Doublethink – The Digital Economy Bill against the digital economy
by Mike Butcher
on April 8, 2010

In 1938 Winston Churchill made a radio speech which was broadcast to America, describing what was happening as Nazi forces spread across Europe.

“The stations of uncensored expression are closing down; the lights are going out; but there is still time for those to whom freedom and parliamentary government mean something, to consult together.”

Perhaps if he’d been around today and au fait with the Internet he might have used the same phrase to describe what is going on in legislatures across Europe.

Tonight the UK Labour governement, together with the Conservative arty, forced through the controversial Digital Economy Bill. The Bill now gets a ‘third reading’ in the House of Lords, which means it is almost certain to become law. The government did a deal with the Conservative leadership, which got a number of provisions it didn’t like removed. In other words, it was, to use an old British phrase, a “stitch up.” [Update 9 April: The Digital Economy Bill has received Royal Assent and is now law].

The law means that ISPs will have to send letters to their subscribers who have been linked to copyright infringements and, after these warnings, suspend their accounts. Copyright holders will be able to apply for a court order to gain access to the names and addresses of serious infringers and take legal action. There are one or two sops – some restrictions won’t come into force for a year and the next Parliament will be able to study the most contentious aspects of the bill. These are largely meaningless as everything can change. Remember, there is a now a general election on and who knows what the next government will look like.

Despite opposition from the Liberal Democrats and a handful of Labour MPs, notably long time Internet savvy MP Tom Watson, the government won two crucial votes allowing it to control the content of the bill and its further progress.

It won by 189 votes to 47. These numbers give a false impression of the amount of debate this crucial Bill got. Barely 20 MPs actually debated the Bill, the rest just filled in to vote, told by their ‘whips’ which direction in which to trudge through the voting halls.

The government did remove the controversial Clause 18, which would have given it unprecedented powers to shut down web sites which it might deem to give access to copyrighted material. However, this was replaced it with an amendment to Clause 8 which lets the Secretary of State for business order a block on “a location on the internet which the court is satisfied has been, is being or is likely to be used for or in connection with an activity that infringes copyright”. So, in other words, more or less the same thing as the old Clause 18, just via a judge.

Yes, that means the UK government could decide to block Wikileaks, which carries copyrighted work.

As one MP pointed out, the words “likely to be used” might infer that a site could be blocked if it looked like it might intend to infringe copyright, rather than actually doing so. Ominous huh.

The effect on startups

So, in other words if you were planning on creating a new startup to offer web locker services like Dropbox, you might not want to do that in the UK. That this should happen in what is normally considered to be a sophisticated economy beggars belief.

The law will of course have many “unintended consequences”, as Watson put it in his speech against the bill.

In trying to support the old music industry models and tackle illegal file-sharing, the #DEBill, as it’s known on Twitter, is poised to produce a new culture. That of legal letters from music industry bodies to ISPs, bewildered householders and, no doubt, any number of Internet companies.

In the past the lawyers had to go after the infringers, with actual proof. Now, the holder of the Internet account (Mum, Dad, Grandparents and the small startup that can’t afford the legal fees) will be held to account for what happens over their connection.

Parents who have no idea their teenage children, neighbours, or even someone parked outside their house, has been slurping their WiFi and downloading the latest movies and music, will now be up in court.

During the debate there was a farcical moment when Stephen Timms, the Labour government’s Finance Minister said, with a throw away line, that people could simply password protect their WiFi. Of course, this shows a staggering lack of knowledge of how easy these are to break. More importantly the Bill does not even afford any guaranteed legal protection for people who try to put security measures in place.

A new way for lawyers to create another ambulance chasing industry? How’s that for unintended consequences.

So let’s just rack this up.

• Media regulator Ofcom, say our sources, doesn’t want to enforce this new law and has no idea how it will.

• Twitter is awash with people saying they are going encrypted and will now use a Tor or anonymity network to go online.

• The wave of civil disobedience started within minutes of the Bill being passed. e.g. See Whatdebill.org

• Legislation based on misconceptions about the cost of file-sharing, when file sharers are already 10 times more likely to pay for songs than those who don’t.

• Spotify, which is providing a free music alternative to file sharing, is actually owned by the record labels which wrote much of this legislation. So on the one hand it bleets about piracy, while on the other forgets to mention it’s giving away music with ads. How many MPs know this?

• And even while the UK is one of the best places in Europe to start an Internet company, if one of your employees goes rogue you’ll be in the frame for it.

All this while more enlightened governments across the planet are starting to talk about Internet access as a human right. How does that sit with withdrawing it without any presumption of innocence?

Consequences

A further impact will be on the UK’s technology innovators. How would you like to create a startup which involves user generated content that might infringe this new law in some way? Your legal bills might end up being bigger than your actual Internet access bill.

Over 20,000 people have written to their MP arguing that the Digital Economy Bill was so complex it needed more time for scrutiny. People donated to the Open Rights Group for newspaper ads to be taken out. Apparently none of this counted as much as lobbyists from the British Phonographic Industry writing draft after draft of the bill for the government.

But perhaps the greatest unintended consequence will end up being for the music industry itself.

In April last year Sweden’s Internet traffic took a dramatic 30 per cent dip as the country’s new anti-file sharing law came into effect.

Prior to this, Sweden, the home of the Pirate Bay, had been a hotbed of illegal trade in movies and music.

But several months later traffic levels started to surpass the old levels. Consultancy firm Mediavision found that the accessing of illegally shared movies, TV shows and music simply recovered. But there was with one crucial difference. Much of the internet traffic was now encrypted.

In other words, the very laws the entertainment industries had lobbied politicians to pass in order to protect their industry, had created the even bigger headache of untraceable file sharing.

For them, this will be the legacy of the Digital Economy Bill.

But a worse legacy will be the wrongly accused (without the presumption of innocence) and the technology innovators discouraged from innovating, and thus actually creating the new digital economy the Government continually lauds with words but not, it turns out, with actions.

Welcome, then, to IngSoc, the home of Digital Doublethink.

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  • @EnglishFolkfan

    How soon I wonder before I can sign up for a package from my ISP which will include VPN and thus protect us both from the long arm of this farcical #debill Law.

    As a UK voter for over 40 years watching the live televised debacle of the bill ‘washup’ I realised I’m finally and totally disillusioned by our current Parliamentary system.

  • Steve

    Great summing up Mike!

    As I write this from Cambodia I am astounded that this narrow sighted bill has got through the House. It smacks of a bill that has had lobbying behind it to push it through. MPs who voted without a real understanding of the ramifications should be ashamed (although sadly I’m sure they’re not)…

  • Amrelee

    I watched the live feed. I am very, very unhappy. Why is main stream not reporting this? We are fools..47 said no.

    Fuck.

  • http://www.binfire.com david Robins

    This sounds similar to the web neutrality crap being discussed in the USA. This is the beginning of censorship.
    We are a new start up providing online hosting and collaboration tools. What our customers need is absolute privacy. Laws like this are made to help the old guard make money a little bit longer. The losers will the consumers and our freedom!

  • PhilT

    ” if one of your employees goes rogue you’ll be in the frame for it.”

    don’t be silly, this is just FUD. Any company worthy of the name is firewalled and filtered to avoid this type of hassle, and who allows P2P apps on workplace computers ?

  • http://www.kianryan.co.uk/2010/04/digital-economy-bill/ kian ryan – code, photography, bob » Digital Economy and the Pains of Democracy

    [...] (along with around 20 others) who genuinely understood what this would mean in a few years time. As some of the blog have already pointed out this morning, certain clauses will certainly cripple aspects of a growing economy – the complete opposite [...]

  • DMH

    Anyone who doubts the vague language of this law will be abused by the State need only look at how anti-terrorism legislation has been co-opted by local councils to spy on peoples’ bin usage, school application procedures and car parking violations. Sad.

  • http://www.chris-reeves.com Chris Reeves

    This is disgusting, MP’s who didn’t bother to show up for the debate shouldn’t be allowed to vote, its that simple, the UK parliamentary system angers me so much.

  • http://openbytes.wordpress.com/?p=3202 Clause 18 of the DEB removed? – And its different because…..? « OPEN BYTES – cave quid dicis, quando, et cui.

    [...] respect of the DEB (and this is found here)  and its reported like its some new piece of legislation or right.  Listen people, you put a [...]

  • Edward Asiedu

    This underscores the problem of representative governments everywhere. A bunch of aloof people get to create laws about things they don’t understand.

  • James Mayes

    TechCrunch should be ashamed of itself. The vast majority of this article is lifted from the Telegraph and is classic reporting “after the event”. TechCrunch should have been on this far earlier and making far more noise.

    The strength of reaction on Twitter alone shows how strong feeling is. TechCrunch #fail.

  • James Mayes

    Apologies for the Telegraph comment – my oversight!

    Notwithstanding, you’re still late to the party.

  • http://www.musically.com Stuart Dredge

    Hey Mike,

    I agree on the worrying nature of the ‘likely to infringe’ clause, and about the craziness of rushing legislation this important through a crucial parliamentary stage in a couple of hours, but…

    The Sweden/IPRED example needs fleshing out. Music sales went UP in Sweden last year – even CDs – which suggests that the combination of IPRED and the popularity of Spotify did result in more people in the general population buying music, even if it also meant more hardcore file-sharers going dark with VPNs.

    And when you dig into the DEB, it does say that the Ofcom report that would be required to trigger any technical measures (i.e. suspensions) would have to include a section on “the steps taken by copyright owners to enable subscribers to obtain lawful access to copyright works”.

    Which will be down to the interpretation of whoever’s in power at the time, but it’s possible to read the Bill as a challenge to the creative industries too: ‘We’ll back you up on anti-piracy action, but you’ve got to up your game when it comes to licensing innovative new startups and access models too’.

    Hopefully, the wave of protests against the Bill at this stage will prod the next government to keep to that aim.

    And that would help startups, rather than hinder them – their complaints about licensing barriers may not fall on deaf ears.

  • http://twitter.com/mikebutcher Mike Butcher

    Er, I *wrote* the Telegraph piece, freelance. These are my words. I get to use them how I like.

    Late am I? I wrote posted this at 3.30am this morning after working all night on it. You only just noticed it on Twitter, that’s why you think it’s late.

  • http://www.musically.com Stuart Dredge

    That said, everything above will depend on the will, resolve and knowledge of politicians, so…

  • http://twitter.com/mikebutcher Mike Butcher

    Thanks for pointing that out Stuart. The trouble is that I fear the section you refer to (“steps taken by copyright owners to enable subscribers to obtain lawful access to copyright works”) will end up meaning that some music label says “Well we put it on iTunes, so there.” This doesn’t take account of people’s changing behaviour and attitude to recorded music. In the end this Bill is a protectionist one for old industries, not new ones. There is little (no, make that zero) thought put in to encouraging digital innovation.

  • http://f2point4.blogspot.com f2point4

    The really sad thing is how late in the day I became aware of some of the implication this law could have on me as a budding photographer. In my other incarnation as a conference interpreter I remember a job for the Musicians’ Union several years ago where they talked about getting legal protection against their issues with illegal file-sharing. They DID work on this for years. Where were we then?

  • James Mayes

    Stuart – I recal a quote from a few years back – something like “A man can achieve anything in the corridors of Westminster, provided he cares not who gets the credit”.

    I think that’s pretty relevant with #GE2010 in play!

  • http://www.thehodge.co.uk/random-musings/vote-for-hodge.php Vote for Hodge? « Dominic "The Hodge" Hodgson

    [...] made it easy to get media online without piracy (and for a reasonable price), Mike Butcher mentioned rightly that the record companies own a good stake in Spotify and yet, I didn’t [...]

  • http://ooyo.info/pdas-newsbucket-jemima-kiss/ PDA’s Newsbucket | Jemima Kiss | Tech Blog

    [...] tiered comment system >> Editors Weblog• The Digital Economy Bill against the digital economy >> TechCrunch UK• Google testing Google Voice desktop app internally >> TechCrunch• Ron Conway and the [...]

  • http://tehlolz.com/pdas-newsbucket-jemima-kiss/ PDA’s Newsbucket | Jemima Kiss | Teh Lolz

    [...] tiered comment system >> Editors Weblog• The Digital Economy Bill against the digital economy >> TechCrunch UK• Google testing Google Voice desktop app internally >> TechCrunch• Ron Conway and the [...]

  • James Mayes

    Hey, I noticed my cock-up on the telegraph aspect and apologised immediately. I would have removed it and rewritten, but there’s no functionality for that.

    My main criticism still stands. #DEBill is of huge importance to the UK’s internet and creative industry and TechCrunch has been FAR too quiet on the issue.

  • http://www.twitter.com/vexingvision Björn Loesing

    There are plenty of companies that have liberal firewall-settings and are open to P2P – like the company I work in.

    Why? Because we distribute online games, and some of our games update via BitTorrent.

    If we were sitting in the UK, this would put us very much at risk – and who’s to say you’re not going to be punished for accidentally looking at copyrighted material via YouTube?

    The Bill is a farce, and while it’s in place, I’ll certainly won’t consider migrating back to the UK.

  • http://teamrob.wordpress.com/2010/04/08/doublethink-%e2%80%93-the-digital-economy-bill-against-the-digital-economy/ Doublethink – The Digital Economy Bill against the digital economy « teamrob's blog

    [...] Doublethink – The Digital Economy Bill against the digital economy By teamrob Leave a Comment Categories: education and internet gubbins Doublethink – The Digital Economy Bill against the digital economy. [...]

  • http://goodne.ws/2010/04/08/doublethink-%e2%80%93-the-digital-economy-bill-against-the-digital-economy/ Doublethink – The Digital Economy Bill against the digital economy | goodne.ws

    [...] more information here: http://eu.techcrunch.com/2010/04/08/doublethink-the-digital-economy-bill-against-the-digital-economy... Learn more about getting your own domain name to make [...]

  • http://community.prweek.com/blogs/kittens/archive/2010/04/08/delusions-of-the-media-sector.aspx PR, Public Relations & communications news and features

    [...] has shown that piracy levels actually increase as consumers learn how to do it with impunity, Mike Butcher has more including how the legislation will devastate the UK technology and start up sectors, encouraging [...]

  • http://www.davehodgkinson.com/blog/2010/04/cowardly-mps-menudo-tuna-facebook-daily-dave-7/ Dave Hodgkinson Music Photography» Blog Archive » Cowardly MPs, menudo, tuna, Facebook – Daily Dave #7

    [...] 40 in total dropped in an out. Despite a massive campaign, they just couldn’t be arsed. Tech Crunch sums it up. Nice Churchill quote too. If you want to know if your MP was a chickenshit or not, consult [...]

  • http://www.ecwid.com Ruslan Fazlyev

    #DEBill is the russian for “#Retard”

  • http://law7355.wordpress.com/2010/04/08/the-digital-economy-bill-wash-upstitch-up/ “The Digital Economy Bill” – wash-up/stitch-up « …a tale gingerly told…

    [...] The Guardian: http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2010/mar/28/pre-election-parliamentary-wash-up TechCrunch: http://eu.techcrunch.com/2010/04/08/doublethink-the-digital-economy-bill-against-the-digital-economy… [...]

  • corn

    Well this is not the 1st time, Google has been sued by UK officials

  • http://asia.cnet.com/blogs/sinobytes/ Steven

    This is horrifying. Please keep writing about it, Mike, both here on TC and in The Telegraph. This is a new form of Luddite-ism, with old media (especially film studios and record labels) attacking new media, getting the law changed for their convenience, thanks to the spectacularly corrupt Peter Mandelson – who came up with this bill after holidaying on a record-label owner’s yacht. How is that not criminal activity? Mandelson, along with Glenn Beck, is one of the very very few people in the world that this liberal pacifist would dearly love to *punch repeatedly* in the face…

  • http://burgseyeview.com/ burgstyle

    I can’t believe you Godwin’d this article in the first sentence. Otherwise very good explanation for the uninitiated.

  • http://codingphobia.com Asad Ali Butt

    That is another blow honestly for start-ups, making hard for newcomers as well. I am in the phase for finalising my start-up which will include four persons. I believe in freedom for employees but as per this new law I will have to keep an eye on them. Not the golden rules I have learned so far.

  • http://blog.labour.org.nz/index.php/2010/04/09/pay-attention-new-zealand/ Pay attention New Zealand « Red Alert

    [...] A wave of opposition to this Bill is gowing momentum. This is an interesting analysis [...]

  • http://twitter.com/mikebutcher Mike Butcher

    Godwin’d ?

  • http://www.sense.co.uk Mark Hall

    You can follow the lastest D Bill update on http://www.tweetlection.co.uk/

  • http://gigaom.com/?p=111487 Britain’s Digital Economy Bill Causes Outrage

    [...] by Labour MP Kate Hoey, Techcrunch’s Mike Butcher calls the passing of the legislation “a stitch up” and points out that the bill could cause startups to move from the UK. He also points to [...]

  • Jack

    Uh, I guess – on TC comments board at least – that I’m in the minority, but aside from airy principles about a free internet (I like torrentz.com as much as the next man) and apart from self-interest in actually having to pay for music again, I can’t really see the disadvantages of this bill.

    Users will get letters sent prior to bring cut off; I guess a little like points on the driving license, with an opportunity to appeal each time. That would cover legitimate issues where a connection has been hacked (i.e. they say ‘wasn’t me’ and then argue the toss).

    So lets have a couple of theoreticals: An internet user pays for the household broadband connection. Gets letter saying “You’ve been stealing music”. He either challenges it, if certain that he hasn’t lifted the tunes himself, or he has a word with whoever in his household did nick the music. No problem with that, right?

    Example 2: User (as above, the bill payer) has been bit-torrenting tunes himself. Gets letters, ignores them, gets cut off. He’s only got himself to blame. Anyone else in the household will just have to pay for their own connection. Again, nothing unreasonable about that.

    Overall, this will have a net positive result for startups. More people will end up paying for content online. Even if it’s only for a tenth the quantity of what they free loaded on before, it still means more cash for digital goods online, and content creators.

    For those companies not selling goods online, there should be a theoretical net increase in ad rates as companies who can now build businesses selling goods online that were previously stolen will be buying ads (adding to demand for inventory) and those who can now make money from content when they previously had to give it away may be less keen to have on-site ads, thus reducing supply of inventory.

    Aside from the personal inconvenience we might face through no longer getting content for free, the principles of this act will be beneficial for the UK’s creative and online industries.

  • http://www.nixle.com NixleRep

    Keep the internet open and free, forever. Come what may.

  • Chris Nicholson
  • http://www.nixle.com NixleRep

    What we do online is nobody’s business but ours. The minute the government starts sticking its nose in our business things gets destroyed. If there are internet movies provided on websites that conflict with copyright laws, send that ISP a letter. The people downloading the content did not put the content online. They are not responsible. This is completely backwards.

  • Jack

    NixleRep, your logic is flawed.

    Saying it’s not the fault of the downloader for stealing content is a bit like saying it’s a road builder’s fault if someone speeds.

    Perhaps it is a little old lady’s fault if she’s mugged because, being frail, she was easy pickings? A woman’s fault she’s raped because she looked alluring.

    It’s a freer, fairer society when individuals can take responsibility for their actions, and not be so pathetic as to blame someone else for putting temptation in their path.

  • http://www.johnconnell.co.uk/blog/?p=2417 Moronic MPs Pass the Digital Economy Bill : John Connell: The Blog

    [...] TechCrunch UK quotes Winston Churchill in 1938, speaking about the growing Nazi threat across Europe: The stations of uncensored expression are closing down; the lights are going out; but there is still time for those to whom freedom and parliamentary government mean something, to consult together. [...]

  • http://onlinejournalismtest.wordpress.com/2010/04/08/links-for-2010-04-08/ links for 2010-04-08 « Onlinejournalismtest's Blog

    [...] Doublethink – The Digital Economy Bill against the digital economy In April last year Sweden’s Internet traffic took a dramatic 30 per cent dip as the country’s new anti-file sharing law came into effect. [...]

  • Gb

    Bravo Mike Butcher! Great analysis, you´re absolut right. Startups will have deep problem in UK and legitimate sites can be censored, like WikiLeaks. Thanks for writing that.

  • http://www.alisonpowell.ca/?p=275 Alison Powell » Digital Economy Bill’s passage shows gap between politics and politicians

    [...] the political crisis that pushes for democratic reform in the UK.  At the very least, as several commentators point out, it demonstrates that social media is transforming politics, and also that digital rights [...]

  • http://www.leftfootforward.org/2010/04/digital-economy-act-puts-uk-on-endangered-list/ Digital Economy Act puts UK on endangered list | Left Foot Forward

    [...] Techcrunch, the defacto publication of record at the centre of the global digital economy summed up how the bill will kill UK technological innovation and strongly discourage foreign direct [...]

  • Jonathan

    Britain is heading at warp speed toward a tyrannical government.

    Once you start spying on your citizens in massive numbers via children (urged to turn in their fellow citizens for eco violations); once you start invading homes to take a look at what’s inside people’s fridges; once you place CCTV’s on every corner block, and now in ‘high risk’ families homes; you’re an inch from raw, scary, statism (whether that be hard socialism or fascism).

  • http://jamiethompson.co.uk Jamie Thompson

    How do you propose that members of the public will be able to sucesfully prove in a court of law that it was not them that downloaded the content. In the vase of someone else using your internet connection over wifi. (wireless security is painfully simple to crack) We shall all be assumed guilty until we are able to prove ourselves innocent. And I don’t see that as being possible. Please correct me if I’m wrong but in a ‘your word against theirs’ situation, what chance will you realistically have?

  • Jack

    I think you are wrong Jamie (“correct me if…”) as the main tenet of British law is innocent until proved guilty therefore the onus will be on the prosecution to prove the case, not the defendant to prove his innocence.

    In a court scenario under this act, I imagine that like any other theft case there’d have to be sufficient proof that the defendant was guilty (the data on the defendant’s PC etc).

    If a wireless network key is that easy to break, then presumably the prosecution has to work that much harder to prove their case, i.e. the guilt of the defendant as the defendant’s lawyer would of course eloquently state how easy the password is to break.

    And I guess we’re missing the big picture here: in 99% of cases it isn’t going to be a case of someone stealing an internet connection etc., it is going to be the owner or a dependant/co-habitor of the owner of the broadband connection pirating the files.

  • Geoff Paddock

    Mike, very thorough piece, some frightening concepts. I can’t believe they will not water this all down due to the strength of feeling, after Mandelson is history though.

  • Dyschord

    How will this impact legitimate sources of downloads. I don’t imagine iTunes would be much affected because most of the content needs to be paid for and that’s fine, but what about sites like http://www.RCRDLBL.com or http://www.stereogum.com which support artists by distributing some of their music for free as a promotional tool? These websites only make the music available for download with the permission and involvement of the artists or their label. How will internet service providers be able to tell whether I am downloading legit content from these sites or illegally distributed content from other sources? After all, you don’t NEED a web locker to upload content. It just makes it much easier.

  • Dyschord

    How will this impact legitimate sources of downloads. I don’t imagine iTunes would be much affected because most of the content needs to be paid for and that’s fine, but what about sites like http://www.RCRDLBL.com or http://www.stereogum.com which support artists by distributing some of their music for free as a promotional tool? These websites only make the music available for download with the permission and involvement of the artists or their label. How will internet service providers be able to tell whether I am downloading legit content from these sites or illegally distributed content from other sources? After all, you don’t NEED a web locker to upload content. It just makes it much easier.

    Dyschord
    Chaos Reigns

  • Dyschord

    I don’t think I agree. As an example: Right now I am sitting in the library of my university, on the web through the university’s wifi. It’s known to be the smallest university in the country and it still caters for thousands of students, not even mentioning teaching and supporting staff every year. As you can imagine, downloading media (both legal and illegal) is rife among the student populace and while limewire, for example, is blocked, I have found the number of websites you cannot access to be in the distinct minority, mainly limited to online games like WoW, Gaia Online and Second Life. If the university were to suddenly become inundated with letters for the hundreds if not thousands of ‘infractions’ that students commit per week or per month both for leisure and in the pursuit of their degrees (and I’m still not convinced that this bill can be fairly and justly enforced) then the likely outcome would be that the university will end up tightening its restrictions to the point where it may impact on how we can conduct our research and generate content for our assessments. Off the top of my head I can see what a detrimental effect this would have on Music Technology, Art, Performing Arts and Media – regions of study which rely heavily on innovation and communication.

  • Jack

    On the other side of the argument, there are going to be more jobs for these students once they graduate as a result of people paying for the content they’ll create.

    I’m not a sysadmin, but I imagine a university could figure out who the offending students are anyway, right? (You probably login etc? If you don’t, they could always implement that as a sensible precaution.)

  • Dyschord

    I know they’d be able to figure it out on an individual level, but I would think they wouldn’t bother penalising individual students, they’ll set up blanket blocks on websites.
    We use web lockers to transfer content between members working on the same content and this often involves media files. If the university puts a blanket ban on access to, for example, Mediafire, I for one lose access to one of my backup storage spaces for documents and other files pertaining to me degree.
    Because I’m savvier with computers than most of the students on my course I have a number of backups including an external hard drive and a USB stick as well as online storage spaces, but I know a lot of other people aren’t as conscientious about it, and if they rely on being able to access a file that they are blocked from unexpectedly it can even contribute to them failing a module through non-submission (which carries its own fine due to new pressure from HEFCE). This is a worse-case scenario, but in my experience students are good at those :(

  • Dyschord

    In addition to that, students at the moment have grown up with the internet. We’re part of the new paradigm and are adapting to the internet in a way the record companies who benefit from this bill refuse to. Little will change in my particular subject area because it is by definition live, but I can see these students benefiting more from the internet being as open as possible than getting locked back into the label monopoly because they use the internet efficiently and intelligently as a platform of publicity and distribution. The scene’s changed, the scenesters have changed their game, but now they’re being told they can’t play?

  • JimBob69

    Only one thing to do now: Download as much as you possibly can

  • http://www.zath.co.uk/digital-economy-bill-is-passed-debill/ Digital Economy Bill Is Passed! (#DEBill)

    [...] Doublethink – The Digital Economy Bill against the digital economy [...]

  • Oflife

    As a Brit, who has only really taken an interest in politics recently, but has his eyes opened by real world events and chats with (intelligent) friends and colleagues, it is beyond obvious that Great Britain is turning into or is already a police state. The youth my look pretty and we may all own innovative gadgets, but there is something unpleasant going on – from fairly innocent people being murdered by young people to the middle classes and hard working people being persecuted for minor if any offense. Google the woman fined £1000 (and worse) for selling a fish to a 12 year old. And then research what happens (or not) to those who commit genuine crimes. Lord help you if you leave your trash out on the wrong day or overfill. I so hope the USA doesn’t follow suit, but if it does, at least you have the ability to fight back! Where’s Churchill when you need him?

  • Paul Carr

    Actually, James, you’re still totally wrong. I may not agree with Mike’s position on this but I covered the bill for TC (Europe and US) weeks ago.

    http://techcrunch.com/2010/03/07/nsfw-hey-america-our-draconian-copyright-law-could-kick-your-draconian-copyright-laws-ass/

    We’ve been on it since the start.

  • Paul Carr

    Yeah. Perhaps come back when you have been interested in politics long enough to understand what a police state actually is.

    Meantime, “fairly innocent people being murdered” is a great line.

  • jim jonz

    This law is great! Freeloaders are losers.

  • Oflife

    A silly typo on my behalf and why the ability to edit a post would be nice. Then again, I was in hurry. Next time I’ll prepare my comment offline. Either way, I stand by the jist of my post and know that a large number of us living here in the UK not only agree with me, but will take things into their own hands if things don’t change in May 2010. Others have or will be leaving. I’m on the fence, as our pubs and Waitrose are priceless.

  • Oflife

    I meant to say, “fairly innocent people / middle classses” etc. The current regime here in the UK have a massive chip on their shoulders and each time that happens in leadership, unpleasant things happen down the line when power gets to the head. It has happened before. A lot of nasty dirty money is keeping this country afloat, and so the politics of those in power is being manipulated. Worrying. Re police states, I have been to one and have relatives who visited some and what we experienced back then shocked us. But today, it is happening here, from surveillance to being arrested for innocent photography. (I admit, some of these things are being toned down, but let’s see if this changes after the election.) OK, I’m off to the pub for a beer to discuss local poverty and how we can deal with it whilst retaining their dignity.

  • http://del.icio.us/zara_lockwood Zara

    okay so is now the time to learn about all that proxy stuff so I can still access search engines (which may have copyrighted items there without permission) and music videos on youtube ?

    I’m scared, gisa job geezer, this tan is going to the dawgs :-(

  • http://technews.bewhizkid.com/?p=3970 Britain’s Digital Economy Bill Causes Outrage – A Collection of Latest Happening in Technology Field

    [...] by Labour MP Kate Hoey, Techcrunch’s Mike Butcher calls the passing of the legislation “a stitch up” and points out that the bill could cause startups to move from the UK. He also points to [...]

  • http://renaissancechambara.jp/2010/04/09/links-of-the-day-388/ renaissance chambara | Ged Carroll – Links of the day

    [...] Doublethink – The Digital Economy Bill against the digital economy – Mike Butcher and the TechCrunch team outline why the next Google won’t be from the UK [...]

  • Rich

    Flabbergasted.

    Politicians no not the monster they create. This will drive file sharing underground. People will figure it out and will continue to live in opposition to their own governments.

    What a wonderful thing the Internet is and will always be. Smart kids will run circles round governments forever.

  • Rich

    …the last thing I’d want to see is some kid, 5-10 years from now being pulled up on some archaic 2010 law that gives lawmakers carte blanche to make up the rules as they go along. What’s worse will be doing that over, let’s face it, something that lawmakers don’t understand: the Internet.

  • The John

    Man, I hope all these people aren’t planning on trying to use bittorrent over Tor; it’ll bring the Tor network to its knees.

  • http://netzwertig.com/2010/04/09/linkwertig-iphone-os-4-0-digital-economy-bill-browser-flickr/ Linkwertig: iPhone OS 4.0, Digital Economy Bill, Browser, Flickr » netzwertig.com

    [...] Großbritannien bekommt ‘Three Strikes’ mit dem Abwasch » Doublethink – The Digital Economy Bill against the digital economy » Digital economy bill: A quick [...]

  • http://aleatory.clientsideweb.net/ rutherford

    Difficult to expect much else from the government of the world’s most monitored country.

    Will we be able to use this to ask for the CCTV footage the government produces of us?

  • http://jtlog.wordpress.com/2010/03/27/digital-house-arrest/ Digital House Arrest « Notes from a small field

    [...] Doublethink – The Digital Economy Bill against the digital economy [...]

  • http://jamiethompson.co.uk Jamie Thompson

    You are correct that the main tenet of British law is ‘Innocent until proven guilty’.. the problem as I understand it is that under these new laws, your ISP will be required to disconnect you without trial..

    The onus is then on you to appeal this though the courts, at your own expense. You will not be entitled to legal aid for your appeal, thus it will be prohibitively expensive for most people.

    Of course this may have unintended consequence. Wireless networks simply are *very* easy to break into, and surely the first time on of these cases goes to court it will have to be overturned on this very evidence.

    Quite simply: “Your Honour, there is absolutely no way of determining wheter or not the copyrighted material was downloaded by the defendant or someone in a car 100m down the road.. and here is my expert witness who will prove this right now by connecting to this courts wifi network and downloading season 4 of Desperate Housewives from rapidshare.com”

    I fully agree that the majority of people this law will affect will be guilty as charged. I was merely pointing out that the bill has been written with little or no understanding of the technologies involved, and as such innocent people will be left wide open to persecution.

  • http://www.andrewbolster.info/blog/2010/04/the-de-bill-or-how-i-learned-to-stop-worrying-and-love-tor/ The DE Bill, or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Tor | Of Penguins & Coffee

    [...] Many sites have a much more indepth tretise on the subject than I could do so I’ll keep this short. [...]

  • http://photocinenews.com/2010/04/09/clause-43-defeated-but-the-digital-economy-bill-goes-through/ Clause 43 defeated, but the Digital Economy Bill goes through : Photocine News

    [...] Mike Butcher at TechCrunch pointed out that after similar laws were passed in Sweden, file sharing simply carried on in untraceable, encrypted forms. [...]

  • http://boycottnovell.com/2010/04/09/ps3-rebate/ Links 9/4/2010: PS3 GNU/Linux Refund, Ubuntu 10.04 @ Beta 2 | Techrights

    [...] Doublethink – The Digital Economy Bill against the digital economy Tonight the UK Labour governement, together with the Conservative arty, forced through the controversial Digital Economy Bill. The Bill now gets a ‘third reading’ in the House of Lords, which means it is almost certain to become law. The government did a deal with the Conservative leadership, which got a number of provisions it didn’t like removed. In other words, it was, to use an old British phrase, a “stitch up.” [...]

  • Michael

    I’m afraid that you need only type “#debill tor” into a Twitter search to see that your hope is in vain.

  • http://trumpetoftruth.wordpress.com/2010/04/10/illegal-downloaders-could-soon-be-banned-for-life-from-using-the-internet-after-a-controversial-bill-was-passed/ Illegal downloaders could soon be banned for life from using the internet after a controversial Bill was passed. « Hiram's 1555 Blog

    [...] Techcrunch’s Mike Butcher said: “In trying to support the old music industry models and tackle illegal file-sharing, the #DEBill, as it’s known on Twitter, is poised to produce a new culture.  [...]

  • freeman

    check out the digital economy pill http://depill.me/

  • http://woollydays.wordpress.com/2010/04/10/ip-not-idiot-proof-britain-passes-bad-digital-economy-bill/ IP not Idiot Proof: Britain passes bad Digital Economy Bill « Woolly Days

    [...] TechCrunch Europe have seen it all before. They emotively used a Churchill pre-war speech as a metaphor for what is [...]

  • http://liberatedsoftware.wordpress.com/2010/04/10/the-fcc-vs-comcast-and-the-digital-economy-bill/ The FCC vs. Comcast, and the Digital Economy Bill « Liberated Software
  • http://www.theredrocket.co.uk/blog/?p=952 the red rocket , Archive » Who’s who in the fight against the Digital Economy Bill

    [...] blogger and tweeter on #debill [...]

  • se7en

    You can’t trust an ISP to supply any kind of secure service, you really really have to do it yourself with a VPN endpoint in a different jurisdiction.

  • ILikeQuality

    Nice idea. I presume you will be making some quality TV series and movies for me to enjoy for free? Thats very generous of you!

    Creatives and start-ups in the digital world aren’t going to be getting very far if they cant generate profit. Who will back them? Or they going to fund themselves entirely through lovely click-through referrals and banner ads???

    We all seem to want something for free – but whos going to go to the effort of making it for us?
    We’ll be left watching some idiot teenager filming his friend falling of a skateboard on his mobile.

  • Dd

    Old medias last stand as they wither and die. They are the ones lobbying ignorant politicians to rush through these ill conceived laws.
    Neither understand the Internet and its economy , both scared of it but for different reasons.

  • http://www.planet-anarky.co.uk/index.php/2010/04/14/so-you-want-to-encrypt-filesharingtorrent-traffic/ So you want to encrypt filesharing/torrent traffic? | Planet Anarky – George's blog

    [...] light of the recent furore over the critically-flawed, Draconian, lobbyist-written Digital Economy Bill, the Internet it already rife with excited [...]

  • http://renaissancechambara.jp/2010/04/15/shameless-plug-digital-economy-act-comment-at-nmk/ renaissance chambara | Ged Carroll – Shameless plug: Digital Economy Act comment at NMK

    [...] Butcher over at Techcrunch has articulated the impact on the UK start-up community. Part of the problem is definition of what “is likely to be used for [...]

  • http://renaissancechambara.jp/2010/04/15/shameless-plug-pr-industry-attacks-digital-economy-act-as-a-step-in-the-wrong-direction/ renaissance chambara | Ged Carroll – Shameless plug: PR industry attacks Digital Economy Act as a ’step in the wrong direction’

    [...] with the continual legal grind that you may come under. Mike Butcher in his article for Techcrunch: Doublethink – The Digital Economy Bill against the digital economy articulates these challenges really [...]

  • http://eu.techcrunch.com/2010/05/14/britain%e2%80%99s-new-government-has-the-chance-to-save-the-digital-economy/ Britain’s new government has the chance to save the digital economy

    [...] provisions were nominally designed to target large-scale file-sharers but in practice will have severe consequences for anyone who uses the Internet to innovate. Among its effects [...]

  • http://www.aspiesoftheworld.com Anonymous Gamer

    Since this bill received Royal Assent, why not make it receive Royal Dissent? Just bombard Princes William and Harry with Cease and Desist letters. After all, dynamic IP addresses ARE notoriously difficult to trace accurately…

  • http://ccgi.whizzyfingers.plus.com/blog/?p=809 Digital Economy Bill, Democracy=Fail

    [...] by business takes precedence over YOUR [...]

  • http://www.leftfootforward.org/2010/11/david-cameron-tech-city-vision/ Cameron’s ‘tech city’ vision is laudable, but more needs to be done | Left Foot Forward

    [...] leads the US in areas such as gay marriage, the current libel laws and Digital Economy Bill affect freedom of speech and innovation across large swathes of the digital [...]

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  • http://www.richardhartley.com/2010/04/pdas-newsbucket-293/ PDA’s Newsbucket | Richard Hartley

    [...] system >> Editors Weblog• The Digital Economy Bill against the digital economy >> TechCrunch UK• Google testing Google Voice desktop app internally >> TechCrunch• Ron Conway and the [...]

  • Anonymous

    Well I really think that technology will sooner or later take us to a society where the poor is very poor, and the rich will be very rich. Take a look at all the different hollywood artists and the rest of us in the world. They bank while we beg. It reminds me of the song someone like you sheet by adele. Someone like you and I will sometime in the future be begging others for mercy while the whole INTERNET collapses into law suits and illegal sharing!

  • Anonymous

    As a Brit, who has only really taken an interest in politics recently, but has his eyes opened by real world events and chats with (intelligent) friends and colleagues, it is beyond obvious that Great Britain is turning into or is already a police state. The youth my look pretty and we may all own innovative gadgets, but there is something unpleasant going on – from fairly innocent people being murdered by young people to the middle classes and hard working people being persecuted for minor if any offense. Google the woman fined £1000 (and worse) for selling a fish to a 12 year old. And then research what happens (or not) to those who commit genuine crimes. Lord help you if you leave your trash out on the wrong day or overfill. I so hope the USA doesn’t follow suit, but if it does, at least you have the ability to fight back! Where’s Churchill when you need him?

  • 5941964142

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  • http://www.richard-hall.org/?p=72 The political economy of openness in HE: or what is the point of it all? | Richard Hall's Space

    [...] and the means of producing and sharing it, can be read into the reaction to the #debill farrago. Mike Butcher noted the telling use of the term “likely to be used” in the Amendment to Clause 8 of the [...]

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