http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2014/jun/05/internet-users-cannot-be-sued-for-browsing-the-web-ecj-rules?CMP=twt_gu
"The court ruled that browsing and viewing articles online doesn't
require authorisation from the copyright holder, settling a row between
the PRCA, the industry body for Britain's PR industry, and the Newspaper
Licensing Authority (NLA), which had raged for five years. The fight
began in a copyright tribunal between media monitoring firm Meltwater
and the NLA."
Yeh another ruling providing some sanity and clarity on these issues.
2014-06-09
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Fencing
Bit of fun... We usually put up some Christmas lights on the house - some fairy lights on the metal fencing at the front, but a pain as mean...
-
Broadband services are a wonderful innovation of our time, using multiple frequency bands (hence the name) to carry signals over wires (us...
-
For many years I used a small stand-alone air-conditioning unit in my study (the box room in the house) and I even had a hole in the wall fo...
-
It seems there is something of a standard test string for anti virus ( wikipedia has more on this). The idea is that systems that look fo...
I find it utterly bizarre that a UK court actually ruled differently. Seriously, they must have either been smoking something, senile, or just incompetent.
ReplyDeleteIt was just moronic.
Or lobbied by UK based entities.
DeletePerhaps so, but I'd say then they are still either smoking something, senile or incompetent or perhaps I ought to add corrupt as well? They are not stupid so I'm not sure what else...
ReplyDelete