"Wikimedia: EU copyright reform threatens the ‘free web""
Posted: Wed Sep 05, 2018 1:30 am
They've run shit like this before but today they managed to somehow talk TechCrunch into running it:
https://techcrunch.com/2018/09/04/wikim ... -free-web/
And then one of the cultists posted it to Slashdot. Where it got very little attention--as usual for a dying "movement". It also reveals that the July blackout protest by some language WPs wasn't terribly successful, as the EU Parliament is plunging ahead in its usual semi-wandering way. Anyone wanna take bets on how long it will be until Jimbo goes to one of his handpicked "friendly Guardian writers" and delivers another of his ill-assembled screeds about how evil the EUP is?
https://slashdot.org/story/18/09/04/185 ... edium=feed
There's some comment in there about "link taxes". As I keep saying, the Internet has escaped the usual taxation/regulation/censorship bit that governments have always slapped onto communications media. This might change in the EU--for better or worse, it's impossible to say. But it WILL ruin the angry little walled garden of crazy that we call Commons.
PS, they recategorized their "vintage dirty picture" collection again:
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Cate ... sex_in_art
https://techcrunch.com/2018/09/04/wikim ... -free-web/
And then one of the cultists posted it to Slashdot. Where it got very little attention--as usual for a dying "movement". It also reveals that the July blackout protest by some language WPs wasn't terribly successful, as the EU Parliament is plunging ahead in its usual semi-wandering way. Anyone wanna take bets on how long it will be until Jimbo goes to one of his handpicked "friendly Guardian writers" and delivers another of his ill-assembled screeds about how evil the EUP is?
https://slashdot.org/story/18/09/04/185 ... edium=feed
There's some comment in there about "link taxes". As I keep saying, the Internet has escaped the usual taxation/regulation/censorship bit that governments have always slapped onto communications media. This might change in the EU--for better or worse, it's impossible to say. But it WILL ruin the angry little walled garden of crazy that we call Commons.
PS, they recategorized their "vintage dirty picture" collection again:
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Cate ... sex_in_art