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One of the many problems with DRM is its blanket nature. As well as
locking down the work in question, it often causes all kinds of other,
perfectly legal activities to be blocked as well -- something that the
copyright industry seems quite untroubled by. Here's an example from Europe involving Nintendo (pdf):
On
Techdirt.
Back in 2012, Ben Zevenbergen wrote a long piece exploring a complicated
Dutch case that had been referred to the Court of Justice of the
European Union, the EU's highest court. It concerned the home-copying
exception of European copyright legislation, and hinged on the question
of whether the Dutch collecting society could charge for the "losses"
that result from people downloading both authorized and unauthorized
uploads. That distinction needs to be made, since in the Netherlands
downloading copyright material is permitted, but uploading it is not.
Manufacturers of blank media claimed that they should only have to pay a
lower copyright levy that covered just the downloads of
legally-uploaded materials.
On
Techdirt.
Almost exactly a year ago, we wrote about two important cases before
Europe's highest court, the Court of Justice of the European Union
(ECJ). They both involved the European Union's Data Retention Directive,
which obliges telecoms companies to retain metadata about their
customers -- now an even more contentious issue in the wake of Edward
Snowden's leaks. One case was from Ireland, brought by Digital Rights
Ireland, which needs donations to carry on its great work, and the other from the Austrian digital rights group AKVorrat (which probably also needs support.)
On
Techdirt.