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Greenlighting 'Censorship Machine,' EU Adopts Controversial Copyright Rules

European Union member states were accused of threatening freedom of speech and online expression—and ignoring the will of millions of people—after they adopted controversial new copyright rules.

Six member states—Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Poland, Finland, and Sweden—voted against the proposal. Three others—Belgium, Estonia, and Slovenia—abstained. Nineteen voted in favor.

The completion of the final hurdle of the new Copyright Directive comes after the European Parliament passed the rules last month—a move German MEP Julia Reda called a “dark day for internet freedom.”

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“With today’s agreement,” European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker said Monday, “we are making copyright rules fit for the digital age. Europe will now have clear rules that guarantee fair remuneration for creators, strong rights for users, and responsibility for platforms.”

Not so, says the Save Your Internet campaign, which argues that the overhaul “only benefits big businesses.”

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The devil is in two provisions, which the Wikimedia Foundation summed up last month. They are Article 15, which was formerly called Article 11, and Article 17, formerly called 13. 

The end result, says the Save Your Internet campaign, is detrimental to users, creators, and competition:

Given such impacts, Catherine Stihler, chief executive of the Open Knowledge Foundation, said the adoption of the rules is “a deeply disappointing result which will have a far-reaching and negative impact on freedom of speech and expression online.”

“We now risk the creation of a more closed society at the very time we should be using digital advances to build a more open world where knowledge creates power for the many, not the few,” she said.

Still, Stihler said that all hope is not lost.

“The battle is not over,” she said. “Next month’s European elections are an opportunity to elect a strong cohort of open champions at the European Parliament who will work to build a more open world.”

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