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Tuesday, August 7, 2012

postheadericon Japan Criminalizes Unauthorized Downloads, Making DVD Backups -- And Maybe Watching YouTube

A model

fairly uniform worldwide application of copyright. Media companies say that piracy is "destroy" their industries, but provide no independent evidence to back this up. They "demand" that governments "do something" - by which means the introduction of tougher penalties for unauthorized downloads. Due to the hypnotic effect that musicians and artists seem to have politicians, governments oblige happily, although there is evidence that these laws will help artists. After the laws are effective, to share online can be dipped for a while, but soon returned to previous levels, so that media companies start whining again, and yet the demand tougher sanctions.

course, if all participants in this endless cycle drew back and looked at what was happening, they would realize that the very companies continue to copyright laws back to the right copyright increasingly difficult to provide clear evidence of the current approach does not work. On the contrary, seem to believe that, even if it did not work every time in the past, whether sanctions could be cruel and painful enough, suddenly, everything would be fine.



Unfortunately, it seems that it is time for Japan to carry out this exercise in futility:
legislative Japan has approved a draft law amending the Law on the nation to add criminal penalties for downloading content or copyrighted material backup DVD. The sanctions come into force in October.
The Upper House of the Japanese Diet passed the bill by a vote of 221-12, less than a week after the measure opened the house, almost unopposed. Violators face up to two years imprisonment or fines of up to two million yen (about U.S. $ 25,000).

In a previous article by the same author, Daniel Feit, in Wired, explained some of the overly restrictive rules apply soon:

would be illegal in Japan to make copies of movies or games to load the data illegal and illegal to download data, illegal to sell copies of data and therefore illegal, as the sale of a device which enables reproduction of the copied data. All these actions are severe penalties

effects of the new law could be even more ridiculous.


Japanese
Toshimitsu Dan lawyer told reporters that even watching a video on YouTube can be grounds for arrest "if the viewer is aware that the exercise of [this area] is illegal."


Because people inevitably do all these things, the laws of Japan crimininalize just a generation. This means that some of them will probably end up in prison for crimes completely insignificant, but also lead to millions more people to question his respect for the laws that are so against what they consider normal and fair.
Perhaps vaguely aware that severe sanctions will not work - or maybe just hungry - some Japanese music groups want the ISP to install a system they say can detect unauthorized files, even before reaching the Internet. TorrentFreak explains:


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