IP = Internet Protocol

IP = Intellectual Property

Integrity = a quality we would like to see in politics



 Iptegrity.com is released under a Creative Commons licence. Please attribute the author when quoting or using it as a reference source. 

 

Don't miss iptegrity

Use Live Bookmarks in your browser to keep up to date with iptegrity.com (RSS feed)

Login / Comment

You will need to log in to make a comment on any of the Policy Matters articles.
Username

Password

Remember me
Password Reminder
No account yet? Create one
It is free to create an account. When you have created it, you will get an email, telling you how to activate it.

 Support IPTEGRITY

Iptegrity.com provides comment and news on EU Internet policy that is independent of all commercial and political interests. 


Your donation will help to keep it that way.

 

Home arrow Policy Matters arrow Digital Britain arrow UK anti-filesharing plans get the Mandelson touch
UK anti-filesharing plans get the Mandelson touch
Written by Monica Horten   
Aug 17, 2009 at 09:50 AM

The UK is to cut users off the Internet for file-sharing, in a new move directed by the Minister, Lord Peter Mandelson. The move appears to follow a dinner with Hollywood media mogul, David Geffen, who has a personal fortune worth $600 million.

 

According to an article in The SundayTimes today, the Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills,  Lord Peter Mandelson, has personally intervened in the policy-making process on peer-to-peer

file-sharing, and ordered that ISPs be mandated to cut off file-sharers who download music and film.

 

Lord Mandelson was dining with the Rothchild family at their  villa in Corfu, where he apparently had a free holiday, when the conversation with David Geffen is understood to have taken  place. He is then understood to have returned to the UK with the demand to ‘clampdown' on Internet filesharing.  

 

The Sunday Times report appears to confirm the information which I have previously reported, that Mandelson was to be given the power directly to order ‘technical measures' against Internet users. ( See my other article : Copyright industries pressure UK to filter the Net)

 

However, the Sunday Times article is not quite right when it suggests that prior to Lord Mandelson's involvement, peer-to-peer users were 'only' going to be throttled. The Digital Britain report, and the accompanying reports on P2P file-sharing, clearly state that ‘technical measures' which include protocol blocking, website blocking and suspension of service, are under consideration. The difference, it would seem, is that Lord Mandelson is falling for the copyright industry pressure to protect the business interests of the music and entertainment industries.

 

The Sunday Times reports suggests that there is a Parliamentary move to oppose Mandelson on this issue.

 

David Geffen is ranked by Forbes magazine in the top 400 richest people in America, with his investment in the DreamWorks SKG studio company now worth $600 million. He is also rated as being the most powerful gay man in America, by Out magazine .

 

It puts the bankers into perspective. The UK government has invested billions of pounds supporting the banks. In the depths of a recession, how can the government  justify an intitiative  that private companies spend further millions supporting èntertainment millionaires  like Geffen?

 

Relevance to the EU Telecoms Package: Mandelson's move would be a restriction on the fundamental rights of Internet users under EU law, and would therefore be  in contravention of Amendment 138 in the EU Telecoms Package - if you are unfamiliar with the issues, please see my coverage elsewhere on iptegrity.com.

 

Read the article in The Sunday Times on Lord  Mandelson's intervention in P2P policy 



This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial-Share Alike 2.5 UK:England and Wales License. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/ It may be used for non-commercial purposes only, and the author's name should be attributed. The correct attribution for this article is: Monica Horten (2009)UK anti-filesharing plans get the Mandelson touch , http://www.iptegrity.com 4 May 2009.  


User Comments

Comment by IanG on 2009-08-19 11:41:44
Hi Monica 
 
I just wanted to draw your attention to the Digital Britain implementation plan (http://www.culture.gov.uk/images/publications/DB_ImplementationPlanv6_Aug09.pdf), which contains the issue you mention, but which also shows that the UK government wants to control the issuance and management of domain names (http://bit.ly/1vXAhr). This is probably a more serious long term issue than cutting off access to Pirate Bay and the like.
Please login or register to add comments

Last Updated ( Aug 17, 2009 at 10:08 AM )
<Previous   Next>

 "We who love the Internet

say that user rights are

defined by what we use our

Internet subscriptions for.

We do not want to be

reduced to consumers so

that our rights are only 

what is in the subscription

agreement. "

Eva-Britt Svensson, MEP


Your Freedom to

 repeal the DE Act

 


La Quadrature du Net

La Quadrature du Net

Don't disconnect us!  

European Commission Creative Content Online consultation

AK Zensur

AK Vorrat

Open Rights Group

open rights group

Exgae

  Code

GetUp Action for Australia

 Campaign against Internet filtering in Australia

...AK Vorrat - against data retention

  AK vorrat