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[ NNSquad ] (Digital Economy Bill) An Open Letter to Sion Simon, Pete Wishart, David Lammy, Peter Luff, John Robertson, Stephen Timms



----- Forwarded message from Fearghas McKay <fm@st-kilda.org> -----

Date: Wed, 7 Apr 2010 21:39:31 +0100
From: Fearghas McKay <fm@st-kilda.org>
Subject: An Open Letter to Si?n Simon, Pete Wishart, David Lammy, Peter Luff,
	John Robertson, Stephen Timms
To: FIPR Alerts <alerts@fipr.org>
Cc: Fearghas McKay <fm@st-kilda.org>, Lauren Weinstein <lauren@vortex.com>

http://nevali.net/post/501647501/an-open-letter-to-sion-simon-pete-wishart-david

and a reply from Peter Luff

http://nevali.net/post/503532938/from-peter-luff

An Open Letter to Siôn Simon, Pete Wishart, David Lammy, Peter Luff, John 
Robertson, Stephen Timms
Dear Sirs,

This evening, as the Second Reading of the Digital Economy Bill was heard 
in the House of Commons, you were watched by a great many people. Many of 
these people had never watched Parliament in session before. Almost 
universal was the horror and anger at the affront to the democratic process 
which was unfolding before our eyes.

This letter is addressed to you because you stated your support for the 
bill, and helped ensure its passage to the compressed “wash-up” stage of 
proceedings, despite the wide-ranging, contentious and to many unknown 
provisions it includes. Some of you expressed your dismay at the contempt 
shown for the House, the lack of scrutiny which has been afforded, and your 
deep concerns with respect to certain provisions. Despite this, you pledged 
your support for the bill, in one case claiming to “do so under duress”.

To the British public who were watching, this was abhorrent.

While some talked of the “powerful ISPs and their digital friends”, note 
this: those who send you letters — numbered in their tens of thousands — 
did so principally to demand proper debate in the Commons of a piece of 
legislation which is poorly-understood, both within and outside of the 
Palace of Westminster. It is clear that we were right to demand this, given 
the misunderstandings, misinformation and — in some cases — complete lack 
of information which abounded. It is a sad indictment of the state of the 
democratic process when the public, writing to their elected Members of 
Parliament, many of whom did so with clearly laid out concerns relating 
specific clauses and paragraphs, are described in such a derisory manner.

The “powerful ISPs” you talk of are anything but, save for some occasional 
exceptions. The vast majority of ISPs who have raised concerns regarding 
this bill are small businesses operating on razor-thin margins. It is fair 
to say that these small ISPs have been almost unanimous in raising their 
concerns. Please do not mistake agreement with conspiracy.

On more than one occasion, it was stated that “something must be done”; 
that is, this bill is better than nothing. Repeatedly, illegal  
file-sharing was cited as a cause requiring the Government to enact  
legislation at, almost literally, the eleventh hour. Allow me to ask you 
this: if the losses to the entertainment industry in the UK from illegal 
file-sharing run into millions of pounds as was claimed in the House, where 
has this money gone? In this time of global economic downturn, with an 
election fast approaching which will be won or lost on the economy, surely 
this question is more important than ever?

The entertainment industry as a whole has seen record revenues. The period 
from January until October 2009 saw record singles sales within the UK, 
according to the British Phonographic Institute — so much so that the 
number of singles sold in that period was nearly three times the number 
sold for the whole of 2002. The statistics presented to Parliament are a 
simplistic measure of losses, based upon estimates of file-sharing supplied 
by the British Phonographic Institute (themselves extrapolated from a 
survey of a small group of people, and was widely debunked in June 2009). 
Indeed, the sectors of industry which the referenced report claims could 
suffer three hundred thousand job losses in the UK employ only marginally 
more than that to begin with. Is it really the case that legitimate sales 
will cease altogether, despite rising steadily for the past ten years?

To the dichotomy between “the measures will not be effective” and “the  
measures are draconian”, the answer is simple: the measures cannot  
guarantee to be free of serious unintended consequences, nor can they  
guarantee to not make erroneous accusations, nor do they stand much chance 
of affecting the habits of the serious, knowledgeable, infringer. This is 
compounded by — if reports are to be believed — a levy of a fee in order to 
appeal an accusation. What kind of due process does this claim to be? This 
is a law which will penalise the poor and the ignorant, and do little to 
prevent the real problem infringers.

Be under no illusions, however. Those who support the abolition of  
copyright as it stands and a “free for all” as far as content is concerned 
do not represent the public in general, nor do they even represent the 
majority of those who wrote to you. Surely if this were the case, some of 
you would have taken great pleasure in reading out their letters to the 
House as justification for action?

All of this touches on a small fraction of a large bill, and there are  
many aspects which Members rightly have considered, well-researched, views 
of. Unfortunately, it seems apparent that thanks to collusion between the 
front benches, their concerns and questions will only be answered after the 
bill has been passed into law. This is, undoubtedly, wholly unacceptable.

This government, and those who have supported the passage of this bill  
through wash-up, have displayed a level of contempt for the public which is 
rarely seen. Tonight, it became widely-known.

We ask one thing of you: if the process by which this bill is being passed 
into law is so contemptible, take the opportunity when it is presented to 
abort the process. For all the discussion of scrutiny and review after the 
fact, bear in mind the looming election. Who will undertake that scrutiny? 
What guarantee will you have that it will ever happen? Will it come close 
to the proper Parliamentary oversight that a bill of this magnitude surely 
requires?

Yours sincerely,

Mo McRoberts (Web developer), plus a long list of signatories.

	and the reply from Peter Luff

>From Peter Luff

Well, apart from condemning the process, we simply don’t agree. I can only 
stand by my speech.

I’m sorry - you are being courteous and reasonable which is more than many 
have been on this contentious issue, but I have given it thought over many 
months and I have now made my position clear.

Thank you for your concern - I just wish we could find more common ground.

Peter Luff FCIPR MP
Member of Parliament for Mid Worcestershire
Chairman, Business Innovation and Skills Committee
House of Commons
London SW1A 0AA

Telephone 01905 763952
Website www.peterluff.org.uk

--==--==--

A couple of other links that might be of interest:

A new Banana Republic

http://confusedofcalcutta.com/2010/04/02/the-digital-economy-bill-thinking-about-banana-ice-cream/

Creativity is the enemy http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U0Ru8qlQEH0



----- End forwarded message -----