Big tech accountability? Read how we got here in  The Closing of the Net 

Report from the ISP Future Content  Models and Enforcment Strategies Summit 2008, Kensington, London

 

The Motion Picture Association (MPA)  - the  Hollywood trade association -  has weighed into the debate around an Internet levy to pay for publicly-funded entertainment with a clear 'no'. Speaking at the  ISP Future Content  Models and Enforcement Strategies Summit 2008, Ted Shapiro, MPA  legal counsel, warned against "turning the Internet into one big compulsory licence".  Expanding on what he meant, he said "you pay your ISP a few Euros per month and we all get a cheque. 

The possibility of a levy on the Internet is being quietly floated by a number of people as an option to deal with file-sharing, and to generate money for content production. I have mostly heard it from members of the rights-holder community, such as the British music industry, and the French cultural lobby. The people more likely to oppose it, are the ISPs themselves - and that could make for an interesting partnership option for the MPA. 

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Iptegrity in brief

 

Iptegrity.com is the website of Dr Monica Horten. I’ve been analysing analysing digital policy since 2008. Way back then, I identified how issues around rights can influence Internet policy, and that has been a thread throughout all of my research. I hold a PhD in EU Communications Policy from the University of Westminster (2010), and a Post-graduate diploma in marketing.   I’ve served as an independent expert on the Council of Europe  Committee on Internet Freedoms, and was involved in a capacity building project in Moldova, Georgia, and Ukraine. I am currently (from June 2022)  Policy Manager - Freedom of Expression, with the Open Rights Group. For more, see About Iptegrity

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States v the 'Net? 

Read The Closing of the Net, by me, Monica Horten.

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Copyright Enforcement Enigma launch, March 2012

In 2012, I presented my PhD research in the European Parliament.

The politics of copyright

A Copyright Masquerade - How corporate lobbying threatens online freedoms

'timely and provocative' Entertainment Law Review


 

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