Showing posts with label isp. Show all posts
Showing posts with label isp. Show all posts
Monday, July 12, 2010
ISP Filtering Faces Opposition
An Overview
Controversial Cyber Laws Around The World
(LINK)
The Land of Oz
Oz government sites floored in firewall protests
(LINK)
Minister: BitTorrent Will Not Be Blocked By Aussie Filter
(LINK)
Fortress Europa
France passes three-strikes bill
(LINK)
Humble Opinions
New web filter laws questioned by top child abuse cop
(LINK)
Could Internet filtering cause more harm than good?
(LINK)
Meanwhile in Asia
China secretly requires real names to post comments
(LINK)
Japanese mobile operators shout 'Avast' at piracy
(LINK)
Pakistan blocks YouTube website
(LINK)
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Posted by
devalera01
at
11:17 PM
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comments

Labels:
censorship,
firewall,
isp
Thursday, September 3, 2009
Irish ISP Blocks Pirate Bay
Bad news for Irish file sharers as Eircom, the country's largest ISP, has made good on the terms of its deal with rights holders and blocked access to the Pirate Bay.
This is of concern for two reasons: a) copyright holders clearly have an inordinately large amount of lobbying power that enables them to force an ISP to change its entire way of doing business, and b) ISP content filtering is creeping into Europe.
Source
Eircom Pirate Bay Blockade Takes Effect
(LINK)
Meanwhile, in Australia their ISP filtering regime may be coming to an end.
Source
Aussie firewall nears death
(LINK)
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Posted by
devalera01
at
10:24 AM
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Friday, July 31, 2009
Some Relevant Academic Writings - July 2009
1. "Clash of the Titans: Does Internet Use Reduce Television Viewing?"
by Stan J. Liebowitz and Alejandro Zentner
July 29, 2009
(LINK)
2. "Invoking and Avoiding the First Amendment: How Internet Service Providers Leverage Their Status as Both Content Creators and Neutral Conduits"
by Rob Friedan
June 1, 2009
(LINK)
3. "Uneasy Lies the Head that Wears the Crown: Why Content’s Kingdom is Slipping Away"
by Jonathan Handel
Vanderbilt Journal of Entertainment and Technology Law, Vol. 11, No. 3, pp. 597-636, 2009
(LINK)
4. "The Death of TV (As We Know It"
by D. Yvette Wohn
Jan 12, 2009
(LINK)
5. "Converting Pirates Without Cannibalizing Purchasers: The Impact of Digital Distribution on Physical Sales and Internet Piracy"
by Danaher, Brett, Dhanasobhon, Samita, Smith, Michael D. and Telang, Rahul
April 14, 2009
(LINK)
6. "Solutions to P2P Copyright Crisis in Hong Kong"
by Lin Xie
March 12, 2009
(LINK)
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Posted by
devalera01
at
12:30 PM
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Labels:
copyright,
first amendment,
internet television,
isp
Saturday, March 14, 2009
The Current Trend of ISP Censorship
Ireland is the location of the latest example in the current trend of ISP censorship.
EMI, Sony, Universal, and Warner had sued the Irish ISP, Eircom for "knowingly facilitating copyright infringement"(1) in failing to prevent illegal file sharing by its customers. Eircom should have been able to rely on Article 5 of the European Copyright Directive(2) which provides that ISP's can't be held liable for data transmissions, even if they infringe copyrights. Nevertheless, copyright holders were victorious when it was announced that Eicom had agreed to put in place a "three strike" system, similar to the one in operation in France, whereby persistent infringers will be removed.
IRMA, the Irish Recorded Music Association, has recently sent letters to other Irish ISPs demanding that they follow Eircom's lead and block access to "any website the music industry says is responsible for illegal music-swapping"(3). This lead the General Manager of the Internet Service Providers Association of Ireland, Paul Durrand, to state that IRMA's actions "could impact on user privacy, damage the development of new internet services and hurt Ireland's standing as an e-commerce hub"(4).
So far, the Irish Government has not acted as extremely as Australia's, which goes so far as to actually blacklist websites with the aid of filtering software(5). However, IRMA's actions could be taking the country one step closer to Oz.
Footnotes
(1) http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/02/03/eircom_agrees_to_three_strikes_enforcement/
(2) http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=CELEX:32001L0029:EN:HTML
(3) http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/02/25/irma_letter_to_isps_blacknight_solutions/
(4) http://www.siliconrepublic.com/news/article/12506/comms/internet-body-labels-irma-legal-threat-spurious
(5) http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/02/25/oz_internet_net/
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Posted by
devalera01
at
4:05 AM
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Labels:
Australia,
censorship,
Durrand,
eircom,
file sharing,
france,
IASPAI,
ireland,
IRMA,
isp,
three strike
Saturday, February 28, 2009
News Roundup - February 2009
1. "Netflix To Offer 'Streaming Only" Plans"
Wired, 26/02/2009
(LINK)
2. "Hulu's Hollywood overlords force Boxee block"
Austine Modine, The Register, 19/02/2009
(LINK)
3. "New Zealand copyright protest blockades parliament"
Juha Saarinen, ZDNet News, 19/02/2009
(LINK)
4. "The Web video showdown: Content providers, cable companies and the users stuck in the middle"
Larry Dignan, ZDNet, 19/02/2009
(LINK)
5. "Facebook does U-turn on eternal data grab"
OUT-LAW News, 18/02/2009
(LINK)
6. "Software body slams Government's 'special treatment' of music industry"
OUT-LAW News, 11/02/2009
(LINK)
7. "Competition Commission blocks broadcasters' online shop"
OUT-LAW News, 04/02/2009
(LINK)
8. "Google on trial over Italian 'defamation' video"
OUT-LAW News, 04/02/2008
(LINK)
9. "Irish ISP Eircom in 'three strike' filesharer crackdown"
Austin Modine, The Register, 03/02/2009
(LINK)
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Posted by
devalera01
at
1:19 PM
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Labels:
boxee,
competition,
data protection,
defamation,
eircom,
facebook,
google,
hulu,
isp,
netflix,
new zealand,
protest
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