Some EDRI Position Papers


Press Release: Censorship machine takes over EUÕs internet

By EDRi, 26 Mar 2019

Today, on 26 March, the European Parliament voted in favour of adopting controversial upload filters (Article 13/17) as part of the copyright Directive. This vote comes after what was an intense campaign for human rights activists, with millions of signatures, calls, tweets and emails from concerned individuals, as well as Europe-wide protests.

Despite the mobilisation, 348 Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) gave their support to the proposed text which includes concerning restriction to freedom of expression. Noticeably, 274 stood up with citizens and voted to reject upload filters. The proposal to open the text for amendments was rejected by five votes difference. The amendments proposing the deletion of Article 13 were not even subject to a vote.

Article 13 of the copyright Directive contains a change of internet hosting servicesÕ responsibility that will necessarily lead to the implementation of upload filters on a vast number of internet platforms. With dangerous potential for automatised censorship mechanisms, online content filtering could be the end of the internet as we know it.

Disappointingly, the newly adopted Directive does not benefit small independent authors, but instead, it empowers tech giants. More alarmingly, Article 13 of the Directive sets a dangerous precedent for internet filters and automatised censorship mechanisms Ð in the EU and across the globe.

said Diego Naranjo, Senior Policy Advisor at EDRi


European Digital Rights (EDRi) has long advocated for a copyright reform that would 


This Directive delivers none of those.


EU Member States will now have to transpose the Directive into their national laws and decide how strictly they will implement upload filters. People need to pay special attention to the national-level implementation of the Directive in order to ensure that the voted text does not enable censorship tools that restrict our fundamental rights.


Copyfails: Time to #fixcopyright!

By Diego Naranjo, 23 May 2016


COPYFAILS:


Copyright reform: Document pool

By Diego Naranjo, 12 Dec. 2016

The current European copyright system is broken. We need to repair it as soon as possible, in a way that respects the rights and values of European citizens and creators Ð not only those of intermediaries such asÊpublishers, record companies or collecting societies!


Procedure file: Copyright in the digital single marketÊ

FINAL Official text to be voted on 26.03.2019 [PDF]



Version: 5.4.2019

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