“Today’s vote on the Telecoms Single Market package in the European Parliament constitutes a broken promise both on the end of roaming surcharges and the establishment of net neutrality”, says Julia Reda, Member of the European Parliament for the Pirate Party and shadow rapporteur for the Greens/EFA group in the Internal Market and Consumer Protection […]
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Author Felix Reda
Net neutrality: Final countdown to keep the internet fair and equal
Tomorrow afternoon (Oct 27), the European Parliament holds its final vote on net neutrality. The proposal before the Parliament has crucial loopholes. My colleagues and I are fighting until the last minute for an internet that is fair and equal.
Here’s what you need to know and how you can still support the fight:
Europe Is About […]
more Volkswagen case: Could cheating on an emissions test become a protected trade secret?
The European Parliament is currently negotiating the Trade Secret Directive in trilogue. In this week’s plenary session I called on my colleagues: We must be very careful not to include in that Directive new lines of defense for companies’ dirty secrets.
Let’s imagine for a minute the Volkswagen case had not been disclosed by […]
more The blank cheque for EU-US data transfer has bounced: Data protection and mass surveillance are irreconcilable
The European Court of Justice today canceled the blank cheque that allowed the transfer of personal data to US companies. This is an overdue step towards better data protection: Whether sensitive data is adequately protected and its transfer thus permissible must now be determined on a case-by-case basis. The court empowered the Irish Data Protection […]
more Why academics need to lobby for copyright reform – now
This speech was given at EPIP 2015 in Glasgow, UK on September 2nd, 2015
I would like to thank CREATe for giving me the opportunity to speak at a conference dedicated to what has proven to be the strongest asset in my personal quest for copyright reform: Scientific evidence. Ian Hargreaves is to be congratulated […]
more EU parliament defends Freedom of Panorama & calls for copyright reform
Today the European Parliament with a broad majority adopted my copyright evaluation report. The plenary decisively removed the controversial proposal to restrict the so-called Freedom of Panorama, the right to use pictures of public buildings and sculptures without restriction, which had previously been inserted by the Legal Affairs Committee.
The parliament has listened to […]
more Last-minute attempt to sneak “snippet tax” into copyright report
A last-minute amendment by German EPP member Angelika Niebler is threatening to undermine my report for a progressive copyright reform:
The freedom to hyperlink is at stake, should amendment 1 be adopted during Thursday’s final plenary vote. Although her attempt at introducing a call for an ancillary copyright for press publishers to my report was […]
more Was a shadowy lobby behind the attack on freedom of panorama? The truth is more worrying.
Over the past week, the people of Europe have spoken loud and clear: No to restricting freedom of panorama, no to royalties on public space.
More than 200,000 people (and counting) are supporting a petition against these ideas. 4,247 German Wikipedians signed an open letter. At least 11 professional organisations representing creators have renounced the proposal.
Where did this […]
more Freedom of Panorama under threat
On Tuesday, June 16, the legal affairs committee voted on my report on the review of EU copyright rules. While I managed to negotiate compromises with all political groups on most of my proposals, one area where we couldn’t agree to a compromise was the right to publish pictures of public buildings and artworks such […]
more Trade secrets could undermine fundamental rights: I voted against.
The European Parliament’s Legal Affairs committee on Tuesday voted on draft legislative proposals on the protection of trade secrets. While the Parliament’s proposals are a slight improvement on the original Commission proposals, my demands on improving transparency requirements were not heard.
Constance Le Grip’s report was adopted with eighteen votes in favour, two against and […]
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