Digital Rights Management
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EP in favour of collecting societies and levies
On 15 January 2004 the European Parliament accepted an own-initiative report about the importance and future of collecting societies, the organisations that collect the rights on copyright and neighbouring rights. The report states that Digital Rights Management is insufficiently developed to replace the work of collecting societies. According to the report, reasonable levies (for example […]
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WSIS report – the long way ahead
The first phase of the World Summit on Information Society (WSIS) ended in Geneva last week, after more than 18 months of preparatory process. Its 2 outcomes are a Declaration of Principles and a Plan of Action, both enthusiastically adopted by government representatives, though hardly discussed until the last hour. A major outcome is also […]
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PNR talks between EU and US move slowly
Talks between the European Commission and the US department of Homeland Security about airline passenger data are moving very slowly. Commissioner Frits Bolkestein told the European Parliament that the US are only willing to compromise on a few disagreements. Most importantly the US do not want to limit the use of airline passenger data to […]
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Statement on human rights in the information society
Early in November independent experts from all regions of the world met in Geneva to discuss about the fundamental human rights in the information society. The meeting was supported by the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC), the European Commission, the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights and the Government of Mali, […]
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Still no EU Data Protection Supervisor
European discussions can’t agree on the appointment of a European privacy-czar. The European parliament insists on choosing Joaquín Bayo Delgado, who has no experience in data protection issues, as the new EU Data Protection Supervisor. The Council favours the Dutch Data Protection Commissioner Peter Hustinx. Jorge Salvador Hernández Mollar, the President of the European Parliament’s […]
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European Parliament limits software patents
The European Parliament yesterday drastically altered the proposed directive on the patentability of computer-implemented inventions. A long summer of intensive lobbying by an impressive European alliance of open source advocates, economists and CEOs of small and medium-sized businesses has paid off. One of the great fears about software patents, the extension to business methods like […]
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EU-US negotiations about PNR Data
Negotiations about airline passenger data between the European Commission and the US are stuck but both parties have agreed to solve their differences before the end of this year. On 22 September, Asa Hutchinson, US Under Secretary for Border & Transportation Security met with EU Commissioner Bolkestein, but that didn’t result in any public change […]
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PNR data transfer: EU Parliament gets angry
On 12 September the moratorium expires on the transfer of European passenger-data to the United States. Already harsh words are being exchanged between EU institutions, one of the last realms of diplomatic kindness. “The violation of EU legislation is continuing and with it the rights of European citizens are being violated.” This judgement from an […]
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Draft EU directive on software patents withdrawn
European Parliament rapporteur Arlene McCarthy has withdrawn the draft directive on software patents. The directive will now go back to the committee stage for some more work. A new vote is scheduled for the plenary sessions between 22 and 25 September. Even though officially the European Patent Office does not allow for patents on software, […]
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Spy-chip in all European cars?
A few days ago, the Sunday Times revealed plans from British government officials to fit all cars in Britain with personalised spy-chips. The micro-chip will automatically report a wide range of offences including speeding, road tax evasion and illegal parking. Roadside sensors will be able to monitor all private cars wherever they travel. But plans […]
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EU Commission finishes Microsoft antitrust probe
The EU Commission is preparing the last steps in it’s antitrust probe against Microsoft. The Commission has been investigating Microsoft practices since 2000 following a complaint by Sun Microsystems. Sun accused Microsoft of abusing its dominant position in the market by not releasing crucial information on the communication between computers and servers running MS Windows. […]
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Preparations for biometric chip in EU passports
International technical standards bodies (ISO) and civil aviation bodies (ICAO) are preparing plans for ‘globally interoperable machine readable passports’. The technology should consist of RFIDs (Radio Frequency Identification) that contain ‘details that enable the machine-assisted identification of the presenter’. These technical descriptions point at passports that can transmit biometric data over a radio frequency. The […]
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