ITPRO

Printed from www.itpro.co.uk

Register to receive our regular email newsletter at http://www.itpro.co.uk/reg/register.

The newsletter contains links to our latest IT news, product reviews, features and how-to guides, plus special offers and competitions.

Skip to navigation

    Lords drop Clause 17, add power to ban sites

The House of Lords has dropped a controversial bit of the Digital Economy Bill, but added the ability to block websites with illegal content in its place.

By Nicole Kobie, 4 Mar 2010 at 09:01

parliament

The House of Lords has dropped the controversial Clause 17 from the Digital Economy Bill, but added a new section that would allow the Government to block access to websites that were hosting illegally shared content.

Clause 17 would have allowed the Government to change copyright law using a tool called "statutory instrument", without taking to to parliament first.

While that news will cheer rights campaigners, a pair of Conservative and Liberal Democrat Lords also tabled a change that would "prevent access to specified online locations for the prevention of online copyright infringement".

If approved, it means courts will be able to prevent access to websites if they are found to have a "substantial proportion" of such content available, but must consider if the site has done anything to stop the copyright infringement.

In a post on the Open Rights Group blog, director Jim Killock said: "This would open the door to a massive imbalance of power in favour of large copyright holding companies."

"Individuals and small businesses would be open to massive 'copyright attacks' that could shut them down, just by the threat of action," he added.

Read on for more about the evolution of the Digital Economy Bill.

Email to a friend

Print this page

< Previous   Public Sector : News Next >

1 comments

You need to Login or Register to comment.

about time something was done

If your running illegal business even online there will be no where to hide too many people are running pirate sites and selling illegal downloads its about time a stop was put to their criminal activities currently the Russian sites are making millions selling music download to unsuspecting uk customers who think they are buying legal download but because they Russia has no reason to shut down these illegal sites they take millions of pounds away from legal companies and the people who want to pay for legal music. The pirate bay also is a criminal way to obtain things that should not be stolen how ever you look at the rights claims for open internet that’s normal the thieves screaming and not honest people who know that you need laws and rules otherwise the world would be full of criminals Let get it this bill through and make the Internet a place that’s fair and honest

By MarkRyder on Friday Mar 5

0 people out of 4 found this comment useful.

Did you find it useful?

    You may also like...

 Sponsored Links

advertisement

    You may also like...

advertisement

    Register for IT PRO

You'll get exclusive member benefits including free whitepapers, downloads, Webinars and weekly newsletters full of the latest IT PRO news, reviews, insight and expertise.

Sponsored Links
Advertisement