Posts for Filtering

[all posts]
23
APR
2012

Australian High Court: ISP not liable for their user’s copyright infringements

The High Court of Australia has spared internet service providers liability for millions of acts of online piracy carried out by their Australian customers. “The Australian” reports that after three years fending the creative sector’s lawyers through legal proceedings, the country's highest federal court found last Friday that Australian ISP iiNet could not be held responsible for the trade of...
20
APR
2012

Lawsuit BREIN against major Telco’s to block access to The Pirate Bay

Last Thursday, the Dutch lawsuit regarding the anti-piracy foundation BREIN against major Telco’s KPN, UPC, T-Mobile and Tele2 took place. BREIN demands that KPN, UPC, T-Mobile and Tele2 block their subscriber’s access to The Pirate Bay through an IP and DNS blockade. Previously, BREIN also filed a lawsuit against the ISP’s Ziggo and XS4ALL successfully and the ISP’s had to block the access to...
02
MAR
2012

The Pirate Bay replaces torrents by magnet links

Administrators of The Pirate Bay have announced that the platform has stopped offering links to torrent files. According to Telecompaper.com, they consider torrents to be a "waste of time and space.” Instead, the Pirate Bay now offers  so-called magnet links that refer to a unique code on each torrent detail page.  The move comes in response to a growing number of court decisions...
17
FEB
2012

ECJ: No general monitoring responsibility for social networks

Online social networks cannot be forced to install a general filtering system to preventively monitor whether its users exchange unauthorised copies of copyright protected work. This would be a disproportionate measure that limits freedom of enterprise of the platform and infringes the privacy of its users, according to Europe's highest court on Thursday. With this preliminary ruling, the...
03
FEB
2012

Google follows Twitter: Country specific NTD to comply with local law

Google joins Twitter in announcing a change to its Blogger service that allows the company to make blog posts unavailable in specific regions. Google will do so in case the texts violate local laws and at national government request. Last week, Twitter announced using a similar tool to allow the microblogging service to comply with local regulations that vary from country to country. Internet...