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Europe's in quite a bit of a pickle. Welcome to the USA, Europe :P - Printable Version +- Las Venturas Playground (https://forum.sa-mp.nl) +-- Forum: Miscellaneous (https://forum.sa-mp.nl/forum-4.html) +--- Forum: General Talk (https://forum.sa-mp.nl/forum-24.html) +--- Thread: Europe's in quite a bit of a pickle. Welcome to the USA, Europe :P (/thread-4708.html) Pages:
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Europe's in quite a bit of a pickle. Welcome to the USA, Europe :P - TRaven - 12-27-2007 From Bit-Tech.net: IFPI says ISPs should police users Author: Gareth Halfacree Published: 27th December 2007 The IFPI seem to want to have as many people hating them as their American brethren. The International Federation of the Phonographic Industry – the RIAA for the rest of the world – wants European ISPs to police their users in order to stem the growing traffic in ‘infringing materials’. The IFPI say that, contrary to a recent statement from ISP PlusNet disavowing responsibility for monitoring what individual customers do with their ‘net connection, ISPs must take action against file sharers whether or not they have received complaints and court orders. According to the IFPI, their requests are simple: ISPs should block peer-to-peer protocols at the core routers, prevent users from accessing ‘illegal’ sites that dare to share links to content which may infringe precious copyright, and constantly monitor traffic for infringing content. Yes, that was ‘constantly monitor’. As in: monitor all traffic from all users all the time, just in case someone might be sharing a song by the Purple Moron. The organisation has gone straight to the top to try and get their way, submitting an official set of recommendations to the European Parliament. The Parliament has the power to turn said recommendations into a Europe-wide law forcing ISPs to do whatever the IFPI wants. For filtering ‘infringing’ content, the IFPI would like ISPs to apply acoustic fingerprinting technology to all music data transferred through their service. Quite who funds the not-inconsiderable amount of processing power this would take is, unsurprisingly, not mentioned in the documentation it provided. It has made clear, however, that such filtering should apply to data transferred through any protocol: P2P, FTP, HTTP, SMTP, you name it. The IFPI also wants a blanket ban on what it describes as P2P services “that are known to be predominantly infringing and that have refused to implement steps to prevent infringement.†In other words: you can kiss goodbye to BitTorrent, despite it being one of the most interesting new open-source technologies in recent years. The final step is a complete severing of access to websites the IFPI describe as “infringingâ€, being “in rogue jurisdictionsâ€, or that simply “refuse to cooperate†with our friendly mediaführers. The Pirate Bay gets a special mention, being described in clipped tones as a “an infamous infringing service located in Swedenâ€. At least they know where they are, even if they can’t get them to stop. The worrying part is that the German news site heise.de is reporting that the IFPI already have political support in the European Parliament for their plans. The European branch of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, however, is already preparing to fight for our rights, calling the proposals a “an ill-considered and damaging quick fix.†http://www.bit-tech.net/news/2007/12/27/ifpi_says_isps_should_police_users/1 Re: Europe's in quite a bit of a pickle. Welcome to the USA, Europe :P - Ben - 12-27-2007 ![]() ....what? Re: Europe's in quite a bit of a pickle. Welcome to the USA, Europe :P - TRaven - 12-27-2007 Yea, this kind of crap has been going on in the US for a while, it seems that Europe wants to catch up. I dont see who's gonna fund all this monitoring and stuff (The users DUH!). I love all the power these private corporations are getting~ influencing law so much~ <3 Re: Europe's in quite a bit of a pickle. Welcome to the USA, Europe :P - Lynexon - 12-27-2007 Yeah. The title says it all. In other words, The Nazi's are wanting control of the net. Yes, the Nazi's still exist, their funders from the U.S.A. (The Rothschild's, the rockefellers, the bush's) never got caught and have been rooting themselves in here. Trust me, most of the people in america are against this type of crap. Thing is....We are a democracy in name only. Bush stole both elections (guy testified that b4 congress), special interests own our congress, and anytime anyone tries to do anything, they become like a jew in nazi germany durring the 1940s. Now, they want control over the only thing they don't already have control over, the internet. I'm an american btw. Right now, we have a candidate which has unheard-of popularity, but the media trashes his name like a landfill. Re: Europe's in quite a bit of a pickle. Welcome to the USA, Europe :P - TRaven - 12-27-2007 (12-27-2007, 05:06 PM)Lynexon link Wrote: Right now, we have a candidate which has unheard-of popularity, but the media trashes his name like a landfill.And celebrates Hillary Clinton *pff* Re: Europe's in quite a bit of a pickle. Welcome to the USA, Europe :P - KRiiSSY - 12-27-2007 (12-27-2007, 01:28 PM)TRaven link Wrote: From Bit-Tech.net: ...what? I didn't quite understand
Re: Europe's in quite a bit of a pickle. Welcome to the USA, Europe :P - TRaven - 12-27-2007 (12-27-2007, 06:43 PM)Nooblet95 link Wrote: ...what?in other words, the IFPI believes that european internet service providers should constantly monitor their users for illegal downloads and block known peer to peer protocols (bittorrent, ed2k, etc etc.). <sarcasm>Yay, we're stopping piracy </sarcasm>, but shit tons of content providers rely on these protocols to move their media or programs or whatever the hell they are trying to move. (freely) Me being the conspiracy theorist that i am see this as locking us into what our corporate masters want us to have. Wow . . . it would be great if Linux was hindered to only being distributed via http instead of distributed amoung peers . . . we would be stuck with paying a shit ton for Windows for all our PCs (because like good sheep, we buy a license per computer we own). It would be totally sweet if those freelance IPTV news programs would go under because they cannot pay masses of money for bandwidth to distribute their shows instead of putting them in a BT tracker, right? That way we can all tune into our favorite corporate sponsored and government regulated news broadcasts on our cable TV. There's so much that goes on that Users have no idea what's out there and what options are available. Not even the l337est of the l337 know everything that's available that so many people use and love and rely on. bah! *grumble* Re: Europe's in quite a bit of a pickle. Welcome to the USA, Europe :P - KRiiSSY - 12-27-2007 Ohh, i get it now ![]() No wait, i still don't.. Re: Europe's in quite a bit of a pickle. Welcome to the USA, Europe :P - TRaven - 12-27-2007 (12-27-2007, 07:06 PM)Nooblet95 link Wrote: Ohh, i get it nowdont worry once [if] you open up your eyes, you'll start to understand. you've just got a little bit left to learn. You're still kinda young. Re: Europe's in quite a bit of a pickle. Welcome to the USA, Europe :P - KRiiSSY - 12-27-2007 (12-27-2007, 07:11 PM)TRaven link Wrote: dont worry once [if] you open up your eyes, you'll start to understand. you've just got a little bit left to learn. You're still kinda young. So true
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