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Antiguo 18-ene-2010, 19:13
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Proposed Web video restrictions cause outrage in Italy | The Industry Standard

New rules to be introduced by government decree will require people who upload videos onto the Internet to obtain authorization from the Communications Ministry similar to that required by television broadcasters, drastically reducing freedom to communicate over the Web, opposition lawmakers have warned.

The decree is ostensibly an enactment of a European Union (EU) directive on product placement and is due to go into effect at the end of January after being subjected to a nonbinding appraisal by parliament.

On Thursday opposition lawmakers held a press conference in parliament to denounce the new rules -- which require government authorization for the uploading of videos, give individuals who claim to have been defamed a right of reply and prevent the replay of copyright material -- as a threat to freedom of expression.

"The decree subjects the transmission of images on the Web to rules typical of television and requires prior ministerial authorization, with an incredible limitation on the way the Internet currently ********s," opposition Democratic Party lawmaker Paolo Gentiloni told the press conference.

Article 4 of the decree specifies that the dissemination over the Internet "of moving pictures, whether or not accompanied by sound," requires ministerial authorization. Critics say it will therefore apply to the Web sites of newspapers, to IPTV and to mobile TV, obliging them to take on the same status as television broadcasters.

"Italy joins the club of the censors, together with China, Iran and North Korea," said Gentiloni's party colleague Vincenzo Vita.

The decree was also condemned by Articolo 21, an organization dedicated to the defense of freedom of speech as enshrined in article 21 of the Italian constitution. The group said the measures resembled an earlier government attempt to crack down on bloggers by imposing on them the same obligations and responsibilities as newspapers.

The group launched an appeal Friday entitled "Hands Off the Net," saying the restrictive measures would mark "the end of freedom of expression on the Web." The restrictions would prevent the recounting of the life of the Italians in moving pictures on the Internet, it said.

The decree was also criticized by Nicola D'Angelo, a commissioner in the Communications Authority, which would be likely to play a role in policing copyright violations under the new rules. The decree ran contrary to the spirit of the EU directive by extending the rules of television to online video material, D'Angelo said in a radio interview.

He also expressed concern at the requirement for government authorization for the uploading of videos to Internet. "Italy will be the only Western country in which it is necessary to have prior government permission to operate this kind of service," he said. "This aspect reveals a democratic risk, regardless of who happens to be in power."

Other critics described the decree as an expression of the conflict of interests of Silvio Berlusconi, who exercises political control over the state broadcaster RAI in his role as prime minister and is also the owner of Italy's largest private broadcaster, Mediaset.

They said the new copyright regulations would prevent Internet users from sharing snippets of popular TV shows or goals from the Italian soccer league, currently viewed online by millions of people.

Mediaset has successfully sued YouTube to obtain the removal of its copyright material, in particular video from the reality show "Big Brother," from the online video-sharing platform. A judge in a Rome civil court ordered the removal of the material last month, and the new decree is seen as providing further protection for Mediaset's online commercial interests.

Alessandro Gilioli, who writes a blog on the Web site of the weekly magazine L'Espresso, said the decree was intended to squelch future competition for Mediaset, which was planning to move into IPTV and therefore had an interest in reducing the number of independent videos circulating on the Web.

"It's the Berlusconi method: Kill your potential enemies while they are small. That's why anyone doing Web TV -- even from their attic at home -- must get
ministerial approval and fulfill a host of other bureaucratic obligations," Gilioli wrote. He said the government was also keen to restrict the uncontrollable circulation of information over the Internet to preserve its monopoly over television news.

Paolo Romani, the deputy minister responsible for drafting the decree, insisted the text simply adopted the recommendations of the EU directive but said the government was prepared to discuss modifications. The decree did not intend to restrict freedom of information "or the possibility of expressing one's ideas and opinions through blogs and social networks," Romani told the ANSA news agency.


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Antiguo 18-ene-2010, 19:27
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Antiguo 26-ene-2010, 22:45
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Antiguo 26-ene-2010, 22:50
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Revuelo en Italia por un decreto que restringirá el vídeo en la Red | Navegante | elmundo.es


Revuelo en Italia por un decreto que restringirá el vídeo en la Red

* EEl texto equipara subir un vídeo a Internet con actividades de radiodifusión





l gobierno de Berlusconi pretende aprobar un decreto este mes que impida la subida de vídeos a Internet sin una autorización previa del Ministerio de Comunicaciones, un procedimiento similar al que existen para las televisiones.

De aprobarse la medida, denuncian algunos expertos y diputados de la oposición, se reduciría enormemente la libertad en la Red para los italianos. El trámite de este decreto pasará por el Parlamento, aunque la decisión de la Cámara no es vinculante.

"El decreto somete a la transmisión de imágenes por la Red a las reglas típicas de la televisión y requiere una autorización ministerial previa, lo que conllevaría una increíble limitación a la manera en que Internet funciona", denunció en una rueda de prensa Paolo Gentiloni, del Partido Democrático, quien calificó el texto de "verdadero escándalo".

El artículo 4 del decreto especifica que la difusión en Internet de "imágenes en movimiento, con o sin sonido", requiere autorización ministerial.

La publicación Articolo 21 (que se refiere a aquél que consagra la Libertad de Expresión en la Constitución italiana) también ha criticado la medida.

Por su parte, Alessandro Gilioli, que escribe un blog en el sitio web de la revista semanal L'Espresso, dijo que el decreto estaba destinado a aplastar la competencia futura de Mediaset, que está planeando mudarse a IPTV y por lo tanto hay un interés en reducir el número de vídeos independientes que circulan en la Web.

"Es el método Berlusconi: Mata a sus enemigos potenciales mientras que son pequeños. Es por eso que cualquier persona que haga Web TV - incluso desde su ático en el país - debe obtener aprobación ministerial y cumplir con una serie de requisitos".

No obstante, el viceministro responsable de la redacción de este decreto, Paolo Romani, comentó a la agencia ANSA que el gobierno simplemente adoptó una serie de recomendaciones de una directiva de la UE, y que el Gobierno está dispuesto a discutir modificaciones.

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