Entertainment industry 'trying to hijack data retention directive'

NEWS

Cyber-rights groups have accused the entertainment industry of attempting to hijack the European Union's data retention legislation.

The European Union is considering whether to force telecoms operators and Internet service providers to retain customer data for up to a year. On Wednesday afternoon, a parliamentary committee approved these plans, which will now be voted on by the EU Council.

Several governments, including the UK, want these powers brought in ostensibly to aid investigations into terrorism.

But the Creative and Media Business Alliance (CMBA), a group of media companies including EMI, SonyBMG and TimeWarner, has lobbied the EU to allow this data to be used to investigate all crimes, not just serious offences such as terrorism.

Opponents have claimed that if this demand was granted, then — combined with the upcoming IPRED2 legislation which could create Europe-wide criminal offences for intellectual property infringement — the entertainment industry would be able to pursue prosecutions against suspected copyright-infringers through the criminal court entirely at the cost of the taxpayer.

CMBA sent a letter to Members of the European Parliament this week claiming that it was wrong to restrict any new data retention powers to merely "the prevention, investigation, detection and prosecution of serious criminal offences such as terrorism and organised crime".

"This Directive is of major importance for our sector and we would appreciate your support in ensuring that this becomes an effective instrument in the fight against piracy," wrote the CMBA.

A spokeswoman for IPFI, the industry body who represents the worldwide recording industry and is a member of the CMBA, claimed the group only wanted to protect its industry and was not concerned with terrorism. "We will leave the European Parliament to deal with terrorism. Our only concern is copyright," she told ZDNet UK.

The Open Rights Group, a UK digital rights organisation, has been angered by CMBA's tactics.

"The data retention directive was proposed to fight terrorism. As ill-conceived as the original legislation was, this should never be used to fight the music and film industries' battles at the expense of the taxpayer," Suw Charman, executive director of the Open Rights Group.

"The music industry's attempt to hijack this legislation is a travesty and a gross affront to civil liberties and human rights," Charman added.

At Wednesday's vote, the parliamentary committee did not extend the range of the proposed directive as the CMBA asked, but the group is still optimistic that the Council will take this decision when it votes on the directive.

"This is just one committee so does not mean anything. We haven't won yet," said the spokeswoman for the IFPI.

If the legislation is passed it is likely to put a substantial financial burden on telecoms operators and ISPs. This would be passed on to the consumer either in the form of raised bills or through government subsidies funded by the taxpayer, Charman claimed.

Talkback

great if that goes throught then you can call
EU = stasi....It will be so popular among the people...
So shall all post officers be allowed to read there letters too....

bye bye freedom...

via Facebook 25 November, 2005 00:36
Reply

If copyright infringement became a criminal offence then perhaps we'd see fines and punishments in line with reality. The million pound fine and 10 years in prison promised on those big signs in cinemas is a joke when you consider what people get for much more serious offences.

If the police start raiding people for things like breaking the copy protection on CDs or similar minor offences - when so many minor offences are ignored due to lack of police time and higher priorites - can you imagine how much bad press the government will get?

via Facebook 25 November, 2005 08:56
Reply

Summing up the proposal. Please spend plenty of tax money and government resources while overhauling several civil rights so we can fill our pockets even more while killing present and future competition at the same time.

In short, please adjust the markets and laws to how we would like to do business rather then let the markets and laws dictate what is and isn't a succesfull business model.

Which politician would even consider that in part let alone in full?

via Facebook 29 November, 2005 22:34
Reply

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