If youāre European, in a couple of weeks you will be denied any and all access to fandom contents on Tumblr and everywhere else on the internet. Hereās why.
On June, 20th the JURI of European Parliament approved of the articles 11 and 13 of the new Copyright Law. These articles are also known as the āLink Taxā and the āCensorship Machinesā articles.
Articles 13 in particular forces every internet platform to filter all the contents we upload online, ending once and for all the fandom culture. Which means you wonāt be able to upload any type of fandom works like fan arts, fan fictions, gif sets from your favourite films and series, edits, because itās all copyrighted material. And you wonāt also be able to share, enjoy or download otherās contents, because the use of links will be completely restricted.
But not everythingās lost yet. Thereās another round of voting scheduled for the early days of July.
What you can do now to save our internet, is to share these informations with all of your family members and friends, and to ask to your MEP (the members of the European Parliament from your country) to vote NO at the next round, to vote against articles 11 and 13.
Here you can find more news and all the details to contact your MEP:
We have just a couple of weeks to stop this complete madness, donāt let them dictating the way we enjoy our internet.
#SaveYourInternet now!
Itās funny how y’all will reblog any and all US things but when whole Europe might lose access to internet then everything is quiet.
Hey, guys! Itās me, your friendly neighborhood law student!
I am seeing this circling my dashboard (yet again) and I would like to say a few things about it. Once again, as I have stated before when Iāve weighed in on something, I am not a lawyer (yet). But, that being saidā¦
Please stop being sensationalist.Ā There are many legitimate criticisms of this directive, but these are not the criticisms I am seeing being spread around. Instead, whatās being spread around amounts to fearmongering. I donāt blame you for doing so – the vast majority of this is being started by the people this will hit hardest, AKA big corporate giants such as Google, Amazon and Microsoft. They have the kind of press pull that very easily leads to this kind of panic.Ā
So, for any of my followers having anxiety about this, let me soothe your worries and address them point by point.
1. āThis will destroy the internet in two weeksā
No, no, it wonāt. This is a directive, meaning (unlike, say, the the last thing to bring my work onto my tumblr, the fucking GDPR) that it leaves the goals of the directive open to somewhat free implementation by member states, as long as the basic goals of the directive are met on time. As such, it will be years before we actually see any binding legislation as a result of this directive, and how member states choose to implement it will vary on the state in question.
2. āArticle 11 will completely restrict the use of linksā
Article 11, AKA what is being referred to as the link tax, essentially implements what we call the ancillary copyright of press publishers. This right gives press publishers the right to demand compensation when snippets of their content are displayed on other web pages. So, essentially, this is an article almost directly designed to bop Google (who currently holds the kind of leading market position that the EU sees as incrediblyproblematic because it kind of goes against everything the EU stands for)Ā on the nose. This would force Google (and, with it, other companies) to compensate the writers of articles that are mirrored to their sites in a truncated form, often leading to less traffic to the actual site in question and thus the mirroring site gaining the revenue that would otherwise be due to the writer of the article.
Now – there are legitimate criticisms of this, which mostly hinge on the fact that forcing people to pay the content creator for content they are using may lead some people to stop using that content. Personally, I think itās better for people to receive compensation for their work, even if it comes at the cost of less sharing of the work. You are allowed to disagree. The most legitimate form of criticism of this article, in my humble opinion, is that it may lead to a picking and choosing of what content to share and what not to. The thing is – is this not something that is being done already? What does this article add to that other than to make sure that if you do choose to share someone elseās work, that other party gets compensated accordingly?
3. āArticle 13 will destroy fandom cultureā
No, no, it wonāt. The vast majority of fandom culture falls under what US law refers to as fair use and most European national laws (which, in the case of EU countries, are harmonized according to the European Union Copyright Directive) refer to as private use. Article 13 in and of itself does not change the allowances made for private use of media in derivative works already. It merely mandates that companies must take effective measures to stop the users of their services from sharing media that infringes on copyright.
Again, I am in the boring camp of agreeing with the EU – I believe it is better for people to be compensated for their work. If the way we are currently using media in fandom is infringing on copyright, then I think we should stop using it that way. You are entirely welcome to disagree with me on this. Notice how the wording of the article constantly emphasizes how measures taken must be appropriate and proportionate. How the the content recognition technology is mentioned as an example of effective measures that could be taken to stop the uploading and sharing of copyrighted works, not as the only way of doing so. Notice how the entire third paragraph of this article deals with best practices and appropriate and proportionate technology which takes into account the availability and effectiveness of technology – so, essentially, if it sucks and flags too many things as infringing on copyright, it should not be used because it is not appropriate, proportionate or effective. And thatās right there in the directive.
And, yet again, there are legitimate criticisms of this article, including the one mentioned in the OP I am replying to regarding the limitations of sharing copyrighted material on, say, Youtube. Thatās true – but you havenāt been allowed to upload full films onto Youtube as is, have you? Videos with copyrighted music in the background have been muted or deleted, as well. The most legitimate criticism Iāve seen is that these automatic copyright infringement flagging algorithms are generally overzealous, and this could lead to over-censoring of content that would actually fall under fair use/personal use/whatever you want to call it. Thatās true, very true – but the article doesnāt require countries to enforce algorithms being used if they donāt work as they should. See above paragraph.
So, in conclusion:Ā yes, this directive could stand to be worded better. Yes, it may technically lead to the kinds of doomsday scenarios people are imagining – but I really donāt think it will. In fact, I doubt youāll notice much difference when (in a few years) these laws actually start getting implemented. Notice how no one has heard about the GDPR for like three weeks now, even though weāre living in that supposedly apocalyptic post-GDPR world? (I say, bitterly, as I wade through piles of GDPR every day at work⦠:D)
Still donāt like the directive proposal? Thatās totally fine. By all means, call up your MEP, take a stand! Now, youāre doing it for the right reasons.
People, please look into stuff and read before You Reblog with captions like āall the fandoms will be goneā
āFair useā and ācopyright materialā are two entirely different things and frankly, by laws from almost Every copyright policy in the world, fan fiction/fanart/fandoms in general are considered as fair use
I usually avoid reblogging this kinda stuff because a) itās always blown out of proportion and b) thereās mis-information and people panicking and i donāt always have the time to look into it myself BUT this keeps getting spread without this addition which is such a good breakdown.Ā
also bear in mind that the EU fought for 3 years to stop things like net neutrality over here and WON (in 2016) so this isnāt a similar situation to whatās going on in the USA.Ā
hades isnāt a badass. hades named his three-headed-guard-of-the-underworld-dog spot. hades whispers to his flowers to make them grow. hades grows fruit. thereās no sun in the underworld.
hades isnāt a badass. stop saying this false thing
In myth, Hadesā most remarked upon traits are 1) how responsible/reliable he is, 2)how sober-minded he is, 3)how dedicated, implacable, and long-remembering he is, and 4)how boring and grim most of the other Olympians think he is to be around. Oh and notably, that if you play him a song he likes, heāll basically give you anything you ask for(though not without conditions).
Hades is, canonically, a gigantic nerd. If theyād had trainsets, heād have been the Olympian who collected trainsets, meticulously corrected with exacto knife and hobby-paints the errors toy-makers introduced to those trainsets, and then endlessly talked about those trainsets to anyone sat next to him at Thanksgiving Dinner š When he wasnāt trying to rope them into an interminable discussion about gardening or divine law, that is š š Heās the sort of god who frequently handed out punishment like giving someone a million-piece puzzle where every piece is shaped the same, that resets itself at the start of every day if you donāt complete it, and then he keeps the last piece on his person at all times as a secret private joke for eternity because he finds you personally distasteful(not even because heās mad at you or hates you particularly; he just doesnāt like you as a person) š š š He is. A Gigantic. Nerd.
Heās also like one of the only gods who is faithful to his wife. And he listens to her like when she asks for a soul to be released and heās likeĀ āBut honey, the rules.ā And she just gives him that look and he goesĀ āYes dear,ā and lets the soul go with the easiest freaking instructions ever in a myth. And the human still fucks it up. Not his fault Persephone, not Hadesā fault this time. Essentially, Hades is sorta like the accountant suburban dad who collects really specific figurines and gets really grumpy when people mess up his lawn. Do you know how hard his wife worked on those roses? He is calling his attorney. Oh wait, he is also an attorney. Ā Ā
Filed under: Favorite Myths
Everybody knows itās Persephone that youāve got to watch out for.Ā
I love this post every time I see it.
This totally made me think of Lore Olympus by @usedbandaid