B2fxxx

By Ray Corrigan
 


RSS Feed

Atom Site Feed




A version of my old Open University net law course, T182 Law, the Internet and Society, is now available on OpenLearn.

Arabic German Portuguese Chinese Italian Russian Japanese Spanish French Korean (About)




Aaron Swartz
Abusable tech ATAC
Academic Copyright
AdviceNow UK Advice service
A copyfighter's musings
Alex Salkever's Security Net
American Prospect
Andrew McLaughlin
Ariadne
Atlantic Monthly
Ananova
ARCH
ALA Info-Commons blog
Bag and baggage
BALII
Balkanization
Battle Searchblog
BBC
Berkeley IP Blawg
Berkman Center
beSpacific
Bhopal Justice Campaign
Bitlaw
Blawg Republic
Blogbook
Blogs at Harvard
Blogscript
Blogzilla Ian Brown
BNA net news
BNA Web Watch
Boingboing
Censorware Project
CDT
Chilling Effects Clearinghouse
Chronicle of Higher Education
CIA Factbook
City of Sound
Cluebot
CNN
CNet News
Consensus at Lawerpoint
Copyfight
Copyfutures
Copyright Colloquium
Copyright Readings blog
Cornell's LII
Corner House
Creative Commons
Criminal waste of space
Crypto-gram
Current bytes in brief
CyberRights UK
Cyberspace law
Daily Whirl
Dan Gillmor
Darknet J.D. Lasica
David Isenberg
disLEXia
Doc Searls
Don't link to us
Drew Clark
Economics of Privacy
Economist
Ed Techie
EDDix top 50 blawgs
E-evidence
EFF
EFF Deeplinks
EFF Minilinks
Elizabeth Rader
EPIC
Ernie the Attorney
Electronic Telegraph
Equal vote blog
Ethical Spectacle
EU Law Web Log
EUpolitix
Euractiv news
EUR Lex index
http://Euro-Copyrights.org/
Europa
EU Commission Pressroom
Europemedia
Evoting-experts.com/
Feedmelegal
footnotes
Fravia web searchlore
Freedom to Tinker
First Monday
Financial Times
Findlaw
FIPR
Froomkin
Froomkin blog
Furdlog - Frank Field
Gigalaw
GILC
Global Voices
GovNet newsfeed
Greplaw
Groklaw
Harvard Jolt
How Appealing
Ian Clarke's blog
ICANN Watch
Ideal e-government
ID theft protection blog
Importance of
INDICARE on drm
INDUCE Act blog
Infolaw
Inforlaw What's New blog
Infosoctech Alan Cunningham
Instapundit
International Herald Tribune
Internet censorship explorer
Internet Legal Resource Grp
Internet Scambusters
IP Central weblog
IPKat
IP Matters
IPRsonline portal
IP Watch
ITN
James Boyle
Jennifer Granick
Jessica Litman
JILT
Jurist
Jurist Paper Chase
Justice Talking
Kim Cameron's Identity blog
Kuro5hin
Law.com
Lawmeme at Yale
Law Society Gazette
Legal Affairs
Legal Theory (Solum) Blog
Lessig weblog
Lex Ferenda
Lex in the city iNews
Librarians' Internet Index
LibraryLaw blog
Linux Journal
Madisonian Theory
Martin W
Mercury News
Memex
Mindjack
MIT Technology Review
MSNBC
Napsterization
Newsforge
No2ID
Nolo Law Center
The Ndiyo Project
New York Times
NTK
Ofcomwatch
OneWorld
Online Journalism Review
On Lisa's Radar
Once upon a time...
On the Commons - Bollier
On the Identity Trail
Open Access News
Open Rights Group
O'Reilly
OUseful
Overlawyered UK
Pangloss Lilian Edwards
P2P policy course Berkeley
Policy Power Tools
Politech
PLoS
Posner & Becker Blog
Privacy & economics
Privacy Journal
Privacy Policy
Walt Mossberg
Phil Agre
Public Knowledge
Quicklinks
Reason
Red Herring
Reporting Civil Rights
RIP archive at FIPR
Roger Clarke
Ross Anderson
Rufus Pollock
Salon
Samuelson's cyberlinks
SANS Computer Security
Sarah Carter's lawlinks
ScadPlus Activities of the EU
SCOTUS blog
Scripting News
Shifted Librarian
Shirky
Siva Vaidhyanathan
Siva Vaidhyanathan Googlization
TalkLeft
Village Voice
Volokh Conspiracy
SciDev Network
Security Focus
Seltzer blog
Seth Finkelstein
Shifted Librarian
Silicon Valley
Slashdot
Slate
Snopes Urban legends
Spyblog
Stephen Fry
STLR
Susan Crawford
American Prospect Weblog
Tech Law Journal
The CATO Institute
The Blog of Doom
The Corner House
The Green Bag
The Guardian
The Industry Standard
The Laboratorium James Grimmelmann
The Nando Times
The New Republic TNR
The Register
The Times
The RISKS Digest
The Trademark Blog
Tony H
Townhall
UCLA Cyberspace Law
UEA law blog
UK Court Service
UK Criminal Justice blog
UK FOI blog
UK Human Rights Archive
UNESCO copyright site
Urban Legends
USACM blog
VUNet
Weatherall's law
Wikipedia
WIPO
WIPO CLEA
WJIN
xkcd
ZDNet

http://www.wikio.co.uk


 

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?

Sitemeter count:

One click on a button helps feed the hungry

Support the Open Rights Group

Search
Google

WWW
B2fxxx


Twitter Updates

    follow me on Twitter



          Tuesday, April 20, 2010

     
    Being one of the lucky few who live in a marginal constituency I decided to write to David Cameron before the passing of the Digital Economy Act to indicate my concerns and explain I would not support any party in the general election who facilitated the (then) bill going through the wash up process before parliament was dissolved.  I received the following response from James Bull in David Cameron's office yesterday.
    "Thank you for contacting us about the Digital Economy Bill. We take what you say on board, and I am happy to respond to your concerns. 

    Britain has been made to wait too long for legislation updating the regulatory environment for the digital and creative industries.  We regret that once the Government got around to considering these issues, it did not allocate the sufficient time in the House of Commons for proper legislative scrutiny.  It says a great deal about their support for the creative industries that despite considering many of these issues as far back as 2006 they have only now just brought this piece of legislation forward.

    We took the decision to seek to remove those clauses of the Digital Economy Bill that we did not support or that we did not feel received proper legislative scrutiny, while supporting the Bill as a whole. Rejecting the Bill would have been an unacceptable set-back for the important measures it contains.

    We support the Bill’s efforts to tackle online copyright infringement. This is an extremely serious issue that costs the creative industries hundreds of millions of pounds each year. We want to make sure that Britain has the most favourable intellectual property framework in the world for innovators, digital content creators and high tech businesses.  Internet piracy also puts consumers at risk, as those who download illegal material increase the likelihood of their machines being attacked by computer viruses, and are exposed to unverified advertising and inappropriate material. 

    The measures in the Bill aimed at tackling online copyright infringement received robust scrutiny in the House of Lords. We were concerned about the lack of parliamentary oversight of the original clauses and as such the Bill now has a super-affirmative resolution in it. This means Parliament will debate any order that the Secretary of State lays that would allow people to be disconnected. These measures can also not be introduced for 12 months after the Bill becomes law. This means that we are by no means rushing in to these decisions and that the next Parliament will be able to consider them beforehand.

    The measures in the Bill designed to tackle illegal peer to peer file sharing set up a proportionate regime that would lead to people having their internet connection temporarily suspended, but only following public consultation, repeated warnings and due process. It will not, as many have suggested, lead to people being disconnected without an appeal. Even if people are disconnected they will be able to sign up to another ISP immediately without penalty.

    While we have no doubt that these measures could have been improved if the Government had allocated time for this Bill to be debated in Committee, blocking these measures in their entirety would have risked hundreds of thousands of jobs in the TV, film, music and sports industries and was therefore not something we were not willing to do.

    Conservatives recognise the need to establish a workable system for unlocking the wealth of inaccessible content known as orphan works, but we have consistently stated that in no way should this Bill actually harm content creators.  We were keen to address the problem of people stripping out identifying information from a digital image and wanted to clamp down on this and ensure that the Bill does not encourage such activities. We also wanted specific requirements for a search for the rights holder and a system in place if that rights holder comes forward at a later date. After Government failed to amend the Bill in line with these protections, we insisted that clause 43 be removed from the Bill.

    The debate on copyright is not yet over and we will seek to revisit options for a balanced solution as part of a broader update of copyright following the General Election.

    Thank you, once again, for getting in touch. I hope my reply was useful.

    Yours sincerely,

    James


    James Bull
    Office of David Cameron"
    My reply is below (with 3 typographical errors tidied up).
    "Dear James,

    Thanks for your response on behalf of David Cameron. I suspect the key things we can agree on are that the regulatory environment for the technology, information and creative industries is not in very good shape and that the debate on copyright is likely to continue.

    I don’t agree with your belief that the disconnection of households due to suspected copyright infringement is a proportionate regime. Neither do I accept that the post disconnection appeals process in the Act constitutes due process under UK law.  In addition to countless legal scholars, no less an authority than the European Court of Justice has indicated in dicta (Promusicae case, 2008) that they would likely strike down the kind of disconnection process the Act facilitates. 

    I wonder what David Cameron’s illustrious predecessor, Winston Churchill, would have made of the notion of restricting a household’s access to communications, education, employment, livelihood, public services and yes even entertainment, on suspicion that someone associated with that household was suspected of copyright infringement?

    You make no mention of the web blocking measures in the Act so I make no assumptions about your perspective of those but I would say, as a matter of principle passing a law in the assumption that the details can be worked out later is not a good idea.  Neither is passing a law which includes damaging provisions because of a desire to get the rest of that bill through. That may be the reality of modern political life but it is not good policymaking practice.

    Internet piracy does indeed put consumers at risk and we have run a course at the Open University for several years outlining the nature of this kind of cyber vandalism and crime and what people can do to protect themselves from it.  Mass copyright infringement also has an impact on the creative industries which you state is in the region of hundreds of millions of pounds each year.  In reality we have very little robust empirical economic data to quantify the problem and desperately need more scholarly research in this area to inform policymaking and construct a balanced regulatory environment which will take into account the needs of

    • Creators
    • Economic agents (technology, information and creative industries etc.)
    • Consumers/citizens
    Once we have the economic evidence and can do an informed cost benefit analysis of the impact of alternative regulatory regimes on the key sets of stakeholders, then reasonable people may still disagree about where the balance might lie. But at least we can then debate the issues in an informed way rather than on the basis of unsubstantiated claims about the damage to the respective stakeholders.

    Thanks again for taking the time to respond. Mr Cameron’s support of the controversial provisions of the Digital Economy Act means I will no longer be considering voting for the Conservative Party in this coming general election.  Given that your party, however, is likely to be in government following the election, I would encourage you and your colleagues to understand that in an information society, the information laws, intellectual property prime amongst them, are the default rules of the road.  Our society and our economy cannot afford the kind of slapdash process that has characterised the passage of the Digital Economy Act and the damaged regulatory structures that emerge from it.

    I hope you won’t mind if I make a copy of this correspondence available on my blog, http://b2fxxx.blogspot.com/.

    Regards,

    Ray"


    Bookmark and Share