back to article Belgian judge reverses moon-on-stick music copyright ruling

A Belgian judge who slapped a €2,500 per day fine on an ISP until it filtered its network for music copyright infringements has reversed the decision after music lawyers conceded it wasn't technically possible. The successful appeal by provider Scarlet last week overturns a ruling made in July last year. The final skirmish in …

COMMENTS

This topic is closed for new posts.
  1. Daniel Garcia
    Unhappy

    Make me sick

    everytime that a judge proves to be a peasant ignorant about the matters that he/she rules.

  2. Fred
    Stop

    typo alert

    "Last year SABAM played down the significance of its victory".... you mean, played UP.... right? They could hardly have played it up more than they did... it was on news site known to mankind.

  3. Marvin the Martian
    Unhappy

    But everybody loves SABAM!

    Except for musicians, but they're a minority, so what. The guiding principle is: equal misery for all.

    SABAM are notorious for their inefficiency. For example, any party say in a scout hut, you had to pay something like 15quid "music reproduction rights" and yes they were actively checked. Costing far more (a tour every weekend night of all scout/school/... spaces) than the price. All in all, they collect royalties at a higher cost than the royalties collected.

    So in the end, musicians basically pay "protection money".

  4. Anonymous Coward
    Paris Hilton

    "Totally Belgian"

    I've lived in Belgium for years. Trust me, the courts and politicians here make their British equivalents look like legal and philosophical giants (think Solomon/Socrates/Occam etc).

    This is the country that's spent nearly 2 years without an operational government.

    This is the country that's about the size of Wales, but has 5 governments.

    This is the country that's been in the top 10 for levels of national debt since the 80s.

    This is the country where politicians can be caught red handed with their hand in the cookie-jar, go to *prison* for fraud, and still get back into office.

    This is the country where just having an internet connection means you pay those b*stards at AUVIBEL about 30 euro per year to "compensate" for assumed copyright infringement. Lets not get started on levy of CDs/DVDs etc.

    Then again, their beer and chocolate do make up for a lot of faults....

    Plus, I can be in and out of Paris with almost no effort..... ;)

  5. Anonymous Coward
    Unhappy

    we're sorry, your honor

    We were led astray by a low-level IT employee who has since been fired.

    You KNOW how this works. None of the lawyers or upper management will be touched.

  6. Paul Crawford Silver badge
    Pirate

    Phorm again?

    Why not do this to BT?

    After all, they are planing to deploy systems that do deep packet inspection, so they can no longer claim to be a simple "common carrier", unable to ploice the data stream, and thus should be held liable for all illegal content on thier network.

    That would be sweet justice!

    OK, a bummer for everyone in the long term...

  7. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Kick back the kick back?

    Does this mean that SABAM has to pay back the money they received from Audible Magic for the privilege of using their product in a legal judgment?

This topic is closed for new posts.