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LA LOI DADVSI A ÉTÉ PUBLIÉE LE 3 AOÛT 2006 AU JOURNAL OFFICIEL

Je soutiens le logiciel libre, j'adhere a l'APRIL

English readers :: 2006/05/


March for digital freedoms, against DRM and against the DADVSI law on Sunday the 7th of May in Paris

MARCH FOR DIGITAL FREEDOMS, AGAINST DRMs AND AGAINST THE DADVSI LAW

We, French citizens, reject the electronic restrictions on cultural works which was established by the law on authors' rights (DADVSI law). This law, via the legislation of digital rights management (DRM) devices, threaten the right to fair use, innovation, individual freedoms and the the durability of works.

Works which we buy should be able to be viewed anytime, anywhere, with the equipment and the software of one's choosing, including free software. We want, for instance, to be able to lend music which we like, and to hand it down to our children.

We refuse to accept any law that considers hackers and lovers of culture as offenders.

We are calling for a demonstration against both DRMs and the DADVSI law on Sunday the 7th of May at the Place de la Bastille in Paris at 2 pm with the following guiding principles:


YES to authors' rights
NO to the DADVSI law
NO to the death of fair use
NO to digital rights management (DRM)
NO to threats to free software in France
YES to interoperability
YES to cultural diversity

This is an initiative of: stopDRM, APRIL, the Audionautes, dadaprod.org, EUCD.info, FFII.fr, Framasoft, FSF France, musique-libre.org, the ODEBI league.

If you are an association or an organization and if you wish to be a cosigner of the call/appeal, contact stopdrm AT gmail.com

See the complete list of supports on StopDRM web site


French DRM law gets ugly - protest May 7/2PM Place de la Bastille in Paris

The French Senate will consider a major revision to its copyright law (the "DADVSI" law) on May 4th, 9th and 10th. This law will implement the EUCD (the European equivalent of the DMCA) and change French author's rights and copright. It was voted by the first chamber on Feb 21st. This will be the final parliamentary step of the examination process, as a shortened "emergency procedure" was called on such a crucial subject.
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