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Nicolas Sarkozy, the President of France, has the sad distinction of 
being in the vanguard when it comes to really bad ideas concerning the 
Internet.  On his initiative, France became the testing-ground for the 
three-strikes approach of throwing people off the Internet upon multiple
 accusations of copyright infringement, without the need for proof or a 
court order, known there as HADOPI.  He also helped put into circulation a view that is much in vogue at the moment: 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
            
        
          
        
          
        
          
        
With the immediate threat from SOPA/PIPA on hold, people have started
 to turn their attention to the long-running saga of ACTA. While it was 
being negotiated behind closed doors, few people knew about it, and 
protests against it were muted.  Now that it has finally emerged into 
the open and begins its last dash towards the finishing line of 
ratification, the pace of anti-ACTA activism is beginning to pick up 
quickly. That's especially true in Europe, where everything hinges on 
the result of the European Parliament's vote on the treaty later this 
year. If it rejects it, ACTA is dead. 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
Although ACTA is billed as a global treaty,
 there are only two participants that really matter: the US and the 
European Union.  If either of those dropped out, it would be completely 
ineffectual. 
On 
Open Enterprise blog.
 
 
 
A key element of the political rhetoric around SOPA/PIPA was the idea that it was about jobs,
 and that jobs are so critical in the current economic climate that 
safeguarding them overrides any other concern the Net world might have 
about the means being proposed to do that.  But then the key question 
becomes: who are really more important in terms of those jobs - the 
copyright industries, or companies exploiting the potential of the 
Internet that would be harmed if the Net were hobbled by new 
legislation?
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
Last Year Techdirt wrote
 about the case of the huge collection of historic jazz recordings that 
had been acquired by the US National Jazz Museum. The central problem is
 that even if the recordings can be digitized before they deteriorate, 
very few people will hear them because of their complicated copyright 
status. 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
            
        
          
        
          
        
Numerous Wikileaks cables have highlighted the pressure that the US has 
brought to bear on several foreign governments behind closed doors in an
 attempt to get the latter to pass maximalist copyright laws.  But it's 
worth noting that plenty of arm twisting takes place openly.  Here, for 
example, is a letter (pdf) from the American Chamber of Commerce in Estonia addressed to the Minister of Justice, and the Minister of Economic Affairs and Communications of that country: 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
Anyone who follows me on Twitter or identi.ca, or on Google+
 will have noticed something of a crescendo of posts about the 
Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) recently.  There are two 
reasons for this.
On 
Open Enterprise blog.
 
 
 
The annual Digital Music Report (pdf)
 of the International Federation for the Phonographic Industry (IFPI) is
 a curiously conflicted production.  On the one hand, it must celebrate 
"a healthy 8 per cent increase in our digital revenues in 2011 -- the 
first time the annual growth rate has risen since records began in 2004 
"; on the other, it must continue to push the party line about how the 
industry is being destroyed by piracy. 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
Twitter has taken quite a lot of heat
 for putting in place the capability to block tweets on a geographical 
basis.  This begins to look a little unfair in light of the fact that 
Google quietly adopted a similar policy before Twitter.  That's shown by
 the answer to a question on Google's Blogger site about blogs being redirected to country-specific URLs, which at the time of writing was last updated on 9 January 2012.  Here's what it says: 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
Can the future aggregate actions of people be predicted from relevant
 sets of data that describe them?  That, of course, is what Isaac 
Asimov's invented mathematical discipline of psychohistory was supposed to do. Some Japanese researchers claim to have made some progress towards that goal: 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
It's now widely recognized that the extreme demands of SOPA/PIPA 
catalyzed a new activism within the Net world, epitomized by the 
blackout effected by sites like Wikipedia on January 18.  But as 
Techdirt has reported, SOPA and PIPA are not the only attacks by the 
copyright industries on the digital commons: another is the Research Works Act (RWA), which attempts to remove the public's right to read the articles written by tax-funded researchers in open access journals form. 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
            
        
          
        
          
        
Open source lies at the heart of Google – it runs a modified form of 
Linux on its vast server farms, and uses many other free software 
programs in its operations. This makes giving back to the open source 
community not just the right thing to do but enlightened self-interest: 
the stronger free software becomes, the more Google can build upon it 
(cynics would say feed off it).
On 
The H Open.
 
 
 
One of the recurrent themes on Techdirt is the sense of entitlement 
the owners of various kinds of monopolies display, and their common 
belief that being able to maximize the profit from those monopolies 
trumps any other consideration. 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
Well, this one's bizarre.  Back in March 2010 we wrote
 about the UK Usenet aggregator Newzbin being found liable for the 
copyright infringment of its users.  A year later, the ISP BT was 
ordered to block access to Newzbin2, its successor.  What amounted to the UK's first Internet censorship order was upheld soon afterwards. 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
            
        
          
        
          
        
We've written
 about the hugely-successful Brazilian writer Paulo Coelho many times 
before, because he is a great example of an artist embracing piracy as a
 boon not a bane.  So it's great to see him offering his thoughts on SOPA: 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
After years of unforgivable inaction, the education world is finally 
addressing the continuing disgrace that is computer teaching in this 
country.  A couple of weeks ago I wrote about the UK Education Secretary Michael Gove's comments on this area, and now we have the Royal Society's report on computing in schools.
On 
Open Enterprise blog.
 
 
 
For a long time, the copyright industries have taken the position 
that they won't launch new digital music services until piracy is 
"solved" – or at least punished.  The inevitable consequence of that 
position is obvious to everyone outside the copyright industries – 
people turn to other, unauthorized sources to satisfy their musical 
needs.  Fortunately, a few startups have launched pioneering digital 
music offerings and some, like Spotify, look like they might succeed. 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
So the Tweedledum and Tweedledee of copyright maximalist legislation, SOPA and PIPA, have
 been halted in their passage through the US legislative process.  Of 
course, they're not dead, but are sure to return, zombie-like, either as
 modified versions of the current texts or new ones that turn out to be 
exactly the same as the old ones at their heart.  However, the 
unprecedented action by the Net world to get the message across that 
these bills were not fit for purpose does mean that our attention can 
swivel back to somewhere else where bad things are happening: ACTA.
On Open Enterprise blog. 
 
 
 
One of the useful side-effects of the groundswell of protest against 
SOPA and PIPA is that a surprising number of people in positions of 
power have come out against their approach, notably in Europe.  First, 
we had Neelie Kroes, Vice President of the European Commission 
responsible for the Digital Agenda for Europe, who tweeted: 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
One new approach to teasing apart the complex relationships between 
genes and common diseases such as cancer, heart disease, asthma and 
diabetes is by creating huge biobanks of medical data and samples.  The 
idea is that by tracking the health and habits of very large populations
 across many years, and then examining their DNA, it will be possible to
 spot factors in common.  Here's a major biobank that is shortly opening up its holdings for research: 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
Given its general contempt for the repeated attempts to close it 
down, you wouldn't expect The Pirate Bay to be particularly worried by 
SOPA.  But in its very own press release on the subject,
 it goes much further: it flings the ultimate insult at Hollywood by 
claiming that not only are the two of them spiritual kin, but that The 
Pirate Bay is the New Hollywood. 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
            
        
          
        
          
        
There is a rather odd atmosphere within the parts of the online 
community that fought so hard against SOPA this week – relief that all 
that work seems to have had an effect, mixed with a certain disbelief 
that for once the outside world sat up and took notice of the tech 
world's concerns.  Amidst all the justified back-patting, there is a 
temptation to celebrate the fact that both SOPA and PIPA are "delayed", and to move on. 
On Techdirt.