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As Techdirt reported
 in 2010, the passage of the Digital Economy Act was one of the most 
disgraceful travesties of the UK parliamentary process in recent times; 
it was badly drafted, hardly revised and then pushed through with almost
 no debate in the dying moments of the previous government.  Since then,
 two UK ISPs -- BT and TalkTalk -- have challenged the Act in the 
courts, but lost earlier this year. 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
We take antibiotics and their ability to kill practically all 
bacteria for granted.  But scientists are increasingly warning that we 
may be about to leave what might come to be seen as a golden age for 
anti-bacterial drugs, and enter a post-antibiotic era.  As the World 
Health Organization’s Director-General said, quoted in an article on the  Citizen Vox site: 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
Techdirt has always been sceptical about Nathan Myhrvold's business 
plan for Intellectual Ventures (IV) -- build up a huge portfolio of 
patents, simply so that it can then license them to those that will, and
 sue those that won't.  Others, however, have been dazzled by Myhrvold's
 pedigree as an extremely wealthy ex-Microsoft manager, and by the fact 
that patents have undeniably become a central concern for the tech 
industries in recent years, which suggests that there is plenty of money
 to be made from them. 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
One of the earliest proposals for mass surveillance was the Panopticon: 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
As I wrote yesterday, one of the most pressing problems the open 
source community faces in the near future is the Unitary Patent 
proposal, which is likely to bring in software patents to Europe.  
Here's the background, and what we can do about it.
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
Mike recently reminded us that for some people, bizarrely, stopping "piracy" is more important than making money.  Here's another example, this time from Norway: 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
Marielle Gallo is probably best known for the Gallo Report, which Techdirt described
 back in 2010 as a "similarly draconian intellectual property 
enforcement" to ACTA, with which it has much in common.  So it's no 
surprise that Gallo has been one of the few vocal supporters of ACTA, 
and it was widely expected that the EU's Legal Affairs (JURI) committee 
she chairs would support her draft opinion calling for ACTA to be 
ratified.  As we now know, that didn't happen, and JURI formed one of five committees that all recommended that ACTA should be rejected. 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
One of the the reasons why legislation like SOPA and treaties like 
ACTA are so dangerous is that their loose definitions allow measures 
intended to deal with copyright infringement to be used to censor 
inconvenient opinions.  Unfortunately, that's not just a theoretical 
problem with future legislation, but one that is already happening, as this post from Rick Falkvinge makes clear: 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
Something seems to be going on in the European Union.  Over the next 
few weeks a range of really important debates and votes are taking 
place, all connected with openness in some way.  Quite why everything is
 happening at once is not entirely clear - unless politicians are trying
 to get everything out of the way before their summer hols, perhaps....
On 
Open Enterprise blog.
 
 
 
The day before the EU's International Trade committee (INTA) recommended
 that the European Parliament should reject ACTA, the EU commissioner 
with responsibility for the treaty, Karel De Gucht, had given a speech 
to its members, trying to win them over.  Although it was short, it 
turns out to be highly revealing about the European Commission's future ACTA strategy.  Here's what he said: 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
There's a fairly constant pattern in the world of copyright 
enforcement.  The media companies claim that piracy is "destroying" 
their industries, although they never offer any independent evidence to 
back this up.  They "demand" that governments "do something" -- by which
 they mean introduce harsher penalties for unauthorized downloads.  
Because of the hypnotic effect that musicians and artists seem to have 
on politicians, governments happily oblige, even though there is no 
evidence that such laws will help artists.  After the laws come in to 
force, online sharing may dip for a while, but soon returns to previous 
levels, so the media companies start whining again, and demand yet 
tougher penalties. 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
            
        
          
        
          
        
Last year I wrote about the OpenCorporates project, which describes itself as follows:
On 
Open Enterprise blog.
 
 
 
Once more, there's good news on the ACTA front.  Today, the important European Parliament committee responsible for handling international trade issues, INTA, voted to recommend that the European Parliament reject ACTA when it comes to a plenary vote on 4 July. 
On 
Open Enterprise blog.
 
 
 
Another major milestone has been achieved in the push to get ACTA 
rejected by the EU: a fifth parliamentary committee has recommended that
 the European Parliament should refuse to ratify it when it is put to 
the vote on July 4th, effectively killing it in Europe.  The other committees
 – on legal affairs, civil liberties, industry and international 
development – recommended rejection a few weeks ago, but today's vote by
 the international trade committee (INTA) was seen as the most 
important. 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
The computing revolution is not the only one driven by constant 
scaling of technologies: the field of genomics -- the study of DNA 
sequences -- has also enjoyed rapid falls in basic costs over the last 
decade and a half.  This means that whereas the first human genome cost 
around $3 billion to sequence, we are fast approaching the point where 
it will cost first a few thousand, and then a few hundred dollars to 
sequence anyone's complete DNA.  An interesting post on the Health 
Affairs Blog points out that neither the law nor society is ready for this. 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
On the not-very-scientific basis of several calls to MEPs yesterday, the impression I get is that the right-of-centre ECR group on the INTA committee will be pushing for delay until after the ECR has delivered its judgement.  That could be in more than a year's time, and would be a big problem in terms of getting ACTA rejected, since all of the momentum that has built up over the last six months would be lost.
On 
Open Enterprise blog.
 
 
 
Until recently there has been an unchallenged assumption that the 
more copyright, the better.  Although people have begun to realize 
that's not the case – and that extending copyright diminishes the public
 domain because we must all wait longer for works to enter it -- 
governments around the world continue to make copyright longer, stronger
 and broader. 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
A few months ago we wrote
 about a really bad idea that was being floated in Germany: making 
companies like Google pay for the use of news snippets in services such 
as Google News.  Unfortunately, that idea has now been turned into a 
concrete proposal for a new law; remarkably, it is even worse than the 
original plans. 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
When the history of modern Brazil comes to be written, a special 
place will be reserved for the soybean, the powerful farmers that grow 
it -- and the deforestation
 it is driving.  And at the center of that tale will be Monsanto, with 
its patented "Roundup Ready" crop, so called because it has been 
genetically modified to withstand the herbicide glyphosate, marketed as 
Roundup. 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
So, we arrive at the penultimate stage of the battle to stop ACTA in
 Europe.  Before the final plenary vote in the European Parliament in 
July, there is a vote in the International Trade committee (INTA) this Thursday.  As its home page explains:
On 
Open Enterprise blog.
 
 
 
Performing rights societies probably don't have the best reputations 
here on Techdirt, but just when you think they can't get any more 
outrageous in their demands, they do.  Here are two stories from the Slovak Republic, both involving SOZA, the Slovak Performing and Mechanical Rights Society: 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
Net Neutrality has suddenly become a hot topic again.  Partly, that's
 thanks to some awful ideas about regulating the Internet coming from 
the International Telecommunication Union, notably those proposed by the
 ETNO -- the European Telecommunications Network Operators Association 
-- discussed recently on Techdirt.  New information from WCITLeaks Wikileaks (found via the Net neutrality in Europe site) provides us with the following details (pdf): 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
We knew it was coming, and here it is: the Communications Data Bill (.pdf.).  First the good news: 
On 
Open Enterprise blog.
 
 
 
As expected, the UK government has published its Draft Communications Bill
 (pdf) -- better known as the "snooper's charter," since it requires 
ISPs to record key information about every email sent and Web site 
visited by UK citizens, and mobile phone companies to log all their 
calls (landline information is already recorded). 
On 
Techdirt.
 
 
 
The Belgian EU Commissioner Karel De Gucht is the driving force 
behind ACTA, and is apparently really keen to combat crimes like 
counterfeiting and piracy.  It also seems he has a slight problem with the tax authorities: 
On 
Techdirt.