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Have you paid you meme license?

Name: Anonymous 2018-06-09 10:01

https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-44412025
Memes, remixes and other user-generated content could disappear online if the EU's proposed rules on copyright become law, warn experts.

Digital rights groups are campaigning against the Copyright Directive, which the European Parliament will vote on later this month.

The legislation aims to protect rights-holders in the internet age.

But critics say it misunderstands the way people engage with web content and risks excessive censorship.

The Copyright Directive is an attempt to reshape copyright for the internet, in particular rebalancing the relationship between copyright holders and online platforms.

Article 13 states that platform providers should "take measures to ensure the functioning of agreements concluded with rights-holders for the use of their works".

Critics say this will, in effect, require all internet platforms to filter all content put online by users, which many believe would be an excessive restriction on free speech.

There is also concern that the proposals will rely on algorithms that will be programmed to "play safe" and delete anything that creates a risk for the platform.

A campaign against Article 13 - Copyright 4 Creativity - said that the proposals could "destroy the internet as we know it".

"Should Article 13 of the Copyright Directive be adopted, it will impose widespread censorship of all the content you share online," it said.

It is urging users to write to their MEP ahead of the vote on 20 June.

Jim Killock, executive director of the UK's Open Rights Group, told the BBC: "Article 13 will create a 'Robo-copyright' regime, where machines zap anything they identify as breaking copyright rules, despite legal bans on laws that require 'general monitoring' of users to protect their privacy.

"Unfortunately, while machines can spot duplicate uploads of Beyonce songs, they can't spot parodies, understand memes that use copyright images, or make any kind of cultural judgement about what creative people are doing. We see this all too often on YouTube already.

"Add to that, the EU wants to apply the Robocop approach to extremism, hate speech, and anything else they think can get away with, once they put it in place for copyright. This would be disastrous."

The Electronic Frontier Foundation and 56 other rights organisations sent an open letter to European lawmakers in October outlining their concerns about Article 13.

Name: Anonymous 2018-06-09 13:10

Will Nikita get charged with hate speech for calling to bomb Russia if he ever reaches EU?

Name: Anonymous 2018-06-09 14:22

The Net interprets censorship as damage and routes around it.

Name: Anonymous 2018-06-09 15:35

So you're Europoor:
Evening approaches, you sit at your computer. Porn license is unpaid for 2 months and all porn is blocked.

No memes on EUnternet sites today.
You connect through 7 VPNs to darknet market and pay 2 euros for an illegal rare pepe starter pack.

After you download it,you have the bright idea to post it in your private forum for mongolian throat singing enthusiasts.

Suddenly, police sirens right outside your window. You start sweating and recall that Pepe the Frog is under copyright by Matt Furie and its registered under Berne Convention as rightful owner of all its derivatives.

Name: Anonymous 2018-06-09 16:08

Also, even legal, fully-licensed rare pepes can be classified as neo-nazi hate speech/ sexist propoganda/islamophobic/bigoted dependent on jurisdiction and content.

Name: Anonymous 2018-06-11 15:15

>not mentioning link tax from article 11
>realizing it's a thing when legacy media finally bothers to post about it

Name: Anonymous 2018-06-11 16:16

Finally memes will be illegal!

Name: Anonymous 2018-06-11 18:13

If memes are outlawed, then only outlaws will have memes!

Name: Anonymous 2018-06-11 18:19

>>7
Your Potato Peeler License, please.

Name: Anonymous 2018-06-22 18:09

Two weeks until it becomes law.

Name: Anonymous 2018-06-22 18:10

this is the dankest timeline

Name: Anonymous 2018-06-22 18:16

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Directive_on_Copyright_in_the_Digital_Single_Market
On 20 June 2018, the European Parliament Committee on Legal Affairs voted in favour of adopting Articles 11 and 13. The vote will then go to the European Parliament in July 2018, while a final vote is set for either December 2018 or January 2019.[22][23]
>>11
There are a few months, so if organized media campaign changes enough MPs opinions the copyright directive expansion will be defeated.

Name: Anonymous 2018-06-23 9:21

The meme approval process will only take 3-6 weeks and some notarized documents per each meme depending on copyrighted content used.
Nothing to worry about.

Axel Voss, a member of European Parliament, has spoken out in support of the changes and said people were misinterpreting Article 13. "There have been a lot of false rumours and misinterpretations over the so-called value gap," he said. "No-one is and no-one will ever filter the internet!"

Name: Anonymous 2018-06-23 13:55

excessive restriction on free speech
Ah, the cornerstone of democracy. How will we get by? Does it matter when we're not getting heard anyway?

the EU wants to apply the Robocop approach
Since when did appeal to fiction become commonplace? Please be a bit more serious.

Name: Anonymous 2018-06-23 16:15

>>14
Since when did appeal to fiction become commonplace?
Has been for a long time. Ever heard people referencing 1984 or Brave New World? Because I hear it quite frequently.

Name: Anonymous 2018-06-23 19:22

>>15
Modern life is dystopian, and those are novels about dystopias. Nothing wrong with apt comparisons like that.

Name: Anonymous 2018-07-04 15:27

Name: Anonymous 2018-07-04 23:38

>>17
You expected different from Euronazis? After all, Europeans openly support Putin and buy his gas.

Name: Anonymous 2018-07-05 10:28

Its not only memes, it covers anything copyrighted btw. Remixes, AMVs, Quotes, Snippets for citation, copyrighted slogans, inline references, recordings from other devices,parodies, etc.
Memes are just popular enough to be noticed. Website owners will likely interpret it in broadest terms to avoid any liability for copyrighted works.

Name: Anonymous 2018-07-05 10:40

Great success: Your protests have worked! The European Parliament has sent the copyright law back to the drawing board. All MEPs will get to vote on #uploadfilters and the #linktax September 10–13. Now let's keep up the pressure to make sure we #SaveYourInternet!
https://twitter.com/Senficon/status/1014814460488413185

Name: Anonymous 2018-07-05 10:41

There is also the article 11.

Name: Anonymous 2018-07-05 10:49

>>21
Also known as the "link tax"

Name: Anonymous 2018-07-05 11:09

>>22
Please explain.

Name: Anonymous 2018-07-05 12:13

>>23
It's where you charge the link tax for advertising

Name: Anonymous 2018-07-05 12:17

>>23
Basically, you want to put link to a news site, however you include a small snippet from the article, e.g. a title or a few sentences from the lead section.
However plain hyperlinks (http://----) are not subject to the article(thankfully).

Name: Anonymous 2018-07-05 12:19

>>23 It makes the following OP post violate article 11(both the short form and long copy in >>1)

https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-44412025
Memes, remixes and other user-generated content could disappear online if the EU's proposed rules on copyright become law, warn experts.

Name: Anonymous 2018-07-05 12:23

>>23
If this website abided by EU Copyright Directive, it would be illegal to host this thread as it cites BBC without having licensed the content( thus violating article 11)
https://savethelink.org/
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2018/02/how-have-europes-upload-filtering-and-link-tax-plans-changed Edited on 05/07/2018 12:26.

Name: Anonymous 2018-07-05 12:56

>>27
They'll probably just inject some mandatory youtube adverts for europeans

Name: Anonymous 2018-07-05 13:16

Is it illegal to even include a summary even if not a snippet?

Name: Anonymous 2018-07-05 13:30

>>29
No. But to be sure also create an original title in the href tag.

Name: Anonymous 2018-07-05 15:09

law abiding citizens

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