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The progress made by the open data movement is pretty extraordinary. 
 A few years ago, data was something that only statisticians cared 
about, but today it is one of the most vibrant areas of exploration and 
innovation.  I think that's in part because of open source's example of 
how opening things up allows people to experiment and make progress 
faster than keeping everything locked down.
On 
Open Enterprise blog.
 
 
 
Now that the EU's ratification of ACTA has departed from the original
 script of everyone just waving it through, the European Commission is 
clearly trying to come up with Plan B.  Some insights into its thinking 
can be gained from the minutes (pdf) of a recent Commission meeting, pointed out to us by André Rebentisch. 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
As Michael Geist
 and others have pointed out, ACTA is the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade 
Agreement without the main sources of counterfeits being involved -- 
notably, China. This has required some skilful footwork on the part of 
ACTA supporters, who need to justify the ratification of a 
loosely-worded treaty with potentially harmful effects on Internet 
service providers, civil liberties and developing countries, but which 
doesn't provide the key benefit claimed in its name.
Here's how the European Union's representatives tried to deal with this issue in a "statement on IP Enforcement Trends" made at the WTO Council for TRIPS: 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
            
        
          
        
          
        
Although ACTA has now been referred
 by the European Commission to the European Court of Justice, it 
continues its passage through the various committees of the European 
Parliament, each of which will provide input on the final decision of 
whether to ratify ACTA or not. The first of these took place last week, 
when the International Trade (INTA) committee had a preliminary ACTA 
workshop.  This included hearing from external experts, one of whom was 
Michael Geist, well known to Techdirt readers. 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
One of the common assumptions in the copyright debate is that artists
 are special, and that they have a right to make money from their works 
repeatedly, in ways not granted to "ordinary" workers like plumbers or 
train drivers, thanks to copyright's reach through time and space. Of 
course, when modern copyright was devised in the early 18th century, 
artists were special in the sense they were scarce; offering them 
special monopoly privileges "for the encouragement of learning" as the 
1710 Statute of Anne puts it, therefore made sense. 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
As far as we can tell, ACTA has been put on
 hold for months, maybe even a year, while the European Court of Justice
 (ECJ) considers its compatibility or otherwise with European laws.  But
 that doesn't mean everything has stopped.  The European Parliament has 
begun examining ACTA from various viewpoints through its committees. 
On 
Open Enterprise blog.
 
 
 
The Raspberry Pi is a $25 credit-card sized computer
 that has succeeded in making GNU/Linux not just newsworthy, but 
downright desirable.  The initial batch of boards sold out in minutes, 
and eager customers crashed the server where it was being sold.
The original vision of the Raspberry Pi was to promote amateur 
programming and to re-invigorate the teaching of computing in the UK 
(and elsewhere) by providing a very low-cost and easily hackable system.
  Naturally, though, its open source code allows it to be applied in 
many different situations.  Here, for example, is a plan to create a secure chat system for activists that can be used in countries where communications are routinely under surveillance, using a program called Cryptocat: 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
Amidst the growing enthusiasm for digital texts -- ebooks and scans 
of illustrated books -- it's easy to overlook some important drawbacks. 
 First, that you don't really own ebooks, as various unhappy experiences
 with Amazon's Kindle have brought home.
  Secondly, that a scan of an illustrated book is only as good as the 
scanning technology that is available when it is made: there's no way to
 upgrade a scan to higher quality images without rescanning the whole 
thing. 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
Some bad ideas just keep on coming back, despite the fact that they 
are manifestly stupid.  Trying to get Google and others to pay for the 
privilege of sending more traffic to newspapers by including short 
snippets from their stories is one of them.  Of course, logic would 
dictate that the newspapers should be paying Google for the marketing it
 provides, but unfortunately not everyone sees it that way. 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
As Techdirt reported
 earlier this year, Spain's Sinde Law, designed to combat file sharing 
by blocking sites with allegedly infringing material, has an extremely 
complex history. It finally went into effect on 1 March, and was 
immediately met with a clever denial of service attack from a Spanish group with the self-explanatory name "Hackivistas". As TorrentFreak explains: 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
One of the most insidious aspects of recent Internet policy-making is
 that much of it is taking place behind closed doors, with little or no 
consultation -- think of SOPA, PIPA, ACTA and TPP. But there's another 
dangerous trend: the rise of "informal" agreements between the copyright
 industries and Internet service providers. 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
Even though the European Commission has referred
 ACTA to the European Court of Justice, the European Parliament 
continues to examine the treaty in its various committees.  Earlier this
 week, the one dealing with International Trade
 met for a preliminary discussion.  One of the key speakers was the 
Commissioner responsible for ACTA, Karel De Gucht, who naturally tried 
to make light of the many problems that have been raised in recent 
weeks. 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
            
        
          
        
          
        
Here's an interesting move from the European Commission:
On 
Open Enterprise blog.
 
 
 
One of the striking features of the demonstrations
 against ACTA that took place across Europe over  the last few weeks was
 the youth of the participants.  That's not to say that only young 
people are concerned about ACTA, but it's an indication that they take 
its assault on the Internet very personally -- unlike, perhaps, older 
and more dispassionate critics. 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
Just as the original term of copyright has been constantly extended 
from the original 14 years in the Statute of Anne, so the the scope of 
intellectual monopolies has been widened by the introduction of new ways
 in which people assert ownership of abstractions.  Here's the latest 
idea: a right to protect your image. 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
A couple of weeks ago, Techdirt wrote
 about a surprising initiative by the Netherlands to introduce new 
flexibilities into its copyright law.  Given that leadership from the 
Dutch government, it's probably no surprise that a few days later, the 
Dutch Parliament also showed itself in the political vanguard by voting not to ratify ACTA for the time being. 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
A couple of weeks ago, Techdirt reported
 on UK politicians calling for ISPs to "take down" terrorist content.  
Now it seems that the idea has not only spread to other European 
countries, but even acquired a cheesy name: "the Clean IT Project". 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
            
        
          
        
          
        
January 18, 2012 may well go down as a pivotal date in the 
history of the Internet – and of copyright.  For on that day, the 
English-language Wikipedia and thousands of other websites were blacked 
out or modified to protest against two bills passing through the US 
legislative system that were designed to fight copyright infringement.  
To understand why that unprecedented action took place, and what it 
means for the future of the Net, it’s necessary to review the history of
 copyright briefly. 
On Stir to Action. 
 
 
 
Somewhat belatedly (apologies), here is the second part of my 
analysis of the UK government's Open Standards consultation.  As well as
 a quick look at the remaining two chapters, I include my responses to 
individual questions at the end.
On 
Open Enterprise blog.
 
 
 
A few months ago, I wrote
 about the library management program Koha, and how the irruption of 
money into the previously tranquil world of open source led to some 
painful arguments. Sadly, that's not a unique example, as the recent 
case of WURFL demonstrates.
On 
The H Open.
 
 
 
            
        
          
        
          
        
As Techdirt reported
 at the time, the UK's Digital Economy Bill was rammed through 
Parliament, without proper scrutiny or even much democratic process, in 
the dying hours of the previous government.  Since then, the 
implementation of the Digital Economy Act has moved forward relatively 
slowly.  That's partly because there have been a series of legal challenges
 from ISPs concerned about its legality (and likely cost for them).  In 
addition, it made sense for the current UK government to wait for the 
completion of the Hargreaves report on copyright in the digital age 
before proceeding. 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
A couple of weeks ago the popular ebook portal Library.nu was shut down,
 apparently voluntarily, after a coalition of book publishers obtained 
an injunction against it and a similar site. As an excellent post on the
 kNOw Future Inc. blog points out,  Library.nu was significant in a number of ways: 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
The governmental body that oversees France's "three-strikes" law, HADOPI, has already been caught once infringing
 on the copyright of others -- by using a logo designed with unlicensed 
fonts.  Now it's been spotted using photographs without respecting the 
so-called "moral rights" of the photographer, which include the right to attribution (French original),
 absent on HADOPI's site.  Such moral rights are taken very seriously in
 France, where they are automatic, perpetual and cannot be waived 
(unlike in some other jurisdictions, such as the United Kingdom.) 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
It was only yesterday that the European Commissioner Karel de Gucht made the surprise announcement
 that the European Commission would be referring ACTA to the European 
Court of Justice (ECJ) "to assess whether ACTA is incompatible -- in any
 way -- with the EU's fundamental rights and freedoms."  Just a few 
hours after that, there are already signs of panic among ACTA's 
supporters that the treaty may indeed be incompatible -- and thus dead 
in the water as far as the European Union is concerned. 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
The British Journal of Photography (BJP) brings us yet another story of aggressive assertion of copyright wreaking harm on artists
 -- the very people it allegedly empowers. It concerns some photos in 
Getty Images' stock library that have chairs in them.  Because a few of 
those chairs are "famous" in the sense that they were produced by a 
couple of designers that worked with the architect Le Corbusier, the 
heirs of those designers, together with the Le Corbusier Foundation, 
have sued Getty Images in France for copyright infringement -- and won: 
On 
Techdirt.