It’s no secret that European governments are banding
together against file sharing websites. Just last month, (joining neighboring
countries) UK courts ordered ISPs to block access to The Pirate Bay. But the
Dutch have just taken these efforts a step further. In early May, a high court
in The Hague has ordered ISPs to block user access to the file-sharing site.
But here’s where things get interesting. In a move that can only be described
as a flagrant violation of free speech, courts in the Netherlands have also
ordered the burgeoning Pirate Party to take down
instructions for circumventing the ISPs blocking measures.
According to the Dutch Pirate Party Blog:
In point ii) of the verdict the Pirate Party
is ordered ‘to cease & desist presenting direct links to other TPB
dedicated proxies.’
This prohibition seems to cover the whole
*.piratenpartij.nl domain. We have to comb every inch of our site, including
our blog, to make sure we have no links to sites such as geenstijl.nl (Dutch
news weblog) or rechtspraak.nl (Dutch law weblog). If we would want to try
and risk €10.000, we could try and
see what exactly is meant by ‘direct links’.
Point v) bids te Pirate Party ‘to cease
& desist placing lists with internet addresses which can be used to
circumvent the block of TPB, on her subdomain tpb.piratenpartij.nl.’
Apparantly it is now forbidden to direct
people to the Tor project’s download page, or even the Opera browser’s page.
Nobody here at
SumRando is going to argue that illegal file-sharing is acceptable. But it
should go without saying that violating basic rights like freedom of expression in order to enforce copyrights is wildly unacceptable.
Blocking access to websites like the Pirate Bay is debatable, but censoring a
fast-growing political party isn’t.
No comments:
Post a Comment