Top EU Court Says There’s No Right To Online Anonymity, Because Copyright Is 
More Important


from the copyright-exceptionalism dept Fri, Jun 7th 2024 12:03pm - Glyn Moody  
https://www.techdirt.com/2024/06/07/top-eu-court-says-theres-no-right-to-online-anonymity-because-copyright-is-more-important/


A year ago, Walled Culture wrote about an extremely important case that was 
being considered by the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU), the EU’s 
top court.

The central question was whether the judges considered that copyright was more 
important than privacy. The bad news is that the CJEU has just decided that it 
is:

“The Court, sitting as the Full Court, holds that the general and 
indiscriminate retention of IP addresses does not necessarily constitute a 
serious interference with fundamental rights.”

IP addresses refer to the identifying Internet number assigned to a user’s 
system when it is online. That may change each time someone uses the Internet, 
but if Internet Service Providers are required by law to retain information 
about who was assigned a particular address at a given time, then it is 
possible to carry out routine surveillance of people’s online activities. The 
CJEU has decided this is acceptable:

“EU law does not preclude national legislation authorising the competent public 
authority, for the sole purpose of identifying the person suspected of having 
committed a criminal offence, to access the civil identity data associated with 
an IP address”

The key problem is that copyright infringement by a private individual is 
regarded by the court as something so serious that it negates the right to 
privacy. It’s a sign of the twisted values that copyright has succeeded on 
imposing on many legal systems. It equates the mere copying of a digital file 
with serious crimes that merit a prison sentence, an evident absurdity.

As one of the groups that brought the original case, La Quadrature du Net, 
writes, this latest decision also has serious negative consequences for human 
rights in the EU:

“Whereas in 2020, the CJEU considered that the retention of IP addresses 
constituted a serious interference with fundamental rights and that they could 
only be accessed, together with the civil identity of the Internet user, for 
the purpose of fighting serious crime or safeguarding national security, this 
is no longer true. The CJEU has reversed its reasoning: it now considers that 
the retention of IP addresses is, by default, no longer a serious interference 
with fundamental rights, and that it is only in certain cases that such access 
constitutes a serious interference that must be safeguarded with appropriate 
protection measures.”

As a result, La Quadrature du Net says:

“While in 2020 [the CJEU] stated that there was a right to online anonymity 
enshrined in the ePrivacy Directive, it is now abandoning it. Unfortunately, by 
giving the police broad access to the civil identity associated with an IP 
address and to the content of a communication, it puts a de facto end to online 
anonymity.”

This is a good example of how copyright’s continuing obsession with ownership 
and control of digital material is warping the entire legal system in the EU. 
What was supposed to be simply a fair way of rewarding creators has resulted in 
a monstrous system of routine government surveillance carried out on hundreds 
of millions of innocent people just in case they copy a digital file.

Follow me @glynmoody on Mastodon and on Bluesky. Originally posted to Walled 
Culture.
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