This may be of interest to some silklisters:

-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: Will you sign our letter protesting the terrible new EU
copyright proposals?
Date: Fri, 8 Jun 2018 14:55:05 -0700
From: Danny O'Brien <[email protected]>

Thanks so much for reaching out to your network.

We're working with our European colleagues to stop a draft EU law that has
had little attention up until now, but is very close to acceptance (there's
a vote in the EU's JURI committee on June 20/21 2018 which represents the
last chance for substantive edits.)

To help in that cause, we're asking some of the key figures of the Internet
to speak up against it in a letter -- and we hoped you and perhaps your
colleagues would join us.

(As you can see from the tone of the letter, we're trying to pull together
a list of the "luminaries" for this action -- but luminaries have imposter
syndrome too, we've noticed. If you've been around from the earlier years
of the Net or the Web, and you've lasted this long, don't worry -- you're a
luminary! You should join.)

Article 13 of the proposed rewrite of the EU's Copyright Directive would
require mandatory filters on all sites that accept and share
user-contributed content, scanning for copyright violations and rejecting
anything that does not pass their test. This is an overbroad rule that
would effectively create a universal, algorithmic blocking system with
little chance of appeal.

This is a very serious issue, and I'm afraid the schedule is tight -- we're
hoping to present this letter to EU officials on Monday. We can take
signatures up until the final moment though, just email me at [email protected].

If you'd like to read more about the EU Copyright Directive, MEP Julia Reda
has some great explainers here:
https://juliareda.eu/2018/05/censorship-machines-link-tax-finish-line/
https://juliareda.eu/2018/06/saveyourinternet/

Letter for signing is below, or at:

Again, if you send your name to me at [email protected], I'll add you to the
list. It's longer than the list below!

And of course, feel free to forward, though please don't put the letter
online for now.

Best wishes,

d.

Antonio Tajani MEP President of the European Parliament
[email protected]

5 June 2018

Mr President,

Article 13 of the EU Copyright Directive Threatens the Internet

As a group of the Internet’s original architects and pioneers and their
successors, we write to you as a matter of urgency about an imminent threat
to the future of this global network.

The European Commission’s proposal for Article 13 of the proposed Directive
for Copyright in the Digital Single Market Directive was well-intended. As
creators ourselves, we share the concern that there should be a fair
distribution of revenues from the online use of copyright works, that
benefits creators, publishers, and platforms alike.

But Article 13 is not the right way to achieve this. By requiring Internet
platforms to perform automatic filtering all of the content that their
users upload, Article 13 takes an unprecedented step towards the
transformation of the Internet from an open platform for sharing and
innovation, into a tool for the automated surveillance and control of its
users.

Europe has been served well by the balanced liability model established
under the Ecommerce Directive, under which those who upload content to the
Internet bear the principal responsibility for its legality, while
platforms are responsible to take action to remove such content once its
illegality has been brought to their attention. By inverting this liability
model and essentially making platforms directly responsible for ensuring
the legality of content in the first instance, the business models and
investments of platforms large and small will be impacted. The damage that
this may do to the free and open Internet as we know it is hard to predict,
but in our opinions could be substantial.

In particular, far from only affecting large American Internet platforms
(who can well afford the costs of compliance), the burden of Article 13
will fall most heavily on their competitors, including European startups
and SMEs. The cost of putting in place the necessary automatic filtering
technologies will be expensive and burdensome, and yet those technologies
have still not developed to a point where their reliability can be
guaranteed. Indeed, if Article 13 had been in place when we first developed
the Internet’s core protocols and applications, it is unlikely that it
would exist today as we know it.

The impact of Article 13 would also fall heavily on ordinary users of
Internet platforms—not only those who upload music or video (frequently in
reliance upon copyright limitations and exceptions, that Article 13
ignores), but even those who contribute photos, text, or computer code to
open collaboration platforms such as Wikipedia and GitHub.

Scholars also doubt the legality of Article 13; for example, the Max Planck
Institute for Innovation and Competition has written that “obliging certain
platforms to apply technology that identifies and filters all the data of
each of its users before the upload on the publicly available services is
contrary to Article 15 of the InfoSoc Directive as well as the European
Charter of Fundamental Rights.”

One of the particularly problematic provisions of Article 13 as originally
proposed by the Commission, and in the compromise texts put forward by the
Council and the Parliament, is that none of these versions of the text
would provide either clarity or consistency in their attempts to define
which Internet platforms would be required to comply with the provision,
and which may be exempt. The resulting business uncertainty will drive
online platforms out of Europe and impede them from providing services to
European consumers.

We support the consideration of measures that would improve the ability for
creators to receive fair remuneration for the use of their works online.
But we cannot support Article 13, which would mandate Internet platforms to
embed an automated infrastructure for monitoring and censorship deep into
their networks. For the sake of the Internet’s future, we urge you to vote
for the deletion of this proposal.

Yours sincerely,[1]

Anriette Esterhuysen, Senior Advisor, Association for Progressive
Communications Brewster Kahle, Founder & Digital Librarian, Internet
Archive

Brian Behlendorf, primary developer of the Apache Web server, founding
member of the Apache Software Foundation

Bruce Schneier, Bell Labs, cryptography writer and expert

Dave Farber, Keio University/CMU

Ethan Zuckerman, Senior Researcher, Berkman Klein Center for Internet &
Society at Harvard University

Guido van Rossum, Founder and developer of the Python programming language
Jimmy Wales, Co-Founder, Wikimedia Foundation

Joichi Ito, Director of the MIT Media Lab John Gilmore, Co-Founder of the
Electronic Frontier Foundation and Cygnus Solutions

Katherine Maher, Executive Director, Wikimedia Foundation

Mitch Kapor, Co-Founder of the Electronic Frontier Foundation and Founder
of Lotus Development Corporation

Pam Samuelson, Richard M. Sherman ’74 Distinguished Professor of Law and
Information at the University of California at Berkeley, Director of the
Berkeley Center for Law & Technology

Radia Perlman, Inventor of routing technology fundamental to computer
networks

Rebecca MacKinnon, Director, Ranking Digital Rights at New America Tim

Berners-Lee, Inventor of the World Wide Web

Tim O’Reilly, Founder and CEO of O'Reilly Media, Inc.

Tim Wu, Professor, Columbia Law School

Vint Cerf, Internet Pioneer

Dame Wendy Hall, Regius Professor of Computer Science, University of
Southampton, UK

~

Aaron Rabinowitz, networking and network security consultant Aaron Zuehlke,
CISSP Senior Risk & Threat Intel Analyst Alan Kay, President, Viewpoints
Research Institute Alfred Ganz, network consultant Alfred Z. Spector,
computer scientist and research manager Allan Gottlieb, Professor, Computer
Science Department within the Courant Institute of New York University
Andrew McConachie, Internet Architecture Engineer Andrew Wolfe, computer
systems consultant Avi Rubin, Professor, Computer Science, Technical
Director, Information Security Institute, John Hopkins University Ben
Mobley, Technology Security Officer, Colonial Group International Bob
Frankston, software industry pioneer Brandon Ross, Founder, Network Utility
Force Chip Rosenthal, Staff Engineer, major broadband manufacturer Chris
Bacon, systems analyst Cliff Sojourner, computer scientist David L. Dill,
Donald E. Knuth Professor, Emeritus, in the School of Engineering, Stanford
University David Patterson, Professor of the Graduate School, Computer
Science, UC Berkeley David Peters, Director of Software Engineering at
Zillow Group Dave Snigier, Systems Architect, University Information
Technology Services, UMass Office of the President David Xia, software
engineer Desiree Miloshevic, UK Internet pioneer Doug Lea, Professor of
Computer Science at the State University of New York at Oswego Ed Lazowska,
Bill & Melinda Gates Chair, Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science &
Engineering, University of Washington Eleanor Saitta, security analyst
Frank Yellin, software engineer Frederick P. Brooks, Jr., Kenan Professor
of Computer Science, Emeritus, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Gerald Jay Sussman, Panasonic Professor of Electrical Engineering at MIT
Gordon Jacobson, Portman Communications Hal Abelson, Professor of Computer
Science and Engineering, MIT Department of Electrical Engineering and
Computer Science Hugh Connery, Head of IT, Dept. Environmental Engineering,
Technical University of Denmark James Doty, Telecommunications Industry
Consultant James Renken, systems administrator and attorney Jim Waldo,
Gordon McKay Professor of the Practice, Chief Technology Officer, Harvard
University Joe Hamelin, network engineer John Bartas, contributor to early
Internet technology John Carbone, Managing Partner, bonify.io John Romero,
programmer and game designer John Souvestre, IT Consultant John Villasenor,
Professor of Electrical Engineering, Public Policy, and Management, UCLA
Jonathan Poritz, Associate Professor of Mathematics and Interim Director of
the Center for Teaching and Learning, Colorado State University - Pueblo
Josh Maida, Partner and Director of New Product, Six Foot Josh Triplett,
Free and Open Source Software developer Joshua Bloch, Professor, Carnegie
Mellon University and Java pioneer Justin Findlay, software engineer Kraig
Beahn, CEO, Enguity Technology Corp L Peter Deutsch, founder of Aladdin
Enterprises and creator of Ghostscript Lester Earnest, Senior Research
Computer Scientist Emeritus, Stanford University Martin Odersky, Professor
at LAMP/IC, EPFL Matthew Bishop, Professor, University of California at
Davis Miguel de Icaza, Founder of the GNOME, Mono, and Xamarin projects
Mike Trest, Principal Consultant, Trest Consulting Neal Gafter, Computer
Programming Language Designer Neil Hunt, CEO, Curai, Inc. (former CPO,
Netflix Inc.) Patrick Koppula, Head of Product and Founder - GarageBand.com
and Principal, Innovate for Society Paul Menchini, past Architect of the
VHDL language Philip Wadler, Professor of Theoretical Computer Science,
University of Edinburgh Ray Charbonneau, computer consultant Robert Oliver,
Solution Architect, Dassault Systèmes Ron Teitelbaum, Chief Executive
Officer, 3D Immersive Collaboration Consulting Simon Phipps, President,
Open Source Initiative Stefano Zanero, Associate Professor, Dipartimento di
Elettronica, Informazione e Bioingegneria, Politecnico di Milano Steve
Holton, software engineer Tim Peieris, President of SeatYourself.biz Tim
Pozar, network architect Tom Ritter, Security Engineer, Mozilla Tyler
Lawrence, CEO, Arcpoint William Cook, Associate Professor, Department of
Computer Sciences at the University of Texas at Austin


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