GNUsocial.no
  • Login
  • Public

    • Public
    • Groups
    • Recent tags
    • People
    • Popular

Notices tagged with copyright, page 13

  1. Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) (schestowitz)'s status on Saturday, 09-Jun-2018 02:10:20 PDT Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊)
    EU Advocate General: Right to Private Life Shouldn’t Hinder #copyright Enforcement https://torrentfreak.com/eu-advocate-general-right-to-private-life-shouldnt-hinder-copyright-enforcement-180607/ as if human rights trail business greed
    about a month ago from pleroma.site permalink
  2. Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) (schestowitz)'s status on Friday, 08-Jun-2018 14:16:54 PDT Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊)
    White House’s #nafta Approach Frustrates Businesses, Panicked Emails Show https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/06/us/politics/trump-nafta-businesses-frustrated.html fails to mention either #patents or #copyright
    about a month ago from pleroma.site permalink

    Attachments

  3. Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) (schestowitz)'s status on Friday, 08-Jun-2018 14:16:22 PDT Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊)

    White House’s #Nafta Approach Frustrates Businesses, Panicked Emails Show https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/06/us/politics/trump-nafta-businesses-frustrated.html fails to mention either #patents or #copyright

    about a month ago from joindiaspora.com permalink

    Attachments

  4. Hacker News ( unofficial ) (hackernews)'s status on Friday, 08-Jun-2018 12:11:56 PDT Hacker News ( unofficial ) Hacker News ( unofficial )

    EU committee will vote on an apocalyptically stupid, copyright proposal

    On June 20, an EU committee will vote on an apocalyptically stupid, internet-destroying copyright proposal that'll censor everything from Tinder profiles to Wikipedia (SHARE THIS!)

    Article word count: 1269

    HN Discussion: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=17266956

    Posted by dredmorbius (karma: 21330)

    Post stats: Points: 134 - Comments: 35 - 2018-06-08T16:23:03Z

    #HackerNews #apocalyptically #committee #copyright #proposal #stupid #vote #will


    Article content:

    The European Union is updating its 2001 Copyright Directive, with a key committee vote coming up on June 20 or 21; on GDPR day, a rogue MEP jammed a mass censorship proposal into the draft that is literally the worst idea anyone in Europe ever had about the internet, ever.

    Under "Article 13," sites that allow the public to post anything that might be copyrighted -- text, pics, videos, games, sounds, code -- will have to run user submissions through a copyright filter that will check to see if it matches the a known copyrighted work. Itʼs YouTubeʼs perennially busted, overblocking Content ID, but for everything from Github to the copyrighted images on that band tee you wore in your Tinder profile.

    These black boxes will have the unaccountable power of life or death over everything Europeans say to each other online. Theyʼll ingest everything we say to each other -- likely sending it to one of the giant American tech companies that specialise in this kind of filtering -- and render a judgment.

    Anyone can add to the blacklist, too: under Article 13, sites have to let people claim new copyrighted works -- but the rule has no penalties for abuse. Trolls can lay claim to every word ever posted to Wikipedia and stop anyone from quoting it on a WordPress site or Twitter or Facebook.

    If you get censored, your only recourse is to ask the site to reconsider its algorithmic judgment. If they wonʼt listen or donʼt agree, you have to hire a lawyer to sue to get your free speech back.

    So far, this has flown under mainstream radar. A few right-wing sites like Breitbart have picked up on it, and well they should, because the conservative and eurosceptic parties are backing this proposal, even though it will make it vastly harder to start new sites where unpopular speech can be heard. Itʼs one thing to pass the hat around to start a right-wing version of Twitter, itʼs another thing to cough up $60,000,000 to clone YouTube Content ID to comply with European law.

    But this affects all politics, and all movements. The whole point of this exercise is to make Google pay German newspapers royalties for linking to newspapers, and you can bet Google and Facebook and the other Big Tech companies will figure out how to comply with it. But as those companies increasingly block and filter speech at the behest of governments, the ability of #BlackLivesMatter or the movement to stop the new Heathrow runway will also have to come up with $60,000,000 if they get kicked off the big platforms for not colouring in the lines.

    If youʼre a European, hereʼs a [1]tool to tweet or call your MEP and tell them how you feel about this.

     Article 13 gets Wikipedia coming and going: not only does it create opportunities for unscrupulous or incompetent people to block the sharing of Wikipediaʼs content beyond its bounds, it could also require Wikipedia to filter submissions to the encyclopedia and its surrounding projects, like Wikimedia Commons. The drafters of Article 13 have tried to carve Wikipedia out of the rule, but thanks to sloppy drafting, they have failed: the exemption is limited to "noncommercial activity". Every file on Wikipedia is licensed for commercial use.
    
     Then thereʼs the websites that Wikipedia relies on as references. The fragility and impermanence of links is already a serious problem for Wikipediaʼs crucial footnotes, but after Article 13 becomes law, any information hosted in the EU might disappear—and links to US mirrors might become infringing—at any moment thanks to an overzealous copyright bot. For these reasons and many more, the Wikimedia Foundation has taken a public position condemning Article 13.
    
     Speaking of references: the problems with the new copyright proposal donʼt stop there. Under Article 11, each member state will get to create a new copyright in news. If it passes, in order to link to a news website, you will either have to do so in a way that satisfies the limitations and exceptions of all 28 laws, or you will have to get a license. This is fundamentally incompatible with any sort of wiki (obviously), much less Wikipedia.
    
     It also means that the websites that Wikipedia relies on for its reference links may face licensing hurdles that would limit their ability to cite their own sources. In particular, news sites may seek to withhold linking licenses from critics who want to quote from them in order to analyze, correct and critique their articles, making it much harder for anyone else to figure out where the positions are in debates, especially years after the fact. This may not matter to people who only pay attention to news in the moment, but itʼs a blow to projects that seek to present and preserve long-term records of noteworthy controversies. And since every member state will get to make its own rules for quotation and linking, Wikipedia posts will have to satisfy a patchwork of contradictory rules, some of which are already so severe that theyʼd ban any items in a "Further Reading" list unless the article directly referenced or criticized them.
    

    [2]The EUʼs Copyright Proposal is Extremely Bad News for Everyone, Even (Especially!) Wikipedia [Cory Doctorow/EFF Deeplinks]

    [3][IMG]

    Muso is a London-based anti-piracy contractor, helping big entertainment companies conduct surveillance and legal threats against online infringers; in a new CitizenMe study they commissioned, 1,000 British internet users were surveyed; the headline finding: 83% of infringing downloads are triggered by an unsuccessful search for a commercially available version of the same work.

    [4]READ THE REST

    [5][IMG]

    As anyone who has been following the sorry saga of the EU copyright reform, key elements -- Articles 3 on text and data mining, 11 on the link tax and 13 on the upload filter censorship machine -- are turning into the proverbial dogʼs breakfast, a complete and utter mess. The well-founded criticisms of the proposed law have piled up to an unprecedented extent, causing the politicians behind it to resort to iterative obfuscation. Successive arguments against each of the three articles mentioned above have led to the Commissionʼs original text being mashed and murdered in an attempt to "address" the points by adding in new "clarifications" that just make things worse.

    [6]READ THE REST

    [7][IMG]

    Alex from Copy-Me writes, "Copy-Meʼs got a fresh video out on the myths behind the way we process and arrive at ʼfully formedʼ ideas. Minds do not operate differently for different people. Minds do not leap. And they don’t work unconsciously.

    [8]READ THE REST

    [9][IMG]

    It might sound counterintuitive, but one of the best ways to bring down a hacker is with another hacker. Commonly known as “white hats,” or ethical hackers, these professionals use a cybercriminal’s tools against them, sniffing out network vulnerabilities and patching them up before they can be exploited. In today’s heightened cybersecurity climate, demand for […]

    [10]READ THE REST

    [11][IMG]

    Accidents are going to happen, and chances are you won’t be able to see them coming. That’s why having an emergency kit is vital for bailing you out of any trouble that comes your way. However, these kits are only as good as the gear you put in them, which is why these UltraBright 500-Lumen Tactical […]

    [12]READ THE REST

    [13][IMG]

    Microsoft Excel is undoubtedly one of the most important tools in any business environment, and it’s home to a myriad of time-saving tools and functions that can dramatically improve your efficiency—if you know how to use them.  The eLearnExcel: Microsoft Excel Master Certification Bundle can show you its ins and outs, and it’s available in […]

    [14]READ THE REST

    References

    Visible links
    1. https://changecopyright.org/en-US/
    2. https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2018/06/eus-copyright-proposal-extremely-bad-news-everyone-even-especially-wikipedia
    3. https://boingboing.net/2018/06/08/competing-with-free.html?utm_source=moreatbb&utm_medium=nextpost&utm_campaign=nextpostthumbnails
    4. https://boingboing.net/2018/06/08/competing-with-free.html
    5. https://boingboing.net/2018/06/07/of-dogs-breakfasts-article.html?utm_source=moreatbb&utm_medium=nextpost&utm_campaign=nextpostthumbnails
    6. https://boingboing.net/2018/06/07/of-dogs-breakfasts-article.html
    7. https://boingboing.net/2018/06/04/murder-your-darlings.html?utm_source=moreatbb&utm_medium=nextpost&utm_campaign=nextpostthumbnails
    8. https://boingboing.net/2018/06/04/murder-your-darlings.html
    9. https://boingboing.net/2018/06/08/fight-for-whats-right-with-t.html?utm_source=moreatbb&utm_medium=nextpost&utm_campaign=nextpostthumbnails
    10. https://boingboing.net/2018/06/08/fight-for-whats-right-with-t.html
    11. https://boingboing.net/2018/06/07/shore-up-your-emergency-kit-wi.html?utm_source=moreatbb&utm_medium=nextpost&utm_campaign=nextpostthumbnails
    12. https://boingboing.net/2018/06/07/shore-up-your-emergency-kit-wi.html
    13. https://boingboing.net/2018/06/06/certify-your-excel-skills-with.html?utm_source=moreatbb&utm_medium=nextpost&utm_campaign=nextpostthumbnails
    14. https://boingboing.net/2018/06/06/certify-your-excel-skills-with.html

    HackerNewsBot debug: Calculated post rank: 101 - Loop: 154 - Rank min: 100 - Author rank: 16

    about a month ago from pod.jpope.org permalink

    Attachments

    1. Error showing notice: Invalid filename.

    2. Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) (schestowitz)'s status on Friday, 08-Jun-2018 11:45:36 PDT Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊)
      Following #copyright #law Should Be Enough—Even When Payment Processors Say it Isn’t https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2018/06/following-copyright-law-should-be-enough-even-when-payment-processors-say-it-isnt I've been SLAPPed by abusers of (lying about) copyright law
      about a month ago from pleroma.site permalink

      Attachments

    3. Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) (schestowitz)'s status on Friday, 08-Jun-2018 11:45:01 PDT Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊)

      Following #Copyright #Law Should Be Enough—Even When Payment Processors Say it Isn’t https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2018/06/following-copyright-law-should-be-enough-even-when-payment-processors-say-it-isnt I've been SLAPPed by abusers of (lying about) copyright law

      about a month ago from joindiaspora.com permalink

      Attachments

    4. Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) (schestowitz)'s status on Friday, 08-Jun-2018 11:44:24 PDT Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊)
      Act now to stop the EU’s plan to censor the web
      https://creativecommons.org/2018/06/08/act-now-to-stop-the-eus-plan-to-censor-the-web/
      absolutely mad. #copyright for #censorship at the highest level.
      #eu #europe
      about a month ago from pleroma.site permalink
    5. Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) (schestowitz)'s status on Friday, 08-Jun-2018 11:43:49 PDT Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊)

      Act now to stop the EU’s plan to censor the web
      https://creativecommons.org/2018/06/08/act-now-to-stop-the-eus-plan-to-censor-the-web/
      absolutely mad. #copyright for #censorship at the highest level.
      #eu #europe

      about a month ago from joindiaspora.com permalink
    6. Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) (schestowitz)'s status on Friday, 08-Jun-2018 09:59:22 PDT Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊)
      With language such as this even in headlines (many other examples) I'm surprised #googlenews still syndicates #techdirt
      https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20180606/09143139981/muso-all-groups-tells-copyright-holders-to-get-their-shit-together-treat-pirates-like-customers-they-are.shtml
      Surely could be softened a little. #copyright
      about a month ago from pleroma.site permalink
    7. Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) (schestowitz)'s status on Friday, 08-Jun-2018 09:58:39 PDT Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊)

      With language such as this even in headlines (many other examples) I'm surprised #googlenews still syndicates #techdirt
      https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20180606/09143139981/muso-all-groups-tells-copyright-holders-to-get-their-shit-together-treat-pirates-like-customers-they-are.shtml
      Surely could be softened a little. #copyright

      about a month ago from joindiaspora.com permalink
    8. Alberto (moshtodon)'s status on Friday, 08-Jun-2018 07:55:32 PDT Alberto Alberto

      The EU's #Copyright Proposal is Extremely Bad News for Everyone, Even (Especially!) #Wikipedia
      https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2018/06/eus-copyright-proposal-extremely-bad-news-everyone-even-especially-wikipedia

      about a month ago from mastodon.social permalink
    9. Hacker News ( unofficial ) (hackernews)'s status on Thursday, 07-Jun-2018 18:11:57 PDT Hacker News ( unofficial ) Hacker News ( unofficial )

      The EU's Copyright Proposal Is Extremely Bad News for Everyone, Even Wikipedia

      The pending update to the EU Copyright Directive is coming up for a committee vote on June 20 or 21 and a parliamentary vote either in early July or late September. While the directive fixes some…

      Article word count: 1076

      HN Discussion: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=17260148

      Posted by Mononokay (karma: 1835)

      Post stats: Points: 163 - Comments: 51 - 2018-06-07T20:51:38Z

      #HackerNews #bad #copyright #eus #even #everyone #extremely #for #news #proposal #the #wikipedia


      Article content:

      The pending update to the EU Copyright Directive is coming up for a committee vote on June 20 or 21 and a parliamentary vote either in early July or late September. While the directive fixes some longstanding problems with EU rules, it creates much, much larger ones: problems so big that they threaten to wreck the Internet itself.

      Under Article 13 of [1]the proposal, sites that allow users to post text, sounds, code, still or moving images, or other copyrighted works for public consumption will have to filter all their usersʼ submissions against a database of copyrighted works. Sites will have to pay to license the technology to match submissions to the database, and to identify near matches as well as exact ones. Sites will be required to have a process to allow rightsholders to update this list with more copyrighted works.

      Even under the best of circumstances, this presents huge problems. Algorithms that do content-matching are frankly terrible at it. The Made-in-the-USA version of this is YouTubeʼs Content ID system, which improperly flags legitimate works all the time, but still gets flack from entertainment companies for not doing more.

      There are lots of legitimate reasons for Internet users to upload copyrighted works. You might upload a clip from a nightclub (or a protest, or a technical presentation) that includes some copyrighted music in the background. Or you might just be wearing a t-shirt with your favorite album cover in your Tinder profile. You might upload the cover of a book youʼre selling on an online auction site, or you might want to post a photo of your sitting room in the rental listing for your flat, including the posters on the wall and the picture on the TV.

      Wikipedians have even more specialised reasons to upload material: pictures of celebrities, photos taken at newsworthy events, and so on.

      But the bots that Article 13 mandates will not be perfect. In fact, by design, they will be wildly imperfect.

      Article 13 punishes any site that fails to block copyright infringement, but it won’t punish people who abuse the system. There are no penalties for falsely claiming copyright over someone elseʼs work, which means that someone could upload all of Wikipedia to a filter system (for instance, one of the many sites that incorporate Wikpediaʼs content into their own databases) and then claim ownership over it on Twitter, Facebook and Wordpress, and everyone else would be prevented from quoting Wikipedia on any of those services until they sorted out the false claims. It will be a lot easier to make these false claims that it will be to figure out which of the hundreds of millions of copyrighted claims are real and which ones are pranks or hoaxes or censorship attempts.

      Article 13 also leaves you out in the cold when your own work is censored thanks to a malfunctioning copyright bot. Your only option when you get censored is to raise an objection with the platform and hope they see it your way—but if they fail to give real consideration to your petition, you have to go to court to plead your case.

      Article 13 gets Wikipedia coming and going: not only does it create opportunities for unscrupulous or incompetent people to block the sharing of Wikipediaʼs content beyond its bounds, it could also require Wikipedia to filter submissions to the encyclopedia and its surrounding projects, like Wikimedia Commons. The drafters of Article 13 have [2]tried to carve Wikipedia out of the rule, but thanks to sloppy drafting, they have failed: the exemption is limited to "noncommercial activity". Every file on Wikipedia is licensed for commercial use.

      Then thereʼs the websites that Wikipedia relies on as references. The fragility and impermanence of links is already a serious problem for Wikipediaʼs crucial footnotes, but after Article 13 becomes law, any information hosted in the EU might disappear—and links to US mirrors might become infringing—at any moment thanks to an overzealous copyright bot. For these reasons and many more, [3]the Wikimedia Foundation has taken a public position condemning Article 13.

      Speaking of references: the problems with the new copyright proposal donʼt stop there. Under Article 11, each member state will get to create a new copyright in news. If it passes, in order to link to a news website, you will either have to do so in a way that satisfies the limitations and exceptions of all 28 laws, or you will have to get a license. This is fundamentally incompatible with any sort of wiki (obviously), much less Wikipedia.

      It also means that the websites that Wikipedia relies on for its reference links may face licensing hurdles that would limit their ability to cite their own sources. In particular, news sites may seek to withhold linking licenses from critics who want to quote from them in order to analyze, correct and critique their articles, making it much harder for anyone else to figure out where the positions are in debates, especially years after the fact. This may not matter to people who only pay attention to news in the moment, but itʼs a blow to projects that seek to present and preserve long-term records of noteworthy controversies. And since every member state will get to make its own rules for quotation and linking, Wikipedia posts will have to satisfy a patchwork of contradictory rules, some of which are already so severe that theyʼd ban any items in a "Further Reading" list unless the article directly referenced or criticized them.

      The controversial measures in the new directive have been tried before. For example, link taxes were tried in Spain and Germany and [4]they failed, and [5]publishers donʼt want them. Indeed, the only country to embrace this idea as workable is [6]China, where mandatory copyright enforcement bots have become part of the national toolkit for controlling public discourse.

      Articles 13 and 11 are poorly thought through, poorly drafted, unworkable—and dangerous. The collateral damage they will impose on every realm of public life canʼt be overstated. The Internet, after all, is inextricably bound up in the daily lives of hundreds of millions of Europeans and [7]an entire constellation of sites and services will be adversely affected by Article 13. Europe canʼt afford to place education, employment, family life, creativity, entertainment, business, protest, politics, and a thousand other activities at the mercy of unaccountable algorithmic filters. If youʼre a European concerned about these proposals, [8]hereʼs a tool for contacting your MEP.

      References

      Visible links
      1. https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/HTML/?uri=CELEX:52016PC0593&from=EN
      2. https://www.politico.eu/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/Copyright-compromise-amendments-V6.pdf
      3. https://blog.wikimedia.org/2017/06/06/european-copyright-directive-proposal/
      4. https://www.communia-association.org/2015/10/19/more-evidence-from-germany-ancillary-copyright-still-not-working/
      5. https://juliareda.eu/2017/10/publishers-oppose-link-tax/
      6. https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2017/04/chinese-snooping-foreshadows-future-copyright-enforcement
      7. http://edima-eu.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/Services-affected-by-Article-13-Infographic.jpg
      8. https://changecopyright.org/en-US/

      HackerNewsBot debug: Calculated post rank: 125 - Loop: 153 - Rank min: 100 - Author rank: 46

      about a month ago from pod.jpope.org permalink

      Attachments

    10. Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) (schestowitz)'s status on Thursday, 07-Jun-2018 14:25:31 PDT Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊)

      The EU's #Copyright Proposal is Extremely Bad News for Everyone, Even (Especially!) #Wikipedia
      https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2018/06/eus-copyright-proposal-extremely-bad-news-everyone-even-especially-wikipedia #eu #europe @MarietjeSchaake

      about a month ago from joindiaspora.com permalink

      Attachments

    11. Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) (schestowitz)'s status on Thursday, 07-Jun-2018 14:25:19 PDT Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊)
      The EU's #copyright Proposal is Extremely Bad News for Everyone, Even (Especially!) #wikipedia
      https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2018/06/eus-copyright-proposal-extremely-bad-news-everyone-even-especially-wikipedia #eu #europe
      about a month ago from pleroma.site permalink

      Attachments

    12. Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) (schestowitz)'s status on Thursday, 07-Jun-2018 08:29:19 PDT Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊)
      "Julia Reda sounds the alarm that the European Parliament will vote on mandatory upload filtering in two weeks, with nowhere near enough attention to this issue from the public at large." https://www.privateinternetaccess.com/blog/2018/06/julia-reda-sounds-the-alarm-two-weeks-until-censorship-machine-vote-in-the-european-parliament/ #copyright
      about a month ago from pleroma.site permalink

      Attachments

    13. Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) (schestowitz)'s status on Thursday, 07-Jun-2018 08:28:57 PDT Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊)

      "Julia Reda sounds the alarm that the European Parliament will vote on mandatory upload filtering in two weeks, with nowhere near enough attention to this issue from the public at large." https://www.privateinternetaccess.com/blog/2018/06/julia-reda-sounds-the-alarm-two-weeks-until-censorship-machine-vote-in-the-european-parliament/ #copyright

      about a month ago from joindiaspora.com permalink

      Attachments

    14. Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) (schestowitz)'s status on Thursday, 07-Jun-2018 08:25:45 PDT Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊)
      How you can #saveyourinternet from Article 13 and the #linktax in the next 14 days https://juliareda.eu/2018/06/saveyourinternet/ #copyright #europe #eu
      about a month ago from pleroma.site permalink
    15. Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) (schestowitz)'s status on Thursday, 07-Jun-2018 08:25:21 PDT Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊)

      How you can #SaveYourInternet from Article 13 and the #LinkTax in the next 14 days https://juliareda.eu/2018/06/saveyourinternet/ #copyright #europe #eu

      about a month ago from joindiaspora.com permalink
    16. Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) (schestowitz)'s status on Thursday, 07-Jun-2018 04:27:36 PDT Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊)
      "reverse engineering and other experimentation should be a permissible fair use despite the existence of patents."
      https://patentlyo.com/patent/2018/06/reverse-engineering-skittles.html
      #copyright law a far bigger barrier to #reverseengineering
      about a month ago from pleroma.site permalink
    17. Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) (schestowitz)'s status on Thursday, 07-Jun-2018 04:14:08 PDT Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊) Dr. Roy Schestowitz (罗伊)
      #copyright #law is out of control and #europe or #eu now tries to even outdo the US when it comes to repressive © law whose purpose is #censorship http://ipkitten.blogspot.com/2018/06/respect-of-family-life-cannot-be-abused.html
      about a month ago from pleroma.site permalink

      Attachments

    • After
    • Before

Feeds

  • Activity Streams
  • RSS 1.0
  • RSS 2.0
  • Atom
  • Help
  • About
  • FAQ
  • TOS
  • Privacy
  • Source
  • Version
  • Contact

GNUsocial.no is a social network, courtesy of peers.community. It runs on GNU social, version 1.2.0-beta4, available under the GNU Affero General Public License.

Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 All GNUsocial.no content and data are available under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 license.

Switch to mobile site layout.