On Fri, 7 Sep 2018 18:40:14 +0200, Robin Gareus wrote:
The worrying part of Article #13 is to introduce
surveillance to
enforce Copyright. The presumption of innocence on gets thrown
overboard with this.
Everything that is uploaded by you must pass an "upload filter".
That filter checks if the content that you post is legal and does not
infringe any Copyrights. Now guess who can afford to pay for that
"filter as a service", not to mention the potential to abuse
[data-collected by] such a central filter. -- In any case this is a
technical solution to a social problem and therefore it won't work to
stop (C) infringement.
Article 3 restricting data-mining to scientific research is another
issue. This discriminates against freelance scientists and artists who
are not affiliated with some organization. This is the part I oppose
most.
The Article 11's "link-tax" is debatable. I'm fine with it as long as
it does not become illegal to properly quote articles with references
and it remains legal to copy entire articles for public archives
(public library,
archive.org).
Guerilla Open Access Manifesto:
https://archive.org/stream/GuerillaOpenAccessManifesto/Goamjuly2008_djvu.txt
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