[AusNOG] Australian senate passes controversial anti-piracy, website-blocking laws
Paul Brooks
pbrooks-ausnog at layer10.com.au
Tue Jun 23 17:59:19 EST 2015
On 23/06/2015 5:09 PM, Paul Wilkins wrote:
> I haven't read the Copyright Act 1968 in its entirety (and perhaps I should), but it
> looks like (ianal), legal remedies are as:
>
> 116AG (3) For an infringement of copyright that occurs in the course of the
> carrying out of a Category A activity, the relief that a court may grant against a
> carriage service provider is limited to one or more of the following orders:
>
> (a) an order requiring the carriage service provider to take
> reasonable steps to disable access to an online location outside Australia;
>
> (b) an order requiring the carriage service provider to
> terminate a specified account.
>
> I doubt on the strength of that, courts will go further than orders to terminate
> specific accounts. What's a bit sneaky, is the courts may rely on data retention
> records in identifying infringing accounts.
Huh?
This has nothing to do with infringing accounts or terminating users.
A copyright holder goes to the courts and says 'I found this website on these pages is
hosting my movie that I hold the copyright for. The site clearly has its primary
purpose to facilitate infringement of copyright. Please issue an injunction to all the
ISPs to have the site blocked under Section 115A of the Copyright Act please'.
You and all our colleagues on and off this list get the court injunction requiring you
to block access to that/those websites for all your customers. No user identified, no
account to terminate.
They may be preparing the submission to the courts to have 100/200/300+ sites blocked
as we speak.
If your only capability to comply to block access to those hundreds of sites is to
switch off your access routers and go home, it might be an issue to ponder on and plan
for a better alternative.
P.
>
> On 23 June 2015 at 15:05, Will Dowling <will at autodeist.com
> <mailto:will at autodeist.com>> wrote:
>
> > However, if *you* are the first test case, how do you plan to show to the court what you interpreted as reasonable, and
> how you tried to use reasonable means? The court order won't tell you what
> 'reasonable' might mean, or what measures might be considered unreasonable. The
> content organisation that asked for the injunction certainly won't tell you.
>
> I’m more than certain the rights holders will be lining up to tell you what they
> think is “reasonable”.
>
> Which brings us back to who has the burden for establishing it… likely it will
> be the courts until precedent is set.
>
>
> Will Dowling
>
> E: will at autodeist.com <mailto:will at autodeist.com>
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