New Report: Germany Caved To France On Copyright In A Deal For Russian Gas

from the horse-trading:-the-public-internet-for-russian-gas dept

In the hours leading up to the vote in the EU Parliament on the EU Copyright Directive, the German publication FAZ (which has been generally supportive of the Directive) has released quite a bombshell (in German), suggesting that the reason Germany caved to France on its terrible demands concerning copyright was in order to get France’s approval of the controversial Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline from Russia.

If you don’t recall, the German delegation had actually pushed back on the more extreme versions of Article 13 — and, in particular, had demanded that a final version have a clear carve-out for smaller companies, so as not to have them forced out of business by the onerous demands of the law. However, after some back and forth, Germany caved in to France’s demands, with many left scratching their heads as to why. However, some noted the “coincidence” in timing, that right after this, France also withdrew its objections to the pipeline which is very controversial in the EU (and the US, which is threatening sanctions).

FAZ notes that there were whispered rumors about Germany and France basically trading these two proposals, with Germany effectively selling out the open public internet in exchange for easier access to Russian gas. However, it has now seen documents that support this claim. Germany’s economic minister, Peter Altmaier apparently promised startups that Germany would not cave on its promise to create a carve-out for all companies with less than 20 million euros in revenue per year — only to drop that demand the very next day.

According to FAZ, the French delegation directly suggested the idea of France backing away from its opposition to the Nord Stream 2 pipeline if Germany backed away from its concerns about Article 13. And, voila, within days, Germany gave up on its demands regarding Article 13 and, a few days later, France switched sides and agreed to support the pipeline. So, as the German MEPs go to the polls tomorrow, we’ll see if they think it was a fair deal to sell out the public internet in exchange for some Russian gas.

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Comments on “New Report: Germany Caved To France On Copyright In A Deal For Russian Gas”

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83 Comments
That One Guy (profile) says:

Re: Re:

Curious: are you claiming that FAZ is infowars level in its reporting?

If it’s that one it would make this line rather interesting(if entirely consistent with others in the same category)…

the German publication FAZ (which has been generally supportive of the Directive)

… and raise the question as to whether they are as dismissive of anything FAZ wrote in favor of the Directive, or if it’s only this little tid-bit that they’re accusing of being beyond sloppy reporting in a blatant show of hypocrisy on their part.

Algorithm-driven Rabbit Hole says:

Re: Re: Clearly Infowars is likely to have a different view.

Just wondering.

You’re always wondering, Maz.

This is yet another instance where your utterly fixed notions just simply prevent you from seeing fairly obvious point (as my subject line).

And your jeering there is just CHILDISH.

Rocky says:

Re: Re: Re: Clearly Infowars is likely to have a different view.

What do your subject line refer to?

That Infowars are better than FAZ in its level of reporting?
Or that Infowars doesn’t think the backroom deal happened between Germany and France?
Or perhaps Infowars thinks people doesn’t make shit up?

Or are you just butthurt that someone made snide remarks about Infowars?

Richard Bennett (profile) says:

Re: Re: Cool conspiracy theory

  1. The piracy lobby often uses fear of censorship to rally the suckers to support Silicon Valley-friendly regulations and policies.
  2. Alex Jones uses conspiracy theories to win support for his battle against censorship.
  3. This conspiracy theory is the type of thing Alex Jones likes.

Incidentally, why no link to the story in FAZ?

Anonymous Anonymous Coward (profile) says:

Re: German politicians for sale. Price: Support for gas pipeline

There is more to that story since electric cars are on the verge of becoming ubiquitous and cheap oil won’t do much to slow that down. Now if the quid pro quo was for something in the renewable energy line, I could see how that might make some sense. But, since it is for cheap legacy oil when that will be out of fashion not too far into the future, there has to be something boiling beneath the surface, and it stinks…badly.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: German politicians for sale. Price: Support for gas

If they’re not profitable you are doing auto manufacturing wrong. And aside from tires and generously wire wrapping (electric motors use many different types of lubricants – oil based ones aren’t one of them) what the fuck would they use oil for in an electric car? Oil is fundamentally a battery tech given the input energy into refinement. If they are using oil they are doing it very, very wrong which explains the inability to profit.

As for thermal events – we should stick to gasoline to avoid fires? Are you trolling or just that stupid and brainwashed?

Algorithm-driven Rabbit Hole says:

So double win for Europe: works protected AND cheap Rooski gas!

What’s your complaint except that you want Youtube to continue ripping off producers AND you want Europeans to pay higher prices for US gas?

Can’t even construe your position as pro-American since you really only want GOOGLE able to continue using content for free.

Above you don’t even exactly specify complaint! Yyour opposition to Google / Youtube being hampered is just SO engrained and automatic — besides well known — that you often forget to state your position clearly. You tacitly write for fixed audience (and certainly of late fail to offer even appearance of objectivity), simply fail to win over anyone new with this piece.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Hmm let me see if I got this right

What’s your complaint except that you want Youtube to continue ripping off producers AND you want Europeans to pay higher prices for US gas?

The way I read that is you are saying the youtube is engaged in copyright infringement? Or are you suggesting that someone producers are compled against their will to upload their content to youtube?

Toom1275 (profile) says:

Re: So double win for Europe: works protected AND cheap Rooski g

works protected

[Asserts facts not in evidence]

you want Youtube to continue ripping off producers

[ASSerts facts not in evidence]

you want Europeans to pay higher prices for US gas

[ASSerts facts not in evidence]

you really only want GOOGLE able to continue using content for free.

[ASSerts facts not in evidence]

Rocky says:

Re: So double win for Europe: works protected AND cheap Rooski g

You know, the last word you should use is "objectivity" since you have proven again and again that you rather make a fool out of yourself than being objective.

You are a dishonest person, you lie, misdirect, misconstrue, refuse to accept proven facts (at which point you slink away like a coward), conflate subjects and have no clue how to write or parse a syllogism (perhaps I really should draw a Venn-diagram for you).

You call everyone not agreeing with you (which is almost everyone it seems) for thieves, pirates, astro-turfers, google-shills and liars, and then get upset that your posts get flagged.

In essence, you are just another sad remnant of a human being living his life vicariously and bitterly through the internet.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

As someone who’s been involved in software dev (and seen production code of other humans). I know there’s a nearly infinite supply of terrible code.

And for some reason many ‘young’ devs seem to think code reuse is the way to go… Which would be ok, if they bothered to grok the code in the first place. However it’s often copy, paste -> no comprehension delta.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: So double win for Europe: works protected AND cheap

Either a bot or some AstroTurf dime a dozen.
They won’t have power after the current Crop of tech illiterates all get out of power and the young ones get in. Times a factor here and that’s one thing they are just trying to hold off.

Richard Bennett (profile) says:

Lovely irony

Germany is desperate for Russian gas because it has shut its nukes down. France doesn’t care about gas because it has tons of super-cool nukes.

Who decided to shut down Germany’s nukes? Why the Greens/Pirates, of course. So the Green/Pirate freakout over nukes not only increases GHG output, it throws a monkey wrench in the piracy machine.

LOL.

Richard Bennett (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

A tech blog…so that means the articles are written by technologists about their technologies and what they’re good for and that kinda stuff? I don’t see that in the current article, just some speculation about politicians horse-trading about natural gas and digital piracy and some gnashing of teeth over YouTube’s revenue stream.

The conspiracy angle pops up in this sentence: "However, some noted the "coincidence" in timing, that right after this, France also withdrew its objections to the pipeline which is very controversial in the EU (and the US, which is threatening sanctions)."

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:3 Re:

A tech blog…so that means the articles are written by technologists about their technologies and what they’re good for and that kinda stuff?

No, a tech blog is just that, a blog about tech. Who writes it or what "technologies" they have or have not contributed to is irrelevant to the classification. That only matters to old men who scream at kids to get off their lawn and are paid industry shills. Sound familiar?

I don’t see that in the current article

Then I suggest a reading comprehension class.

just some speculation about politicians horse-trading about natural gas and digital piracy

Where did piracy come in from? Oh right, you think legacy copyright companies should get paid every time someone even thinks about something one of their signed artists created.

some gnashing of teeth over YouTube’s revenue stream.

Youtube wasn’t even mentioned so….projection much?

The conspiracy angle pops up in this sentence:

And I suppose the sentence "Russia took out a bunch of political ads and ran some political propaganda campaigns the same year as a US presidential election" is just a conspiracy too right? They weren’t trying to influence the election at all, right? They just want to be friends, right? Correlation is not always causation, but that doesn’t exclude it from the realm of possibility.

Try again Richard.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:4 Re:

Not technically.

He posts on here occasionally and either actually believes the drivel he writes or is paid to write it by legacy industries. He runs his own propaganda blog and managed to somehow get himself appointed to the Broadband Advisory Council to the FCC.

He used to actually try to make a coherent argument but after I eviscerated his arguments with undeniable proof as either being ignorant of how tech works, deliberately misleading, or outright lies, now he just shows up to flame TD once in a while. It’s still fun to poke at him though.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:6 Re:

It’s not a self assessment. It’s fact.

Anyone (including you) is free to look back at our exchanges on here. They will show you being ignorant, misleading, or outright lying, followed by me pointing them out with independent, easily verifiable facts, some of which were posted either in the article being discussed or by scrolling up a few comments. After which you generally run away and stop commenting for a while.

Your grasp of how technology (and especially the internet) works is especially lacking and sad. How you managed to get on the BAC, or why anyone would ever take anything you say seriously is beyond me.

Try again Richard.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:8 Re:

Even if I’m not the same one (which I am but I understand that is the downside of commenting anonymously), that doesn’t change the fact you got your ass handed to you because you were either ignorant, misleading, or outright lying. And now you can’t be bothered to make an actual argument and are instead just flaming and trolling.

Try again Richard.

Richard Bennett (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:9 Re:

Sorry, but you lose. You can’t take credit for past behavior until you manager to summon the courage to use a unique name of some kind.

As far as I can tell, you’ve never handed a single ass to any person at any time.

Prove me wrong if you can, but be warned I’m asking for real evidence instead of your florid imagination.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:10 Re:

Tsk tsk tsk.

Apparently reading comprehension is a skill you lack in addition to tech knowledge.

As I clearly stated in the statement above, ultimately it doesn’t matter whether it was me or not (again, it was but not being able to prove it is a hazard of commenting anonymously and irrelevant to my larger point).

The fact of the matter is I, or someone like me if you refuse to admit it was me specifically, handed you your ass on a silver platter because you can’t be bothered to actually educate yourself or make any straightforward, honest statements. The proof of which is easily visible for all to see with a simple search of your comments.

But again, this just proves my point that you don’t make anything but ignorant, misleading, or lying statements. I would classify this one as misleading since you are trying to deflect from the fact that you got your ass handed to you not only now but at various times in the past as well.

Prove.

Me.

Wrong.

But be warned, I’m asking for real evidence instead of your florid imagination.

Try again Richard.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:10 Re:

So typical of Richard. Eviscerate his arguments and back him into a corner and he runs away.

I guess I can’t blame him. Since he’s obviously incapable of making intelligent, straightforward, honest statements, running away at least mitigates the embarrassment of continuing to make ignorant, misleading, lying statements. Still though, it’s fairly sad he can’t accept reality and instead runs off to lick his wounds and re-assert his delusions by accepting another paycheck from his ISP and legacy industry masters.

Oh well. See you in another few months when you get the courage to comment on here again, Richard.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Lovely irony

No, apparently pirates are strong enough to influence 1.8 billion people which is why the Wikipedia blackout must be stopped, but only 27 Bangladeshis read this site! But 27 Bangladeshis saying Shiva Ayyadurai didn’t invent email is enough to prevent him from making money ever again! Mumbo, jumbo, chicken gumbo…

It’s like every time some jerkoff like Dick Bennett tries to make an argument it makes one feel like they need a thorough shower.

Hey, Dick, still trying to get people to pirate/steal that research paper you disagree with?

Richard Bennett (profile) says:

Re: Re: Lovely irony

Fukushima, Merkel’s coalition, and the Greens’ long-standing fear of nukes. Sometimes it doesn’t take much to produce a political result.

The trouble the piracy movement faces is a distinct lack of popular support. 100,000 Germans turned out over the weekend for piracy, but that doesn’t look at all impressive compared to the million Brits who turned out to stop Brexit.

That One Guy (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2 'Sour grapes' for the modern day

There’s a reason for the denigration of the protesters beyond just trying to brush a very visible example of an unhappy public under the rug, and it’s because the ones doing so know they’d never be able to get that kind of public support for them and what they support.

Hundreds of thousands were willing to take to the streets in protest against an attempt to attack an open internet in the EU, but when it comes to those in favor of that? A handful, indoors, sipping champagne and holding up little cards.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: Lovely irony

Fukushima……Sometimes it doesn’t take much to produce a political result.

That’s cool that you think a major disaster that has destroyed lives and is affecting the world ecology is such a small thing. You disgust me.

Also, Fukushima is not "nukes", by which I assume you mean nuclear weapons. It is a power plant you moron.

The trouble the piracy movement

What piracy movement? This only exists in your head. Come back to reality, it misses you. Shill.

faces is a distinct lack of popular support.

Oh? And hundreds of thousands of people protesting along with online protests was what, another hallucination? Unpopular support? I guess from your corporate master’s point of view it would be "unpopular" to them and you.

100,000 Germans turned out over the weekend for piracy

No, they turned out to protect freedom of speech. But you’re a shill and a moron, I don’t expect you to understand at this point.

but that doesn’t look at all impressive compared to the million Brits who turned out to stop Brexit.

Well let’s just compare apples to oranges here. That makes sense. Not.

Try again Richard.

Anonymous Coward says:

Copyright reform

We need copyright reform.

1) Public performance is fair use after 28 years
2) Derivative use is fair use after 28 years
3) Retroactive copyright terms are null and void

28 years is the original length of copyright, including the one extension. Also, copyright is supposed to be for a limited period of time. The copyright owner would still have exclusive rights for selling the copyrighted material.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Article 13 passes

Not really. Google’s position is going to be either cemented, or they will leave and you get the aftermath of Spain when Google News pulled out.

Seriously, you chucklefucks couldn’t even decide if you wanted filters or not, or whether they had to automated, outside you struggling to come up with the answer that made you look least like a douchebag.

Maybe if you thought more with your brain instead of your Dick you’d be able to come up with a coherent answer.

How’s Pai handling that $43,000 fine, Dick?

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