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19 votes
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Algeria expels thousands of migrants in forced Sahara march
6 votes -
BMW joins Airbus in Brexit warning
8 votes -
EU committee approves new rules that could "destroy the internet as we know it."
13 votes -
Cory Doctorow: "The EU is about to end everything that's good and pure about the internet"
12 votes -
Norwegian court orders website of public domain court decisions shut down with no due process
14 votes -
EU to members: Prepare for no deal Brexit
3 votes -
EU to impose tariffs on $3.2 billion of US goods starting Friday
5 votes -
The EU's Copyright Directive, Article 13
Next week the EU parliament will vote for their new copyright directive. In general it contains some good ideas, but also some extremely bad ones, such as article 13. It will require all uploaded...
Next week the EU parliament will vote for their new copyright directive. In general it contains some good ideas, but also some extremely bad ones, such as article 13. It will require all uploaded content to be scanned, and deleted if it might contain references to other copyrighted material.
The issue here is the word might. Due to the possible fines for companies that accidentally leave up something that contains a copyrighted work, they are incentivized to act more harsh than often necessary. It's safer for them to delete everything that looks like it might infringe copyright than risk the fine.
This could be disastrous for the Internet as we know it. And this is why many movements are speaking out against it. One such example would be the open letter to EU parliament. More information is available on https://saveyourinternet.eu/resources/, and you can find much more about it all over the Internet if you search with your favourite search engine.
What's your opinion on article 13, and have you done anything to make your voice heard?
13 votes -
Why should any non-Euro companies care about the GDPR?
18 votes -
The EU could be about to ban memes and 'destroy the internet'
4 votes -
The EU's copyright proposal is extremely bad news for everyone, even (especially!) Wikipedia
8 votes -
The rebellious French village making wine banned by the EU
3 votes -
Iran launches plan to bolster uranium enrichment. Move piles pressure on European states scrambling to salvage nuclear deal
5 votes -
Gay spouses granted the same freedom of movement rights as straight couples in all EU
11 votes -
Fall asleep in seconds by listening to a soothing voice read the EU’s new GDPR legislation
11 votes -
US tariffs a dangerous game, says EU
15 votes -
He chaired the campaign for Britain to leave the EU. Now he’s applying for residency in France.
6 votes -
EU, Mexico, and Canada impose retaliatory tariffs in response to the US
8 votes -
Donald Trump hits Canada, Mexico, EU with steel and aluminum tariffs
19 votes -
GDPR will pop the adtech bubble
13 votes -
Europe will vote on internet censorship on the 20th
11 votes -
Italy: Political turbulence spooks global financial markets. The euro has fallen to its lowest value against the dollar in almost a year
9 votes -
Facebook and Google each face billion-euro lawsuits for being non-compliant with GDPR
8 votes -
EU's General Data Protection Regulation comes into effect today. Rather than comply with it, some US news sites have chosen to simply block EU users.
10 votes -
Instapaper is temporarily shutting off access for European users due to GDPR
10 votes -
GDPR quiz: How will data privacy law affect you?
6 votes -
Microsoft extending EU's GDPR rights worldwide
9 votes -
This is how internet regulation can go really wrong
4 votes -
GDPR will pop the adtech bubble
9 votes -
Why am I getting all these terms of service update emails?
5 votes