed to promote innovation by protecting the author. That is good idea in its heart. But, like so many things, they have been completely corrupted by lawyers. I seem to remember that the copyright on artistic work (music, books, paintings etc) was 20 years. That sounds reasonable. Now it is what, 80 years? 100? And they can be transferred, inherited, sold... Totally ridiculous. Totally the opposite of what the original intention was.
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Re: EU votes and it very well will change the internet as we know it.
...yup...
well...it was in good faith that such measures were implemented... so families and next of kin wouldn't be screwed out of the hard work of the loved ones who have left... and to as well...try to keep the corps and businesses from easily acquiring said copyrights... of course it has been all turned on its head... and now .. the world is in threat of shutting access ...to a great deal... a "brown age" ...if not a dark one... culturally, artistically it is the equivalent of castration .. or so I see it ... |
Re: EU votes and it very well will change the internet as we know it.
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I don't know what that's supposed to be, but I believe the EU parliament truly didn't have in mind to destroy Wikipedia. So they vaguely thought of "something", but I guess even they don't know in legal terms what that "something" is or should be. This EU decision however is just a framework, which, when it takes effect, needs to be implemented by individual laws of the EU states. I think it's safe to say that this will create a whole zoo of individual laws with all kinds of incompatibilities. If you are affected by these laws, then I guess it will come down to whether you are "too big to fail". I think Wikipedia is, so they will get their more or less individual exception, either by the EU or its various member states. However, Openstreetmap seems to think they are not "too big to fail". According to their statement the see a problem in the character of their data. Usually when you need to evade copyright problems with competitors you make your product sufficiently different from theirs. But because their product is "the reality" as they put it, they don't see this as an option. A street in Openstreetmap will always essentially look the same as in the product of any commercial competitor, because there is only one way of displaying it correctly (direction, length, curvature, etc.). Quote:
So technically speaking, it doesn't even prevent someone from uploading copyrighted material, because the data needs to be uploaded in the first place to compare it against the DB. It's just that the algorithm will decide to publish the uploaded material or not. In any case, the upload volume will tax your data plan (if you are on one). Quote:
Now, what makes a copyright protection "effective" or not is a constant point of legal debate. It's certainly not as simple as in: "If it can be broken it's not considered effective anymore." I'm no lawyer, but I feel the general approach is, that it is considered "effective" when it had not been already broken at the time it was first implemented. To circumvent this "right for personal backup copies", publishers have changed their approach on selling their stuff. They often claim to sell you the physical medium along with a license to consume it's content, but they don't sell the content itself. This way they say you are not allowed to copy the content, because it doesn't belong to you. Strangely enough though, we pay taxes on storage media (HDDs, empty DVDs, USB sticks - anything, even whole computers) to compensate for the financial loss that copyright holders may experience due to copyright violations. Quote:
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[1] https://www.openstreetmap.de/uf/ [2] http://memory-alpha.wikia.com/wiki/P..._%28episode%29 [3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GEMA_%...rganization%29 |
Re: EU votes and it very well will change the internet as we know it.
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Think of picture comparison algorithms instead! One I know basically gradually reduces the resolution of two pictures and keeps checking whether the color info of the remaining pixels is identical (or similar). Taken to the extreme you'll end up with a single pixel for each picture and then you'll check whether their RGB (or HSV or whatever) values match. With such an algorithm you don't just get a binary true or false result but some fuzzy resemblance factor. In this case the copyright DB would have to store the equivalent of a thumbnail of the copyrighted picture at the resolution you consider to be your resemblance threshold. |
Re: EU votes and it very well will change the internet as we know it.
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For yer nomal middle-class people who get a house or a piece of land, an old car and some miscellaneous furniture inheritance is OK. However If pop's a successful businessman and builds a fortune then in the end what's the reason the brats should get the loot when he hits the pit? OK, I grant it some piece of the proceedings could be handed out to the offspring, no need to take it all off but think about it for a while; amassing any kind of fortune is most likely based on theft and extortion so it would even out it a bit for the state to take it in possession as taxes. It would benefit the kids too, in the end, as they'd not grow up to be slothy worhless billionares but be encouraged to get real jobs and contribute to the society. |
Re: EU votes and it very well will change the internet as we know it.
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If "the state" is a community of people then you're totally right, but if it's just some bureaucratic entity then it doesn't change anything. If the biggest land owner in a village dies and his children can't take over, then it's totally fair to redistribute his fields to his farming neighbors. On the other hand, if the local government just sits on the land and waits for some rich external investor to polish the mayor's budget, then it doesn't improve the situation. Quote:
These kinds of comparisons always have the same flaw: The compared options are not mutually exclusive. "I'd rather have brains than pretty looks." The pretty guy (or gal) can still have brains. |
Re: EU votes and it very well will change the internet as we know it.
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But look at it from the successful businessman's PoV. Who would you like to benefit from you working yourself to death and building a successful business? The "society"? Or your own kids? |
Re: EU votes and it very well will change the internet as we know it.
Luckily I don't need to make that choice; my brats are not in position to inherit a fortune from me and have been raised from the beginning to be thinking creatures capable of making their own choices in the world. :D
Granted, they think daddy is soft-headed old socialist and take after a more individualist tone but wtf, it's going to be their world anyway :eek: |
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