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BRUSSELS, Belgium – European Union countries on Monday, April 15, adopted copyright reforms championed by news publishers and the media business, but opposed by US tech giants like Google.
EU countries adopted the reforms that were agreed last month by the European Parliament, they said in a statement.
“The new rules ensure adequate protection for authors and artists, while opening up new possibilities for accessing and sharing copyright-protected content online throughout the European Union,” they said.
An EU source said Italy, Finland, Sweden, Luxembourg, the Netherlands and Poland voted against the controversial legislation.
The culmination of a process that began in 2016, the revamp to European copyright legislation was seen as urgently needed as it had not been updated since 2001, before the birth of YouTube or Facebook. (READ: Will EU copyright overhaul ‘break’ the internet?)
The reform was loudly backed by media companies and artists, who want to secure revenue from web platforms that allow users to distribute their content.
But it was strongly opposed by internet freedom activists and by Silicon Valley, especially Google, which makes huge profits from the advertising generated alongside the content it hosts. – Rappler.com
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