Europe Considers Harsh Piracy Law

Published: 17 March 2004 y., Wednesday
The European Parliament approved a controversial piracy law that would allow local police to raid the homes and offices of suspected intellectual-property pirates, search their financial records and even freeze suspects' bank accounts. The European Union's directive covers selling everything from pirated CDs and counterfeit toys to fake Chanel and Viagra. Organizations that suspect their intellectual property has been violated can obtain search-and-seizure orders and injunctions. The measure passed last week by a vote of 330 to 151, but not without some last-minute brokering by European Parliament President Pat Cox. Various industry groups had pushed for a tougher directive that would have included the threat of criminal sanctions. Consumer-rights groups such as the European Consumers' Organization charged that the law was overly broad and would re-create the Digital Millennium Copyright Act in Europe. As passed, the measure includes civil and administrative penalties for commercial piracy. Criminal penalties were dropped. Individual member countries are still free, however, to punish intellectual-property theft with criminal sanctions. Parliament was under the gun to pass legislation before its May recess, June Parliament elections and the imminent expansion of the EU from 15 to 25 countries, particularly in Eastern Europe.
Šaltinis: wired.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

12 New Mobile Processors

CeBIT: AMD Jump-Starts Competition In Thin-And-Light Notebook Market; Unveils 12 New Mobile Processors more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Microsoft explores self-managing software

The company plans to unveil the initiative, called Dynamic Systems Initiative (DSI), at a Las Vegas conference next week when it debuts its new systems management tools more »

CeBit cleans up with new tech

Oracle deal: Good omen for Linux group? more »

DSL Leads Global Connections

Global DSL subscriptions nearly doubled during 2002, from 18.8 million to 35.9 million more »

Password-stealing e-mails spread

Scam widens; latest seeks Discover Card accounts more »

“Chief” level event

The ICT World Forum @ CeBIT 2003 more »

Deloder worm leaves behind two Trojan horses

The worm uses infected copies of remote-access app VNC and Internet-communications app IRC more »

Intel's New Wireless Platform: Centrino

After years of working with code-named chipsets and bundling the processors on a new platform, Intel Corp. Wednesday officially took the wraps of its latest Centrino technology more »

Two main problems

Europe finds MS guilty, but wonders what to do about it more »