Technology content trusted by users in Australia and around the world.
4,951 Articles | 29,850 Posts
Select Your Edition:  
Tweakipedia
A wealth of
tech information!

AU EditionYou are located: Home > All News > News > US President Obama Takes up MPAA and RIAA Flag

US President Obama Takes up MPAA and RIAA Flag

By: (more) | Posted: May 8, 2009 1:06 pm

The Movie and Music industry in the US is riding high on a wave of exhilaration lately. After their stunning win over the Pirate Bay (although that might get over-turned) it seems they feel they can do whatever they want.

 

First they decided to continue suing private individuals after saying they wouldn't, then they buddy up to ISPs and ask them to cut people off from the Internet only on their say (a law that was rejected in the EU).

 

Now they have sent the President of the United States to talk to Spain and pressure them to change their Anti Piracy Laws. You see in Spain, private non-commercial file sharing is legal. As are non-profit bit-torrent sites. But the MPAA wants that to change and change now. Since they have no sway over the Spanish government they chose to send someone with a little more power.

 

When President Obama and Vice President Bidden were elected many felt we were getting little more than a puppet for the MPAA ad RIAA. In fact some of President Obama's resent appointments to the US DoJ seem to support this.

 

But to actually go to another country and ask them to change the laws on behalf of a US corporate entity is just plain wrong. It is not our place (I am a US Citizen) to police this or for the US Government to represent any Corporate interests. If this is an indication of things to come under the Obama administration I shudder to see what happens next.

 


Read more here

 

US President Obama Takes up MPAA and RIAA Flag

 


The US charges that the Spanish government has done little "to change the widespread misperception in Spain that peer-to-peer file sharing is legal," referring to the 2006 "decriminalization" notification from the Office of the Prosecutor-General as "problematic".

 

Of course, no article on bringing in tougher restrictions on file-sharing would be complete without the obligatory calls for pirates to be disconnected, and the Special 301 Report doesn't disappoint. The United States says that part of Spain's "priority action" should include an agreement between ISPs and copyright holders to prevent infringing content being available on the Internet and should include "the immediate and effective implementation of graduated response [3 strikes] procedures."

 

Related Tags



Further Reading: Read and find more news at our news index page.

TweakTown News RSS FeedDo you get our news RSS feed? Get It! Got a news tip? Tell Us!

Post a Comment about this news



Check out our
RSS feeds!
  • Upcoming Content: Whatever happened to Comodo Time Machine?
  • Upcoming Content: SuperSpeed RamDisk Plus 11 Software Review
  • Upcoming Content: HP Envy TouchSmart 4 Touchscreen Ultrabook Laptop Review
  • Upcoming Content: MSI Radeon HD 7790 1GB OC Overclocked Video Card Review
  • Upcoming Content: ADATA DashDrive Elite UE700 USB 3.0 Flash Drive Review
  • Upcoming Content: Kingston DT Workspace 64GB 'Windows To Go' USB 3.0 Flash Drive Review
  • Upcoming Content: Lexar Professional 128GB Compact Flash Memory Card Review
  • Upcoming Content: MyDigitalSSD BP4 240GB mSATA Review

Tech News Posts

View More News Posts

TweakTown Web Poll

Question: What new stuff are you most excited to see at Computex Taipei 2013?

Cases, Coolers & PSU’s

CPU's

Gadgets

GPU's & Video Cards

Keyboards & Mice

Laptops, Tablets & Phones

Motherboards & Chipsets

New Tech

SSD's & Memory

Booth Babes

or View the Results

View More Polls

Forum Activity

View More Forum Posts

Press Releases

View More Press Releases