' New Zealand rethinks “3 strikes” copyright law | MTLR

New Zealand rethinks “3 strikes” copyright law

New Zealand copyright protesters

New Zealand copyright protesters

New Zealand’s government announced this week that their proposed “three strikes”/”graduated response” copyright law would not go into effect, and would be rewritten from the ground up.The law, which would have required ISPs to cut off internet access to users who had been accused of copyright infringement three or more times, had already been delayed from its initial effective date in February after stalled implementation negotiations and public protests caused lawmakers some concern.

Of particular note to those interested in U.S. copyright issues, Google submitted comments arguing that Internet disconnection is a disproportionate response to unproven allegations of copyright infringement. New Zealand recording industry groups had argued that the evidence of infringement they provide to ISPs is highly reliable, but Google’s comments cite to a 2006 report (summary here) that showed up to 30% of takedown notices Google received “presented an obvious question for a court”, and over half of requests to remove links appeared to be from businesses targeting competitors. Obviously, many of the takedown requests that Google fields are not from official industry groups, but given that U.S.  industry group representatives have likened innocent infringers to dolphins inevitably caught in fishing drift-nets, New Zealand ISPs and consumers had good reason to be concerned.

Image credit – “Dare not write, dare not speak, dare not feel” CC by-nc Fertala

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