Could I be the first to point out that government powers to ban disinformation 
and other "harmful" forms of speech are exactly what led to the Wikipedia ban 
in Turkey, and current threats against Wiki projects in Russia?Now look what 
else they're trying to throw into the UK OSB: breaking E2E encryption.  
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2022/jul/06/uk-could-force-messaging-apps-to-scan-for-child-sexual-abuse-imagesBe
 extremely careful what you wish for(and worse still, what you campaign for), 
unless the law you're trying to make even stricter excludes nonprofits or 
community-moderated projects.  Especially when rights of redress under the 
Human Rights Act are being watered down.Phil
-------- Original message --------From: Kyle Taylor <[email protected]> Date: 
06/07/2022  09:22  (GMT+00:00) To: Alex Stinson <[email protected]> Cc: 
Publicpolicy Group for Wikimedia <[email protected]>, Matthew 
Gallagher <[email protected]> Subject: [Publicpolicy] Re: EU Policy Monitoring 
Report: June 2022 Hi Alex!Apologies for my incredibly slow reply. I have Covid 
yet again and it's gotten the best of me this time!In short, the broad view (of 
course not speaking for everyone) is that the bill doesn't go far enough with 
dealing with disinformation largely because of the exemptions, exceptions and 
exclusions but secondarily because of the powers reserved to the Secretary of 
State to largely determine what is disinformation and this Committee they're 
proposing, which doesn't report for EIGHTEEN MONTHS. So it doesn't go far 
enough, I'm afraid. Within UK civil society, Full Fact has down great work 
around this. A few of their 
pieces:https://fullfact.org/blog/2022/mar/online-safety-bill/https://fullfact.org/blog/2022/jul/the-government-must-start-listening-to-concerns-on-online-safety-bill/I
 hope that helps a bit!Best wishes,Kyle---Kyle TaylorFounder and Director+44 
7745 93 44 33https://www.fairvote.ukOn Fri, Jul 1, 2022 at 7:11 PM Alex Stinson 
<[email protected]> wrote:The meeting I was in yesterday as part of: 
https://caad.info/who-we-are/ -- highlighted how easy it was for misinfo actors 
to get exemptions from the rules around disinfo: so it's likely to be 
exploitable, and potentially a shelter for disinformation actors from outside 
the UK. I am curious if we have a position on the disinformation parts of the 
law? On Fri, Jul 1, 2022 at 8:35 AM Rita Jonusaite <[email protected]> wrote:Hey 
all, If you have not seen re OSB in the UK, the Fair Vote UK is circulatring a 
Global letter to the UK Government on the loopholes in the UK's Online Safety 
Bill that they would like other organisations to sign. The joint letter is 
nearing 50 signatures already including Accountable Tech, Institute for 
Strategic Dialogue, Global Witness and Global Project Against Hate and 
Extremism etc. I am sharing with you their original message below and adding 
Matt and Kyle who are leading the campaign in Cc if you have any questions 
directly. Deadline is COB Friday (but they can go as late as Monday to my 
understanding)!Best, Rita --ORIGINAL ASK--I'm Matt of Fair Vote UK, and I'm 
leading within our organisation on an international coalition campaign to voice 
global opposition to the loopholes currently written into the UK's Online 
Safety Bill. I'm writing to ask for your organisation's signature on a global 
letter to the UK Government, highlighting the danger posed by this bill's 
exemptions, exceptions and exclusions – which fundamentally undermine its 
purpose of making the internet safer. The risks are international in scope as 
these loopholes could effectively allow for harmful content and disinformation 
to be "laundered" in the UK. Please sign if possible! Overview of the Letter: 
The UK’s Online Safety Bill, currently making its way through Parliament, aims 
to make the UK “the safest place in the world to go online”. Unfortunately, it 
falls far short of that objective in its current form – to the extent that it 
could actually make adults and children less safe online. The bill contains 
glaring loopholes that could allow some of the actors most responsible for harm 
online to avoid oversight and regulation. Media entities are exempt based on 
incredibly lenient criteria which would allow nefarious actors to launder 
harmful content. The democratic importance exemption would let politicians' 
online speech stay up regardless of its vast reach and potential to cause harm. 
Paid ads are left in scope despite their demonstrable role in spreading 
disinformation and hate. All of this serves to create a two-tiered system  in 
which some of the most harmful actors are given precedence, prioritising their 
freedom of speech over the regular user. We’re demanding online regulation that 
protects all of our human rights equally. These loopholes have severe 
implications not just for the UK, but for the global community as well. If this 
new regime does not address them, the UK could become the world’s 
“disinformation laundromat”. We’re urging orgs and individuals from anywhere in 
the world concerned with democracy, children’s safety, disinformation, public 
health, climate change or other related causes to sign this letter to the UK 
Government calling on them to close the loopholes and build a more robust human 
rights framework that applies equally. In addition to this letter, we’re 
kicking off a public advocacy campaign on July 4th with significant digital 
spend behind it to further raise awareness about the OSB’s dangerous loopholes. 
You can sign on by adding your name in the format shown at the bottom of the 
document. Please let me know if you have any questions or concerns! Many 
thanks, MattP.S. Please feel free to forward this on to additional orgs and 
individuals you think would consider signing with [email protected] cc'ed. Thank 
you! On Fri, 1 Jul 2022 at 13:05, Eric Luth <[email protected]> wrote:Hi 
everyone,Thanks for the summary, Dimi. Interesting read on the Digital Commons, 
happy to see that the Swedish government also supported.On Copyright reform, 
the Swedish government has sent its proposal on copyright reform to the council 
on legislation, which is the last step before it goes to parliament. We are 
currently analyzing the proposal, and working with MPs to improve the worst 
parts and safeguard the best.Best Eric LuthProjektledare engagemang och 
påverkan | Project Manager, Involvement and AdvocacyWikimedia 
[email protected]+46 (0) 765 55 50 95Stöd fri kunskap, bli medlem i 
Wikimedia Sverige.Läs mer på blimedlem.wikimedia.seDen tors 30 juni 2022 kl 
17:58 skrev Jan Gerlach <[email protected]>:Many thanks for another great 
update, Dimi!Alex, the Foundation's Global Advocacy team is tracking the UK 
Online Safety Bill and we have published our first impressions on the text 
here. We're in touch with various allies of our movement in the UK and plan to 
further engage on the bill when appropriate.Thanks for your interest!JanOn Thu, 
Jun 30, 2022 at 8:32 AM Alex Stinson <[email protected]> wrote:Hi Demi and 
list?Is anyone following the UK law at: 
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/online-safety-bill-supporting-documents/online-safety-bill-factsheet
 Curious if we are watching that in connection with other Disinfo/Content 
moderation laws.Cheers, AlexOn Thu, Jun 30, 2022 at 12:16 PM Dimi Dimitrov 
<[email protected]> wrote:The French government has vowed to invest money in 
the commons. Rub your eyes, read it again and then continue reading below. 
====================DIGITAL COMMONS====================It still surprises us to 
be able to put “French government” and “investment in the digital commons” 
together, but here we go: The French Presidency of the Council of the EU came 
up with a plan how the old continent can compete with dominant US tech 
companies. The plan is to have more “digital commons”, which can be anything 
open source, including software, code libraries, tools, repositories. The basic 
thinking is that if fundamental tools and libraries are accessible to all 
players, this will level the playing field. [1]—19 EU Member Countries and the 
Commission presented the idea of digital commons at the Digital Assembly in 
Toulouse. They acknowledge that there are many instances of working digital 
commons, but also point out that oftentimes projects lack long-term, structural 
support. The plan envisages financial help and a “one-stop-shop” to find 
government support. [2]—Funds in the ballpark of tens of millions of euros are 
already pledged, but the concrete details are still in the making. Thanks to 
the leadership of Wikimédia France, our movement and a group of partners 
(Europeana, Communia, OpenStreetMap) are part of this conversation from the 
start. We especially want to show that governments can often help by removing 
legal and administrative obstacles, not just by peddling money. 
[3]======CSAM======We wrote about the proposal of the Commission to regulate 
the online moderation of “Child Sexual Abuse Material (CSAM)” in last month’s 
report [4]. While it is a very important issue to tackle, we do have great 
concerns with parts of the text, especially provisions that would allow 
scanning all online chats on a given platform. We are still analysing how 
exactly, if at all, this would impact Wikimedia projects. In the meantime, we 
can offer a short briefing. [5]—On the legislative side, the start feels very 
bumpy: The European Parliament probably won’t refer the file to a committee 
until September or October, while ample criticism is pouring in, including from 
the German government. [6]=========Net Neutrality=========The European 
Commission plans to push out a new legislative proposal after the summer that 
is expected to include provisions forcing some service providers to pay for 
data traffic (think Facebook and Netflix paying Deutsche Telekom and 
Telefonica). While this is a classic example of a lobbying battle between very 
large telecommunications companies and very large tech companies, it also would 
violate some basic principles of net neutrality. A group of civil society 
organisations, led by EDRi, sent a letter to the relevant Commissioners 
outlining the main issues. [7]—On the bright side, BEREC, the EU’s body of 
telecoms regulators, has updated its net neutrality guidelines to close some 
loopholes and effectively ban zero rating of data for some applications. 
[8]=============Disinformation=============The European Commission has 
presented an updated Code of Practice on Disinformation. [9] Wikimedia had not 
signed up the original Code, because we deemed it was mainly focused on “follow 
the money”, hence where disinformation is spread through advertising and paid 
reach. The version will allow researchers more access to data of large 
platforms and again focus on advertising.—The Code of Practice is a voluntary 
initiative for online platforms, but taking part in it essentially removes some 
obligations under the newly created Digital Services Act. =============Italian 
Dramas=============The Italian government published new draft guidelines about 
public data (open government) and opened a consultation. [10] They basically 
state that open government and open data provisions don’t apply to institutions 
related to culture, which is a very Italian thing. We wonder if this is in line 
with the Public Sector Information Directive and will investigate with 
Wikimedia Italia, which are also participating in the consultation. —The 
Italian government has been on a roll. It also published the draft national 
digitisation plan. It would establish an administrative fee for the commercial 
use of all public domain digitisations of cultural institutions. It essentially 
outlaws CC0 as a relevant license for most GLAMs in the country and circumvents 
the public domain safeguard enshrined in the latest copyright directive. There 
was a public consultation until 15 June which Wikimedia Italy and partners 
participated in. Expect blog posts on Diff and on wikimedia.brussels 
soon.=============Polish & Czech Copyright Reforms=============The Czech 
copyright reform is in parliament. We have a Czech language copy. [11] The 
Polish government published its proposal, which will go to parliament very 
soon. We have a rough English translation. [12] If you consider yourself a 
copyright geek, enjoy reading them. If you want to help our national partners 
advocating on this, get in touch! 
:)====END====[1]https://twitter.com/AmbNum/status/1540657835427741699[2]https://www.diplomatie.gouv.fr/fr/politique-etrangere-de-la-france/diplomatie-numerique/actualites-et-evenements/article/le-rapport-sur-les-communs-numeriques-un-levier-essentiel-pour-la-souverainete[3]https://www.wikimedia.fr/pour-un-developpement-des-communs-numeriques-a-lechelle-europeenne/[4]https://lists.wikimedia.org/hyperkitty/list/[email protected]/thread/D6C5TA6FWDLA6JHLJHAT66C2BZ4AQ3XG/[5]https://docs.google.com/document/d/1dD5AF8-uk2LFG7mu62AK7S80H4CrF1ftV7lheE6ZJBM/edit?usp=sharing[6]https://www.techdirt.com/2022/06/27/germany-says-hell-no-to-eu-proposal-to-outlaw-encryption/[7]https://drive.google.com/file/d/16Q4d13xqr5UsPkoSMw7d_3YL-hZnq4cL/view?usp=sharing[8]https://fossbytes.com/europe-bans-zero-rating-internet-offers/[9]https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/IP_22_3664[10]https://www.agid.gov.it/it/agenzia/stampa-e-comunicazione/notizie/2022/06/16/open-data-consultazione-linee-guida.[11]https://docs.google.com/document/d/1J7dvl4yEk6ScWIIypdI6Uq_7273T7G5i/edit?usp=sharing&ouid=110641574264354613563&rtpof=true&sd=true[12]https://drive.google.com/file/d/1N0ArQkgpZkQQcdpsidS_Yc-bS5liQsl5/view?usp=sharing


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-- Alex Stinson Lead Program StrategistWikimedia FoundationTwitter: 
@sadadsLearn more about how the communities behind Wikipedia, Wikidata and 
other Wikimedia projects create calls to action to invite new contributors 
through campaigns: https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Campaigns 

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