On TV.com: The Final Curtain Falls for Nip/Tuck
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

By Matthew Broersma
Posted on ZDNet News: Mar 8, 2004 4:13:00 PM

Civil liberties groups are engaging in a last-minute attempt to alter a controversial intellectual-property law that they claim will lead to a flood of frivolous lawsuits against consumers and small businesses.

The Intellectual Property Rights Enforcement Directive, which passed through the European Parliament's judicial affairs committee last month, is scheduled for a parliamentary debate on Monday. The parliament is set to vote on the directive Tuesday, in the last chance for members of the European Parliament to introduce amendments before ministers vote on the directive Thursday. If approved, member states would have two years to incorporate the directive's provisions into national laws.

The directive is primarily aimed at cracking down on organized piracy and counterfeiting in the EU, which is a growing problem. Critics, however, say the directive's scope has been broadened to cover not just piracy for commercial purposes, but also involuntary acts or those committed by individuals without commercial intent or impact.

According to U.K. civil rights group the Foundation for Information Policy Research (FIPR), the law would also allow large companies to use draconian legal measures to threaten and harass smaller competitors, for example, by raiding their premises, seizing evidence and freezing bank accounts in highly technical patent infringement cases.

A coalition of citizen- and consumer-rights groups, including FIPR, is calling for parliament members to support a collection of amendments that it asserts will place appropriate limitations on the directive. More than 100 parliament members have already pledged to support the amendments.

Ian Brown, FIPR's director of the coalition, said the directive must be limited in order to serve the interests of EU citizens and rights holders. "Otherwise it will lead to a flood of lawsuits against small businesses and consumers that will discredit European law in this area," he said in a statement.

A representative for the Business Software Alliance, which has been fighting to broaden the directive's scope and penalties, recently said stronger enforcement was needed to curb the activities of criminal gangs. The alliance cited research that 37 percent of the software in use in Western European businesses is illegal. Reducing the United Kingdom's software piracy rate from 25 percent to 15 percent would add $18.5 billion (10 billion pounds) to the country's gross domestic product, $4.6 billion in tax revenue and 40,000 IT jobs, according to IDC figures quoted by the Business Software Alliance.

The European recording industry association has criticized the directive as not going far enough to crack down on piracy because its measures are not as harsh as those in some member states.

Matthew Broersma of ZDNet UK reported from London.

SponsoredWhite Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 40 Talkback(s)
Mistake
Yes from Moon is a Harsh Mistress. Read when I was about thirteen so you'll have to forgive an old man, but I can see you understood the context and meaning.... (Read the rest)
Posted by: rabban192 Posted on: 03/09/04 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
COPYRIGHTS need to be STRICTLY INFORCED N O W !  idnew2011@... | 03/08/04
(NT) Wow. So does correct spelling.  John E Wahd | 03/08/04
He/She must have a Copyright on it so it is correct for them  idnew2012@... | 03/08/04
Sure...  BitTwiddler | 03/08/04
http://www.iespell.com  TechDiva_z | 03/08/04
then enforce them!  ryusen | 03/08/04
Money needs to be paid for software and for using it  idnew2011@... | 03/08/04
Disagree.  doe_z | 03/08/04
I agree to disagree with you  idnew2012@... | 03/08/04
Define The Word Payment  rabban192 | 03/08/04
One problem with this  tic swayback | 03/08/04
minor correction...  OldeTimeGeek | 03/09/04
Mistake  rabban192 | 03/09/04
"BTW: Professional has two, not one 's'. "  B_HI | 03/08/04
How many names do you use?! (NT)  el1jones | 03/08/04
Piracy is wrong and needs to be punished  idnew2012@... | 03/08/04
Worth Comparing  Nigel Johnstone | 03/08/04
Ah! The BSA argument!  TechDiva_z | 03/08/04
Seems like lawyers making ways to make more money  voska | 03/08/04
I agree 100%  Jomo_z | 03/08/04
Stealing is wrong, but this is not stealing  tic swayback | 03/08/04
Copyright Holders Shouldn't Remain Ignorant  ParadigmOdyssey | 03/08/04
Copyright Holders need to sue offenders NOW  idnew2012@... | 03/08/04
Dear MEPs  Nigel Johnstone | 03/08/04
How valuable is your personal liberty?  Goobers | 03/08/04
This how you fix the piracy problem  voska | 03/08/04
The law is the law  Bill4 | 03/08/04
Not a job creator  Nigel Johnstone | 03/08/04
Message has been deleted.  idnew2013@... | 03/08/04
Message has been deleted.  idnew2013@... | 03/08/04
Message has been deleted.  tidapornk@... | 03/08/04
Please note  Nigel Johnstone | 03/08/04
Think it's Bitty in one of his many incarnations...?  TechDiva_z | 03/08/04
Laws are created to keep honest people honest  idnew2012@... | 03/08/04
Govt's Job is to pretect it's people  ryusen | 03/08/04
The fallacy of "intellectual property"  Goobers | 03/08/04
100+ years isn't limited though  voska | 03/08/04
Freedom of speech, but abide by copyrigh laws on software  idnew2025@... | 03/08/04
True, but...  Nigel Johnstone | 03/09/04
uh huh copyright nothing i pay for the software is mine period  M_c | 03/08/04

What do you think?

advertisement
advertisement

White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

CIO Sessions

advertisement
Click Here