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Cases

Cases

Chronicle of a Block Foretold: UK ISPs ordered to block Pirate Bay

The High Court of England and Wales has ruled that UK internet service providers must start taking steps to technically block access from their customers to The Pirate Bay (Virgin Media has already started). Arnold J has delivered a short copyright order in Dramatico Entertainment Ltd & Ors v British Read more

By Andres Guadamuz, 14 years ago May 3, 2012
Cases

Text of the Costa Rican ruling declaring Internet as a fundamental right

One of the most frequent questions I receive is with regards to the 2010 ruling by the Costa Rican Constitutional Court (Sala IV) declaring access to the Internet as a fundamental right. The Costa Rican online jurisprudence system is considerably clunky and difficult to navigate, and most of the requests Read more

By Andres Guadamuz, 14 years ago January 16, 2017
Cases

European Court of Justice rules against filtering (again)

In a re-enactment of last November’s Sabam v Scarlet, the ECJ has ruled against indiscriminate filtering by service providers again, but this time in a case regarding social networks. In Sabam v Netlog (C‑360/10), the Belgian collecting society Sabam sued a social network site named Netlog, based in Ghent, attempting Read more

By Andres Guadamuz, 14 years ago February 17, 2012
Cases

Can a court order stop a torrent file?

I’ve just finished reading the fascinating case of AMP v Persons Unknown [2011] EWHC 3454 (TCC) via the IP Osgoode blog. This is a BitTorrent case with a twist, as it is NOT a copyright case. Perhaps we have grown accustomed to BitTorrent technology, it is used to share legal Read more

By Andres Guadamuz, 14 years ago February 28, 2012
Cases

Chile enforces net neutrality for the first time, sort of

(via Jose Otero) In 2010 Chile became one of the first countries in the world to enact a net neutrality legislation. The law 20.453 enacts a three-pronged approach to protect users against abuse, firstly by determining that Internet Service Providers (ISPs) may not differentiate content based on the origin; it Read more

By Andres Guadamuz, 14 years ago February 13, 2012
Cases

European Court of Justice rules against indiscriminate intermediary filtering

For more than a year, those of us interested in intermediary liability have been waiting for an important Belgian case, Saban v Tiscali (now Sabam v Scarlet). This has been a long-running battle between Sabam, the Belgian rights management agency representing authors, composers and editors of musical works, and Tiscali, Read more

By Andres Guadamuz, 15 years ago June 14, 2013
Cases

Dutch ruling sends intermediary liability back to the 90s

A civil court in Amsterdam has delivered a throwback ruling that reverses a decade of legal practice in intermediary liability. The BREIN Foundation is an anti-piracy group in the Netherlands, and it sued News-Service.com Europe (NSE), one of the largest providers of Usenet services in Europe. BREIN brought the action Read more

By Andres Guadamuz, 15 years ago February 13, 2012
Cases

German court enforces Creative Commons licence

This bit of news was reported by the Creative Commons Blog some weeks ago, but it deserves as much dissemination as possible. The regional court of Berlin (Landgericht Berlin) has effectively enforced a CC Attribution-ShareAlike (CC BY-SA) Unported licence against a far-right party. This is great news because it is Read more

By Andres Guadamuz, 15 years ago October 2, 2011
Cases

Newzbin: Internet filtering and file-sharing

It has been a very interesting week for UK copyright, with some landmark decisions in Lucasfilm v Ainsworth and Newspaper Licensing Agency v Meltwater. However, everyone seems to be talking about Newzbin. In the case of Twentieth Century Fox Film Corp & Ors v British Telecommunications Plc [2011] EWHC 1981, Read more

By Andres Guadamuz, 15 years ago July 29, 2011
Cases

Intermediary liability: because you’re worth it (L’Oreal v eBay)

The European Court of Justice has finally ruled on the landmark case of L’Oréal v eBay (C-324/09) . It is true that the term “landmark case” gets used quite a lot in these virtual pages, but in this situation is more than accurate. The case has been a long-running legal Read more

By Andres Guadamuz, 15 years ago June 11, 2013

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