French Assembly passes 'three strikes' HADOPI law

By Angela Gunn | Published May 12, 2009, 7:49 PM

lol hadopi catThe highly controversial French Création et Internet law, which gives ISPs there the power to block access to the Internet for anyone accused three times of illegal file-sharing, is on a collision course with the EU after winning approval in a well-attended 296-233 vote in the National Assembly. The bill previously passed the National Assembly on a rather smaller, dead-of-night 21-15 vote.

The bill is also known as HADOPI, the High Authority for Copyright Protection and Dissemination of Works on the Internet. That's the proposed organization to be charged with monitoring compliance if the bill passes into law.

The bill now moves to the Senate and to the desk of President Nicolas Sarkozy, both of whom are expected to give quick approval. The European Parliament is, however, the true court of last resort here -- and as recently as last week, nearly 90% of that body said that it would not support HADOPI's "graduated response" unless judicial oversight was put into place to manage the process.

The EU's constitution stipulates that Internet access is a fundamental human right. As it stands, the three strikes are really just accusations: There's no significant burden to prove that the accused party is indeed file-sharing, and there's no appeals process available for the accused. No judges no cease, said the EU, which last week refused a "compromise" offered by the French. And thus France girds itself for a human rights battle.

In related news, it has come to light that employees at the Ministry of Culture, which lobbied hard for HADOPI, were responsible for leaking a letter written by a citizen to his MP expressing a critical opinion of HADOPI -- resulting in his firing.

Jérome Bourreau-Guggenheim, who was head of the Web Innovation Center for broadcaster TF1, did not write his letter from his work account. Nonetheless, the letter made its way from his MP, to the Ministry of Culture, to TF1, to one of those meetings that ends with a cardboard box and a security escort. Le Point magazine cites MP Christine Albanel who describes the man's firing as vraiment regrettable.

The Open... blog, which has been diligently covering HADOPI developments, makes note of new information about the tracking software users will be required to use. It appears, among other problems, that the program may not support GNU/Linux -- interesting, since according to Red Hat's map of open-source usage, France is first in the world for both per-capita open-source deployment and open-source deployment in government itself.

The Senate vote is expected this week. (Anti-HADOPI lolcat courtesy of Flickr user tristao.)

Comments

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"There's no significant burden to prove that the accused party is indeed file-sharing, and there's no appeals process available for the accused. "

Anything in there regarding penalties for false accusations?

Ripe for abuse is a candidate for "Understatement of the Year" without them....

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Yes! Finally a proper authority is sorting out what is righteous and what not. How about next removing the right to appear in public places for jay walking three times? Then followed by the right to be French for three spelling mistakes?

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"Then followed by the right to be French for three spelling mistakes?"

Curse you! This is the third keyboard you've destroyed now.. .

...on a side note, it might be a good idea to start buying stock in Logitech if you keep this up.

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The mind reels at the likely penalty for three mispronunciations; that's already a sneering offense in France after all. I'm going to have to start wearing higher collars.

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Don't worry, by the time you've clenched your fist to defend yourself, they'll have run away.
*ahem*

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I think the Sarkozy and Obama administrations are having some kind of contest to see who can get the peasants to storm the capitol first.

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No burden of proof required to make accusations? That's ripe for abuse by someone who wants to harass others. So just find out who works at the Ministry of Culture and accuse each of them 3 times of illegal file-sharing. Do it to President Sarkozy too. Maybe they'll get the hint.

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How about every member of the House and Senate that Vote for it. since this will be in the hansard.

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"On-again, off-again punishment for accused fire sharers is most emphatically 'on'... for now."

What's wrong with sharing fire? :>

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By taking an unlit torch and lighting it from the original torch you are effectively making an illegal copy of the original combustion.

The guy who invented fire would be able to sue the Mammoth-skin off you!

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Definition of infinity: The amount of superiority of mechanimorph's response compared to my usual bad-typist mea culpa. Now give me back my mammoth skin; don't you see the little Creative Commons symbol I seared into the fur?! With the fire I took from the... uh oh.

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