http://comment.zdnet.co.uk/0,39020505,39115479,00.htm

New Euro law could make criminals of us all Rupert Goodwins
ZDNet UK
August 05, 2003, 10:00 BST
 
  
New legislation from the EU could lock up buskers and criminalise spare
tyres. But it's not all good news 

  
Welcome, European citizen, to a new world of criminality -- a world where
you're the star. The IP Enforcement Directive, a proposed new law from
the EU, has been attracting some attention from the usual quarters. In
particular, the sainted Ross Anderson of Cambridge University has rolled
out a masterly analysis of the threat to many of our accepted civil
liberties and commercial freedoms. Yet even a cursory readthrough reveals
much to be worried about.  


The proposal is a hefty document with no shortage of long sentences. A
third of the way through the 54 pages, we've learned that piracy and
counterfeiting is bad and that different states have different ways of
dealing with it -- also bad. So far, who's arguing? But the solution
proposed is to criminalise many civil infringements and to back that up
with thudding great powers spring-loaded in favour of the big guys.


By page 20, we're into the meat. Impressed by the UK's Anton Pillar
orders -- where your premises can be searched and documents and computers
seized without warning -- the proposal seeks to make this a standard
European-wide process for intellectual property rights infringements.
This is to be backed by freezing of bank accounts and other assets. You
can do this now in the UK and many states with legislation based on
English law, but it's a fairly rare procedure. Making it the backbone of
new law will widen its scope tremendously: you only have to look at the
way the RIAA in the US is throwing everything into all-out legal war with
its customers to imagine how certain people would behave with this arrow
in their quiver. 


The really nasty bit comes in Article 21, which creates legal protection
for �technical systems' intended to protect and authenticate products.
That's stuff like the hologram on your credit card and Microsoft licence
document, and things like RFID tags. The protection for these systems
includes outright bans on the creation, selling and use of equipment that
can interfere with their operation -- either by letting you clone the
authentication devices, or blocking their use. As with the American
Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), this can be extended to the act
of analysing how the systems work.
 

It's hard to over-emphasise how much power this will give to established
manufacturers, and how difficult it will be for anyone to compete in
their spheres of influence. Ask yourself whether DVD region locks and
smart ink-jet cartridges have been used to benefit the consumer, or
whether they've been used to keep prices up and choice down: now, imagine
the same power of control being given to any manufactured goods.  


You want to change the tyres on your 2006 model Ford Prefect? Anything
other than genuine Ford tyres -- with the genuine Ford ID chip -- will
disable your car. Your Sony MP3-playing nasal hair trimmer will only work
with genuine Sony batteries: don't even think about trying to make
alternatives, because that'll make you a criminal. And no, you can't buy
those jeans -- the RFID chip in the label says they're only for sale in
America. By the way, the same RFID chips on the clothes you are allowed
to buy may well be radiating all manner of things about your location:
you're not allowed to find out for yourself, as possession of an
unlicensed receiver is a criminal act.


This wholesale criminalisation of anything that might be at risk of
contravening IPR goes deep. If you go busking and play a Beatles song,
you should pay a few pence to whoever owns the rights: it's impracticable
and pointless, and however much you may be in pain from yet another awful
warbling of Yesterday nobody suffers from the minor civil infringement of
the rules. In the brave new world of the Directive, singing that song in
public with your hat on the floor would be a crime, if you didn't pay the
dues. You can imagine how much the police are going to enjoy having to
cope with that.


By effectively conflating counterfeiting and piracy and criminalising
large rafts of IP abuse, the proposal creates legal weaponry of
extraordinary power and range while making targets of us all. The FAQ
issued with the proposal touches on this, claiming that proportionality
-- making the punishment fit the crime -- is part of the plan. But this
appears to be left to the companies concerned: the FAQ stating piously
that �it is not in the interest of rightholders to spend a lot of time
and money in litigation to catch offenders who are simply sharing a few
files with a handful of friends,� for example. Yeah, tell that to the
Americans. 


And we know how companies love to use anything in their power to block
the open market and extract as much money from us as possible. They have
to -- it's called maximising return on investment, and it's quite
possible that any company that doesn't use the new law to its fullest
extent will be open to legal action from its shareholders. The fiat of
big business runs all the way through the directive. They have the power,
the motivation and the money to lobby intensively at the highest level
for their own benefit, while the consumers and citizens of the EU are
individuals, unorganised, unaware and unmotivated. 


The EU, like any government, has a duty to balance the powers and rights
of individuals and companies in order to promote the best environment for
us all. In the case of this directive, it is not doing its job. The
directive goes before the European Parliament on 11 September -- a
masterpiece of timing for a controversial measure -- so if you care, make
sure your MEP knows what's going on and what you think about it.  All
property may not be theft, but on this basis intellectual property is
verging on thought crime.

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