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NZCPR
Guest Forum
David Farrar
14 February 09
New
government fails to defend internet freedom
Most
businesses in New Zealand will be unaware of this, but by the
end of the month they will be at risk of having their Internet
access terminated, if they are accused of repeat copyright
infringement. They do not have to be found guilty. They do not
need to have been infringing themselves.
A
new unbalanced law has the American film and music industries
able to pressure ISPs to terminate users (any individual or
business) solely on their say so. And if an ISP resists, then
they may get sued for not complying with the new law – as
has happened in
Australia
.
So
how did this all happen? In 2006 the Labour Government
introduced a bill to try and update the Copyright Act to the
digital age. Many of the changes had wide-spread support. One
change did not, being the proposed addition of a s92A which
reads:
92A
Internet service provider must have
policy for terminating accounts of repeat infringers
“(1) An
Internet service provider must adopt and reasonably implement
a policy that provides for termination, in appropriate
circumstances, of the account with that Internet service
provider of a repeat infringer.
“(2) In
subsection (1), repeat infringer means a person who
repeatedly infringes the copyright in a work by using 1 or
more of the Internet services of the Internet service provider
to do a restricted act without the consent of the copyright
owner.
The
bill did not define “reasonably implement”, “appropriate
circumstances” or who decides if someone “repeatedly
infringes”. It also turned ISPs into an unpaid enforcement
arm for copyright holders.
The
multi-party Commerce Select Committee that heard evidence on
the bill, decided unanimously to delete this section from the
proposed law. But lobbying continued behind the scenes and the
Labour Government decided to over-ride the Select Committee,
and reinsert s92A into the bill at the Committee of the Whole
consideration. The National Party also voted to reinsert s92A
into the bill, despite having voted to remove it at select
committee stage.
A
leading Intellectual Property barrister, Peter Dengate-Thrush
(who also is the Chairman of the global Internet Corporation
for Assigned Names and Numbers) described (NZ Herald 28 July
2008) the new law as causing ISPs to police the behaviour of
their customers, and that this is akin to Transit NZ being
blamed for a road crash.
"Occasionally
Transit are responsible for that if they've designed the road
badly, but in this case, I take the view that ISPs have a role
that's supposed to be no greater that that of other citizens
in relation to infringements. I particularly disagree with the
thrust of the current amendment, which turns the ISPs into
enforcement agents for copyright owners. I'm a copyright
lawyer and I've acted for copyright owners and I've written on
the value of copyright to the community. It's not an attack on
copyright but we do need to get the balance right between
copyright interests and the rights of ordinary citizens and
what's good for the internet industries.
The
NZ Computer Society (PR 19 September 2008) made another
comparison:
Copyright
owners absolutely have the right to protect their intellectual
property, and NZCS and others are not for one second saying
otherwise. To state it clearly: Copyright violation is a major
problem, and we support moves to reduce it.
However
to trample all over the rights of computer and internet users,
and to place ISPs in the position of potentially having to be
the policeman, judge, jury and executioner in what are often
vague and unclear situations is completely unreasonable.
This
is actually eerily similar to a situation where a power
company would be forced to have a policy stating that they
must cut the power off to a house, business, school or library
(yes, they’re included) if someone on the property used that
electricity to do something illegal. I can’t imagine that
situation receiving a good reception, so why is this any
different?
Despite
the criticism, both the former Labour Government and the new
National Government has refused to stop s92A from coming into
force. The enactment date was delayed, but will now come into
force on 28 February 2009.
Over
the last few months ISPs have been working on a code of
practice, to guide the industry on how to interpret and
implement such a badly defined law. Their code will provide
some certainty to businesses and users who could be affected
– however the two major rights holders industry groups
(representing the
US
movie and music industries) do not agree with key provisions
in the code, and any disputes could end up in court, as is
happening in
Australia
.
They
key point of difference, is on who decides if someone has
infringed copyright. Is it the ISP? The user? The rights
holder? A judge?
The
draft code put together by the Telecommunications Carriers
Forum provides for termination of a user’s Internet access
if a user is accused of infringing copyright, they do not
dispute the allegation, and at least four undisputed
allegations are recorded over an 18 month period (and in at
least three different months).
If
a user disputes the allegation, then the draft code says it is
not up to the ISP to determine guilt, and the rights holder
should take the user to court if they wish to pursue them.
Actually
proving guilt in court though is deemed by some of the rights
holder groups as far too cumbersome. They have proposed a
novel alternative solution. That if a user denies the
allegation, then the rights holder should consider their
denial and in their sole discretion decide if it is valid, and
notify the ISP accordingly.
This
would provide a unique system of justice for users and
businesses on the Internet. The rights holder would be the
prosecution, the judge and the jury, and the ISP would be the
executioner.
There
will be a period of great uncertainty when the law comes into
force at the end of the month. If you provide Internet access
to others (such
as your staff) you can be deemed an ISP yourself and you will
be in breach of the law if you do not have a policy (as
required by s92A) on terminating Internet access to repeat
infringers. This means you may have to remove Internet access
from some of your staff!
If
you have an unsecured wireless router in your home, and a
neighbour (or visiting friend) downloads some songs, then you
may find yourself facing the loss of Internet access unless
you can prove yourself innocent. There is no requirement for
guilt to be proved – the onus will be on you to prove
innocence.
If
there was a Guinness Book of Records category for badly
drafted, confused, costly laws that infringe the principle of
innocent until proven guilty, then s92A of the Copyright Act
would be leading contender.
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