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France Legalises P2P

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zachbb

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long live the french!

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French Parliament is making the first step in legalising P2P
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At the end of 2005 the French National Assembly took a surprising decision
by adopting the draft law that transposes the directive on copyright in
information society with unexpected amendments. During a night meeting on
December 21/22, the National Assembly adopted (30 pro and 28 against votes) an amendment legalising the exchange of music and video files on the Internet, as private copies.

The amendment meant to complete paragraph 2 of art. 122-5 of the
Intellectual property Code is as follows:

" The author cannot forbid the reproductions made on any medium from an
on-line communication service by a natural person for his personal use with
no direct or indirect commercial purposes, except for the copies of a
software other than a backup copy, provided the reproductions make the
object of a royalty as stated by article L. 311-4 ."

The amendment comes in total contradiction with the project proposed by the
Minister of Culture Renaud Donnedieu de Vabres, establishing fines up to USD
360 000 USD and three years of imprisonment for natural persons condemned
for publishing copyrighted works.

The decision was saluted by the Association of Audionauts that suggests the
completion of the amendment text with a royalty tax collected from Internet
service providers. Those companies would likely raise the money by levying a
monthly fee ( they suggested 2 to 5 euros ) on customers who engage in a
certain amount of downloading and uploading.

Patrick Bloche, a Socialist representative from Paris who co-authored the
amendments, told the New York Times." We are trying to bring the law up to
date with reality. It is wrong to describe the eight million French people
who have downloaded music from the Internet as delinquents."

The draft must be approved also by the Senate in order to become a law
according the initial procedure and it is clear that the pressure groups
have not yet had their last word in this. In case of disagreement between
the two chambers of the Parliament a mixed commission will be created to
agree on the final text.

In an attempt to make a common ground for the adoption of the draft
copyright law, the Minister of Internal Affairs Nicolas Sarkozy, had a
common meeting on January 16, 2005 with the main actors from cinema, music
and Internet industries and representatives of consumers. The participants
agreed on 7 principles to be followed in the new legislative debates,
including ensuring the private usage of legal acquired works or allowing the
free sharing of the works for which theirs authors choose this option.

The latest news says that the debate will be resumed in the Senate in
February 2006

France may sanction unfettered P2P downloads ( 22 12 2005)
http://news.com.com/France+may+sanction+unfettered+P2P+downloads/2100-1030_3-6005860.html

The National Assembly wants to legalise the peer-to-peer downloading ( only
in French, 22 12 2005)
http://www.droit-technologie.org/1_2.asp?actu_id=1141

Draft law on the copyright and the related rights in the information
society, no. 1206 ( only in French )
http://www.assemblee-nationale.fr/12/dossiers/031206.asp

DADVSI : Nicolas Sarkozy agrees on seven principles (only in French, 17 01
2006)
http://www.ratiatum.com/news2761_DADVSI_Nicolas_Sarkozy_degage_sept_principes.html
 
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