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On the subject of donations to protect our freedoms: ---------- Forwarded Message ---------- Subject: [UKUUG-Announce] [Fwd: Update on pledge - 'create a standing order of 5 pounds per month to support an organisation that will campaign for digital rights in the UK' at PledgeBank.com] Date: Monday 28 November 2005 8:45 pm To: announce@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx -------- Forwarded Message -------- Subject: Update on pledge - 'create a standing order of 5 pounds per month to support an organisation that will campaign for digital rights in the UK' at PledgeBank.com Date: Mon, 28 Nov 2005 18:55:43 +0000 OPENRIGHTSGROUP o Thirty-Four In Twenty-Four o Open Rights Meeting Tuesday o Music Industry Hijacks Terror Legislation PLEDGE NOW STANDS AT: 966 FOUNDING MEMBERS http://www.pledgebank.com/rights >>> Thirty-Four In Twenty-Four We're less than forty pledges away from the point where the Open Rights Group officially launches; and co-incidentally, just a day away from our first networking meeting to let members meet with activists and sketch out the UK digital rights landscape. It'd give the fledgling ORG the greatest of pushes to synchronise the two events -- and we thought you might be able to help. If you know anyone who is concerned about any of our issues - the overreach of copyright, the abuse of technology to invade privacy, the protection of free speech, and the protection of open knowledge (including open source, and public access to government information), please mail them a link to our pledge, and encourage them to join you. Here's a sample mail you can cut and paste (or use your own words): A while back, I signed this pledge to start a digital rights group in the UK. Now they're inches away from reaching the 1000 they need to launch. There's more info on the plan here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_Rights_Group And they've got an open meeting on Tuesday (see http://www.openrightsgroup.org/2005/11/16/ ) Would you be up for pledging a fiver a month to get a British voice in the fight to use technology to defend civil liberties? You can join me in signing the pledge here: http://www.pledgebank.org/rights >>> Open Rights Meeting Tuesday The emergence of new communications technologies has radically changed the civil rights landscape in our society. Privacy, intellectual property, and access to knowledge are just some of the areas where digital rights are being eroded by government and big business. The Open Rights Group (ORG) would like to invite you to an evening of digital rights discussion, networking and wine at 01Zero-One Hopkins Street on Tuesday 29 November at 6pm to debate these issues. This inaugural ORG event will begin with a short presentation by special guest speaker Jonathan Zittrain, Chair in Internet Governance and Regulation at Oxford University. Lloyd Davis from Perfect Path will then moderate an open discussion, asking: Which issues are a priority for you? And where would coalitions strengthen your hand? There'll also be plenty of time to meet and talk with fellow organisers and activists. To reserve your place, please email events@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx now, or just turn up on the night. This free event is open to digital rights campaigners, grassroots activists, the press and the general public, so please do forward this email to anyone you think may be interested. Where: 01Zero-One Hopkins Street (corner of Peter Street), Soho, London, W1F 0HS When: Tuesday 29 November, 6pm - 9pm Guest Speaker: Jonathan Zittrain, Chair in Internet Governance and Regulation, Oxford University; Co-Founder, Berkman Center for Internet & Society RSVP: events@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Map: http://www.01zero-one.co.uk/map.htm This event is presented with the support of 01Zero-One's InSync Programme. >>> Music Industry Hijacks Terror Legislation In a letter to all MEPs today, music industry body the Creative and Media Business Alliance (CMBA) lobbied to co-opt the EU Data Retention legislation currently being debated by the European Parliament. The newly-formed UK digital rights organisation the Open Rights Group joined with other civil liberties groups across Europe to condemn this lobbying against human rights, and called on the Alliance's members - which include Sony BMG, Warner Music, Disney, and EMI - to retract their demands. The Data Retention draft framework was originally proposed by the UK, Sweden, Ireland and France for "the prevention, investigation, detection and prosecution of serious criminal offences such as terrorism and organised crime" by forcing telecommunications and internet service providers to retain 'traffic data' - information about your telephone calls and web browsing activities. The CMBA today demanded that this data be made available for the prosecution of any crime, such as copyright infringement, and not just serious organised crime and terrorism. British MEP Bill Newton Dunn has already suggested an amendment to widen the scope of the legislation in this way. Taken with the upcoming IPRED2 legislation which creates new, Europe-wide criminal offences for intellectual property infringement, this would let the music industry pursue prosecutions through the criminal court entirely at the cost of the taxpayer. Both the Data Retention and IPRED2 directives are being "fast-tracked" through the EU by short-circuiting normal legislative processes and allowing for only one reading in the European Parliament, instead of the normal two. Sources from within the Parliamentary system indicate that some MEPs are unaware that the usual democratic process is being bypassed. Because of the tight timetable, MEPs will be put in the difficult position of having only a couple of days to assess the Data Retention proposal before the final vote on 13 December. "The passing of the Data Retention directive would be a disaster not just for civil liberties and human rights in Europe", said Open Rights Group director Suw Charman, "it would also put a substantial financial burden on telcos and ISPs which would be passed on to the consumer either in the form of raised bills or through government subsidies funded by the taxpayer." If the CMBA is successful, the situation will be exacerbated by an increased number of demands for access to the retained data as more cases are to court by the music and IP industries. If British record labels set up prosecution production lines like their American counterparts, the system could crumble under the strain, hampering any reasonable and legitimate enquiries into genuine terrorist or serious crime activity. Civil liberties groups such as Privacy International and European Digital Rights (EDRi) have been campaigning against data retention. Ian Brown, of the Open Rights Group, said: "The British government claimed that Data Retention was essential in the fight against terrorism and serious crime, but it has now become clear that groups with commercial interests have their eye on the same data. Charles Clarke cannot continue to pretend that this legislation has been drafted purely for reasons of national security." Gus Hosein, Senior Fellow at Privacy International, said: "The EU has been claiming that data retention was some urgent policy response to terrorist attacks. But they are carefully drafting this legislation to ensure that it can be used for all purposes under the sun. Ironically, the EU seems to be going at it alone: even the U.S. Bush Administration is not proposing such a ludicrous policy, despite the strong lobbying by Hollywood." Sjoera Nas, Board Member of EDRi and Co-Director of Bits of Freedom, this afternoon presented a petition against Data Retention to MEPs: "Tomorrow morning there is a crucial vote on Data Retention by the LIBE Committee. We have just given a petition with 58,000 signatures to the Chairman of the Committee, and to MEPs from the Green Party, the Christian Democrats and the Social Democrats. We hope that it will be tabled at the LIBE meeting tomorrow, to point out that 58,000 Europeans have protested against Data Retention. "Last minute negotiations with representatives of the European Council have lead to what we feared the worst - a draconian directive that flies in the face of our recommendations. We can only hope that the European Parliament will come to its senses and realise that they cannot turn Europe into a surveillance society overnight without throwing away all human rights." Are you doing something that defends or extends digital rights? Want more people to know about it? Worried about an issue that no-one has spotted yet? Mail info@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx with details. It's our job to tout you to the skies. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -- Neil Williams ============= http://www.data-freedom.org/ http://www.nosoftwarepatents.com/ http://www.linux.codehelp.co.uk/
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