[Infowarrior] - UK's controversial net-blocking bill passed
Richard Forno
rforno at infowarrior.org
Thu Apr 8 11:57:29 UTC 2010
riginal URL: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2010/04/08/mandybill_commons/
Mandybill: All the Commons drama
Web-blocking goes through, orphan works fails
By Andrew Orlowski (andrew.orlowski at theregister.co.uk)
Posted in Music and Media, 8th April 2010 00:03 GMT
Live TV and internet coverage allowed the nation to feel grubby as the
Mandybill was shunted through the House of Commons late last night.
The government’s replacement for Clause 18 – a catch-all illiberal web-
blocking measure that few in the music business ever expected to
survive – was approved, and the photographers cemented a spectacular
victory by crushing the orphan works clause.
But not before a bit of spirited resistance – or token posturing –
take your pick, for it in truth it was a bit of both, to the copyright
infringement clauses by Tom Watson, Austin Mitchell, Bill Cash and
other backbenchers.
Almost universally the MPs who spoke objected to the bill being rammed
through in a sort of procedural speed-dating, at the very death of
Parliament. Even stalwart copyright supporters such as John Hemming, a
BPI member, and LibDem frontbencher Don Foster condemned the
scheduling. Foster said the government’s whips could have timetabled a
Commons debate three weeks earlier, but had left MPs kicking their
heels.
Watson proposed a number of probing amendments - ie ones designed to
be withdrawn - before duly withdrawing them all. The first of these,
which would have decriminalised online file sharing except for
commercial infringers, took almost an hour to debate. While it gave
MPs a chance to vent before a sizeable crowd following on Twitter, it
exhausted most of the time available.
On Twitter, the probing amendments caused some confusion
Foster said that it “was disgraceful a bill of this complexity is
given so little time” to be debated, explaining: “That’s why so many
of us are in such a difficult position. [Watson] has raised important
probing amendments.”
He regretted the time didn’t allow orphan works to be discussed, but
then nobody mentioned the ludicrous timetable for radio switchover. Or
radio at all. Not once.
The government’s promise of a “superaffirmative” procedure in the next
Parliament (commencing mid-May) may not have won over any rebels, but
perhaps staunched any defections. The procedure means leftover
legislation is subject to a further 60 days' scrutiny.
So the Digital Economy Bill was passed by 189 to 47 votes at 11:18pm.
The web-blocking provision was the only clause to go to a division,
where it was carried 197:40. Clause 43 fell on a voice vote.
Apart from blaming the Labour Party for rotten scheduling, the
Conservatives were quiet. Tory spokesman Ed Vaizey mocked the
“extraordinary bleating” of the Labour worrywarts, and didn’t think
much of Watson’s amendments, which he said were “scribbled on the back
of an envelope at 100 mbits/second.
“It is pathetic for the Labour benches to say that the three hours is
nothing to do with them. They are responsible for the lack of scrutiny.”
In turn, Watson wasn’t impressed with The Honourable Edward Vaizey,
and said he could have done some scrutinising of his own.
'Likely to infringe'
On Twitter, the divisions caused some confusion
Watson, who was in no way playing to his Twitter gallery, said he
feared the tyranny of the “lickspittle media oligarch who gives
instructions from his tax haven”. If Twitter was an electorate, Watson
would have won by around 3,000 votes to one by this point. Those are
the kind of numbers a dictator would be comfortable with.
Watson said he thought a statutory license would solve the problem – a
confiscation of private property (from the lickspittle media
oligarchs) to be handed over to the People of a Free Freetardia – and
said that’s how a Labour government had solved the problem of Pirate
Radio in the 1960s. The analogy doesn’t quite scale, obviously.
Unfortunately, with a few open goals to aim at, many of the backbench
objections were about as coherent.
One MP said the trawl would only catch children, the inference being
grown-ups don’t use Bittorrent. Another MP said the legislation was
unenforceable, because people could change their internet providers as
easily as they could change an email addresses, and if disconnected
they’d just create another Hotmail account to get on the internet
instead.
Hemming said that publication of FOIA requested-material that had
stamped with the crown copyright could be blocked. This was not in the
Amendment the government countered with last week, it must be said,
which would permit publication in the public interest.
Foster scored some better points, wondering why on earth web blocking
could be applied to sites “likely to infringe”, and why an injunction
needed to be “indefinite”?
These are terrible amendments, but in their haste to pursue fictional
grievances that catch headlines, such as Open Wi-Fi and
disconnections, the Open Rights Group is guilty of incredibly naive
tactics, and has helped unleash some really dangerous legislation into
the wild.
(They could take a leaf out of the Stop43 group’s successful campaign.
Rather than trying to get their names in the papers as Freedom
Fighters, using enviro-scare tactics, the photographers quietly
stopped the bad legislation through rational persuasion and did so
using fewer resources - and less time.)
On Twitter, latecomers were simply confused
Now what?
The Mandylaw may not survive the cooler appraisal of
‘Superaffirmative’ scrutiny in the next session, but Ofcom - which has
the task of devising the “technical counter measures” - may get cold
feet.
The timetable is for a six-month consultation period. This is likely
to stretch to nine months when the EU is included. Then the first
letters go out. Only a year after that, the throttling can begin. ®
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