German ‘Upload Filter’ Law Sets Standards to Prevent Overblocking

The German Parliament has adopted new legislation that will implement the EU Copyright Directive into local law. This includes the controversial Article 17 that, according to some, would lead to overbroad upload filters. To deal with these concerns, the German law prevents ‘minor’ and limited use of copyrighted content from being blocked automatically.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

germanyIn 2019 the European Parliament adopted the new Copyright Directive that aims to modernize how copyright is protected in the online environment.

After the directive passed, individual EU member states began working on implementing the text into local law, which has to be finalized next month

This includes the controversial Article 17, which requires online services to license content from copyright holders. If that is not possible, these companies should ensure that infringing content is taken down and not re-uploaded to their services.

Many opponents fear that this language will effectively lead to broad ‘upload filters’ that will take down more content than needed. This worry has been reiterated reiterated by several experts over the years.

Germany Tames Upload Filters

One option to limit the damage would be to implement the requirement into local law with several precautions. This is the direction Germany being taken by Germany.

Last week, the German Parliament adopted its version of Article 17, which includes various measures to prevent over-blocking. Once signed into law, online services will have to ensure that copyright-infringing content is not re-uploaded, but not without keeping potential legal uses in mind.

As pointed out by Communia, Germany introduced the concept that some uploads can be “presumably authorized by law.” This refers to uploads that qualify for a combination of fair use elements.

‘Presumably Authorized’

These “presumably authorized” uploads should not be blocked automatically if they qualify for all of the selection criteria below.

– The upload should use less than 50% of the original copyrighted work
– The upload must use the copyrighted work in combination with other content
– The use should be ‘minor’

The term ‘minor’ applies to non-commercial uses of fewer than 15 seconds of video or audio, 160 characters of text, or 125 kB of graphics. If the use of a copyrighted work exceeds these ‘minor’ thresholds, it can still qualify as ‘presumably authorized’ when the uploader flags it as an exception.

Rightsholders Can Object

If all conditions are met an upload can’t be blocked automatically. However, copyright holders still have the right to object and request a further review from the online platform.

Additionally, the “presumably authorized” classification doesn’t apply to content that’s still being broadcasted. This is in part to protect sports rights holders, who don’t want short clips of live events being made available, while a game is ongoing.

The German Article 17 proposal has yet to be signed into law by the President but that is expected to happen soon. It will then become the first Article 17 implementation with over-blocking protections built-in, which could set an example for other EU countries that have yet to implement the text into law.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

Der Impfverweigerer aus der Pharmaindustrie

Der Millionärserbe Dimitris Giannakopoulos leitet ein Pharmaunternehmen in Griechenland. Dennoch will er sich nicht gegen Covid-19 impfen lassen, mit einer beachtlichen Erklärung

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Vom Habeck-Hype zur Baerbock-Blase?

Die inhaltlichen Aussichten der Öko-Partei gut vier Monate vor der Wahl – eine Mängelanzeige

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Review: zombie heist thriller Army of the Dead is Zack Snyder at his best

Snyder reined in his worse impulses in this entertaining twist on a zombie apocalypse

A team of mercenaries ventures into zombie-infested Las Vegas in hopes of recovering millions in cash from a casino vault in Zack Snyder's zombie heist horror thriller, Army of the Dead. It's a stylish mix of Zombieland (especially the opening montage) and Ocean's Eleven, with a smattering of The Dirty Dozen. While Snyder's distinctive directorial style is plainly evident, he's reined in his worst impulses to give us a clever, entertaining twist on the zombie apocalypse, featuring all the flesh-eating carnage one expects from the genre.

(Some spoilers below but no major reveals.)

As I wrote previously, in a sense, Snyder has come full circle. His directorial debut was 2008's Dawn of the Dead, an entertaining reboot of the original George Romero classic from 1978. Army of the Dead started out as a joint project between Universal Studios and Warner Bros. back in 2007. But like so many films, it got stuck in development hell until Snyder signed on as director in 2019. Netflix picked up the distribution rights from Warner Bros. soon after.

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Frieden in Nahost ist möglich

Laut ihrer Schriften streben die abrahamischen Religionen nach Frieden. Doch in Nahost führen sie Krieg. Wie kann das überwunden werden?

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Rock Pi 4 Plus is a faster single-board PC with built-in storage for $49 and up

Radxa’s Rock Pi 4 line of single-board computers are tiny Pcs that look a lot like a Raspberry Pi, but which feature Rockchip RK3399 hexa-core processors rather than Broadcom BCM2711 quad-core chips. Now the company is introducing a new model ca…

Radxa’s Rock Pi 4 line of single-board computers are tiny Pcs that look a lot like a Raspberry Pi, but which feature Rockchip RK3399 hexa-core processors rather than Broadcom BCM2711 quad-core chips. Now the company is introducing a new model called the Rock Pi 4 Plus that uses a slightly faster version of the processor […]

The post Rock Pi 4 Plus is a faster single-board PC with built-in storage for $49 and up appeared first on Liliputing.

Google’s “I/O Adventure” was almost as good as being there

Holding a trade show inside an online game is actually pretty fun.

Google I/O was this past week, and while there were still the usual announcements and information dump, the pandemic made the show online-only. Normally, people from across the world descend upon the Shoreline Amphitheater to learn about Google's new products and developer initiatives, swap stories, and network. But none of that could really happen this year, at least not in person.

Google often tries to "gamify" these tech trade shows (I've been known to sometimes get addicted to them), but this year Google I/O was an actual game, called Google I/O Adventure. This is Google I/O, with all the booths and information you would expect, but rendered in a 2D, top-down, MMO game that you and everyone else virtually attending can run around in. The game has a rolling chat window for nearby players, and tables in the game world start up a private chat for everyone sitting at them. It was sort like a Google I/O version of Second Life or an MMO Animal Crossing that runs in your desktop browser. I/O was only three days long, so most of the hustle and bustle of I/O Adventure is over, but the world will still be online for the next month.

When you start the game, you first go through character creation and can only pick basics like hair, skin color, and a few options for arms and legs, including wheelchairs and some robot parts. The game is a collect-a-thon though, and scattered across the virtual Google I/O during the convention were all sorts of accessories that fit into various cosmetic items slot. You could stop by the Android booth and get a cool Android hat or get an offline dinosaur doll from the Chrome booth. There are NPCs to talk to and mini-games like golf, fishing, and a few music games. The controls are dead simple: WASD and that's it. If you want to interact with something, walk into it.

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When is a Porsche 911 not a Porsche 911? When it’s a Ruf

The cars have starred in Gran Turismo and on the Nordschleife.

The Porsche 911 is one of the most instantly recognizable cars in the world. For decades and across multiple generations, Porsche has kept the same basic shape and the same basic format—a flat-six engine mounted behind the rear axle. But some of the most famous 911s don't actually wear the Porsche crest. Instead, they're officially recognized as the products of a company called Ruf, based in Pfaffenhausen, Germany. And there's a new exhibition celebrating them at the Petersen Museum in Los Angeles.

If you're a car nerd, chances are you already know about Ruf. That might be because of Faszination on the Nürburgring. It's a 20-minute promo video made by Ruf in 1987 and features a bright yellow Ruf CTR, also known as the Yellowbird. Based on the naturally aspirated 911 Carrera 3.2, Ruf seam-welded the chassis, replaced the body panels with lightweight aluminum (or fiberglass for the bumpers), and upgraded the suspension and brakes. Ruf also upgraded the engine, boring it out to 3.4 L and adding a pair of big turbochargers, resulting in at least 463hp (345 kW) and 408 lb-ft (553Nm)—well in excess of anything Porsche sold at the time.

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Dänemarks Einfluss in der Arktis schmilzt

Kopenhagen gerät angesichts der Interessen der USA, Russlands und Chinas in die Defensive? Das zeigt sich vor allem auf den Faröer Inseln

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