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Earlier today, Sir Tim Berners-Lee, the creator of the world wide web, made an unprecedented
call. Speaking on the 25th anniversary of his creation,
Sir Tim said there needed to be a "Magna Carta"-style bill of rights to protect web users...
Otherwise the online community could just end up continuing down a road towards more
and more government surveillance. We need to, at this point, it's 25 years on.
We need to think about the next 25 years and make sure that we've established the principles
that the web is being based on: principles of openness, principles of privacy, principles
of not being censored, for example. Sir Tim compared the level of importance of
online rights to that of human rights and stressed that the internet should be a "neutral"
medium that could be used without the threat of surveillance.
The inventor's World Wide Web Foundation has already begun moves towards such a bill of
rights with it's "web we want" campaign. The campaign calls for an "open, universal
web" that will hold up the vision laid out in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
and says that the first step is to draft an Internet Users Bill of Rights for every country,
which can then be proposed to governments. While all this sounds great however, we can't
help but be cynical and think that governments are unlikely to take Sir Tim up on his offer.
And here's just a few reasons why...
Governments like being able to keep their eyes on us...
When we say "governments" here we're mostly referring to the United States and United
Kingdom who were revealed last May to have the ability to spy on the online activities
of millions of ordinary citizens via the US' National Security Agency and the UK's Government
Communications Headquarters. And if the US and UK's response to the Edward
Snowden revelations are anything to go by, they're unlikely to give up this ability anytime
soon. Rather than apologising for the massive breach
in privacy and public trust, the politicians of both countries deflected blame onto the
whistleblower Edward Snowden, as well as the Guardian newspaper that first published his
leaks. Of course, we're under no illusions that other
governments aren't spying on web users too - just probably not to the same scale as the
US, and its collaborator the UK. And even if governments did agree to an internet bill
of rights, it's unlikely that this would prevent their intelligence agencies from spying on
web users - they just wouldn't tell anyone about it. So pretty much the same as now then.
It could put a stop to the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP) - or at least to parts of it.
The TPP is one of the most ambitious free trade agreements ever attempted. And if agreed,
would see stronger economic and regulatory ties between at least 12 countries, including
the US, Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Malaysia, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, Vietnam
and Japan. The specifics of the agreement are being deliberately
kept secret by the governments involved BUT back in November Wikileaks managed to obtain
the chapter relating to intellectual property. And it revealed that all web users should
be VERY concerned. If agreed, this chapter would extend the length
of time that original works are covered by copyright for as well as bring in the idea
that even temporary copies of original works are covered by copyright.
You say, well, why would I care about that. Well, everything travelling across the internet
is actually a copy. Everything on your computer when you download stuff, when you watch this
programme, is a copy. And they want to bring in copyright for that, so you'd have to get
permission just to download anything across the internet. Or even have it on your computer.
So, they're trying to broaden the range of copyright. They're also trying to make the
DRM, the idea of locking down copyright materials even more stringent so that you can't actually
break the copyright on things like DVDs or or anything else, bring in more stringent
laws against that. They want to bring in very harsh civil damages so if you're found to
have infringed on copyright they want to bring in laws that would effectively let you be
sued for practically everything. They're claiming things like the effective loss of revenue,
the lost profits, the damages, they just pile it on so to try to make it as expensive as
possible. And although the TPP only involves 11 countries,
the nature of the world wide web means that all web users would be affected by any such
agreement. And that large copyright holders would likely
rake in huge amounts of profit off of the back of it.
So, if the governments involved in the TPP were to agree to a bill of rights for web
users, they would likely have to do away with any deal on intellectual property that related
to the internet. And this is unlikely to go down well with the US in particular, which
is in the pockets of the lobbyists of the companies that hold large volumes of copyrighted
material. And who are allegedly the ones responsible for writing this part of the TTP.
Corporations, on the whole, don't like net neutrality.
One of the things that Sir Tim stressed in his call for a bill of online rights was that
the internet should be a "neutral" medium. Which is unlikely to go down well with the
companies who would like to see an end to net neutrality.
Net neutrality, or the open internet, is a principle that says all legal content on the
internet is equal. And in practice this principle prevents internet service providers from interfering
with, or discriminating against any data sent through their pipes. Which means that providers
can't allow some data to arrive at your computer quicker, simply because that data is owned
by them, for example, or because the owners of that data are paying for it to be delivered
quicker. But recently there's been a trend against
this, particularly in the US. On 14 January of this year, in a ruling in favour of internet
service provider Verizon, a US court threw out the country's open internet rules, and
since then, in a game-changing deal, Netflix has paid provider Comcast an undisclosed sum
to speed up the delivery of Netflix content. Obviously deals like this give certain companies
an advantage over their competitors, an advantage they are unlikely to want to let go just because
Sir Tim and millions of us web users want it so.
And as we've seen with the copyright industry, when it comes to the internet, companies usually
have more sway over government decisions than web users like you and me.
Of course, these are just a few of the reasons why governments are unlikely to agree to a
bill of rights for web users. And we'd love to hear your thoughts on this so leave us
a comment below and we'll see you again next time.