The European Commission presented a plan today (14 September) to charge internet companies for linking to online news following a heated, two-year-long fight over whether the “Google tax” will help publishers stay profitable—or simply be overzealous regulation that could “break the internet”.
“I want journalists, publishers and authors to be paid fairly for their work, whether it is made in studios or living rooms, whether it is disseminated offline or online, whether it is published via a copying machine or commercially hyperlinked on the web.” – President Juncker, State of the Union 2016
The European Commission’s proposals to reform the region’s copyright rules, published in draft form today, have been criticized by tech companies and digital rights groups as regressive and a missed opportunity to modernize hopelessly outdated rules.
Ich glaube, dass der Begriff des Urheberrechts-Extremismus ziemlich genau einen der Gründe beschreibt, warum selbst moderate Reformen des Urheberrechts so schwer zu realisieren sind.
Denn der Markt für Freie Schriften im Internet – so man von Markt sprechen kann – ist ein extrem unübersichtlicher Bauchladen geworden; weit entfernt von dem, was ich damals mit meinen ausführlichen und sachkundigen Portraits angefangen (und aus Zeitmangel bald wieder eingestellt) hatte.
FREE CULTURE is available for free under a Creative Commons license. You may redistribute, copy, or otherwise reuse/remix this book provided that you do so for non-commercial purposes and credit Professor Lessig.
In his keynote address to a packed house at OSCON 2002, Lawrence Lessig challenges the open source audience to get more involved in the political process. Read the complete transcript of Lawrence's...