Welcome to P2PNET.net - The original daily p2p and digital news site. Always First!
Register | Login
RIAA News
Cool Stuff
MPAA News
Games / Consoles
News
Music
Movies
TV
Open Source
Mobiles
Advertising
Product News
P2P
Off Topic
Freedom
Politics
Interviews
Security
DRM
Links
Kids and Kartels
Search: 
Search
 
Web P2PNET   
Search: 
Search
Torrent Site Tracker
MP3rocket
 
Add real-time p2pnet headlines to YOUR site ! Click here to download our newsfeed code
p2pnet - rss feed: http://p2pnet.net/p2p.rss | p2pnet celebrities: http://p2pnet.net/celeb.rss | Mobile? http://p2pnet.net/index-wml.php

EU Net Broadcasting Regulation

p2pnet.net New:- The European Commission has released five issue papers on its revision of the regulation of audiovisual content, which will bring a replacement of the Television without Frontiers Directive. The revision will also extend broadcasting regulation to the internet, with main obligations for all audiovisual services on:

* Protection of minors and human dignity
* Identification of commercial communications
* Minimum qualitative obligations regarding commercial communication
* Right of reply
* Basic identification / masthead requirements.

The regulation would exclude all non-commercial or private, and individual communications.

The papers make a bit of a distinction between linear and non-linear audiovisual communications, with the first also being subject to "lighter and modernized" rules of the Television without Frontiers Directive. The first paper explains the distinction:

[N]on-linear audiovisual services would cover on-demand services where users/ viewers are able to choose the content they wish at any time, eg, video-on-demand, web based news services, etc, whatever the delivery platform.

The notion of linear audiovisual services would only cover services that are scheduled, ie, where there is a succession of programmes arranged throughout the day by the responsible editor and the viewer does not control the timing of the transmission.

An attempt of even regulating anything internet is set up to criticism, as outlined in this Times Online article. From America comes the Technology Liberation Front, under the headline "And We Thought things Were Bad Here […]", with:

[I]t’s hard to predict what, if anything will sprout out of Brussels’ bureaucratic maze. Still, it kind of makes you glad that over here we have that pesky First Amendment to protect us (well, usually) from such regulatory musings.

Both articles speak of a fear of state involvement in internet regulation. While this may be benign, and the "bureaucratic maze" has resulted in some intransparent and sometimes overbroad regulation, one might ask why we need to shoot down a regulatory initiative because it’s by the state (or the European Commission, for that matter). I haven’t yet gone through the proposals at length, and more than likely they’ll be open to criticism, and not just because the internet is involved.

Commercial communications will have a growing impact on the future of the internet. To reach the user’s attention, commercial parties will increasingly use manipulative measures, relating to the technological process, rather than the content.

Identification of these measures, of the involvement of a commercial party that seeks to manipulate for commercial gain, may call for for more extensive protection of user interests.

Regulation of commercial speech is a difficult subject and will be hard to tackle. And as always with regulation on a European level, a question will be: who will be the real winners - users or commercial interests?

Only in recent years has there there been a tendency to increase consumer protection. More usually, the core principals of the EU (free movement of goods and services) have come out on top. So, things can go bad, here, through misplaced regulations, but also by a lack of protective intervention out of fear for state involvement.

Rik Lambers - CoCo
[Lambers is a former researcher at the Institute for Information Law, Amsterdam, who’s now in transition to a new full time job in the field of IP/Internet law. He’s also an associate member of the European INDICARE project, which researches consumer issues related to DRM.]

=============

Something you think we should know? tips[at]p2pnet.net

HOME

Leave a Reply

    Advertisments
Teksavvy