Sep. 15th, 2018

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thefingerfuckingfemalefury:

blvnk-art:

‘Come on, Ginny’s not bad,’ said George fairly, sitting down next to Fred. ‘Actually, I dunno how she got so good, seeing how we never let her play with us.’
‘She’s been breaking into your broom shed in the garden since the age of six and taking each of your brooms out in turn when you weren’t looking,’ said Hermione from behind her tottering pile of Ancient Rune books.
‘Oh,’ said George, looking mildly impressed. ‘Well, that’d explain it.‘ 

Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix

Anything is possible if you’ve got enough nerve.

[instagram @potterbyblvnk] 

Ginny Weasley is a bad ass <3
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john-marshall:

reblog and put in the tags if you have the “cilantro good” or the “cilantro bad” gene
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riallasheng:

somethingoddinsod:

lauraannegilman:

PSA for anyone who was at DragonCon….. one of the vendors (and a few other people, I’m hearing) have come down with chicken pox.  

If you’re feeling even lightly run down or ‘off’ - you might want to see a doctor.

Damnitall - reblogging for awareness. This notice is for DragonCon 2018.

As I know some of my mutuals went to Dragoncon, please be careful!
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fyeahcopyright:

If you’re a longtime reader (first-time caller) of FYeahCopyright, you’ll know that we’re not the alarmist sort. We don’t traffic in rumors, and we look at the cases and the laws (or proposals) that we discuss. 

That being said, if you’re a citizen of an EU country, it’s time to get cranky with your representatives, and hope that we can change things around re certain copyright laws that are expected to pass in January when they’re up for a final vote. 

Here’s a summary of what will change on the internet if the final vote affirms today’s vote. 

In the US, companies have grown in and by hosting user-created content – fanfic, memes, photos, videos, audio clips, VR and so much more – but the EU regulation includes NO exception/carve out/safe harbor for user generated content, or works in the public domain (France, for example, has Moral Rights rules that apply re authors of public domain works). But hey, certain corporations are happy because it creates new rights for sports events, and some new rights for publishers.  

There is a carve-out for “non-commercial” entities including “encyclopaedias” – but not databases or other informational resources, nor creative content. The battles will be fought over the definitions – and there could be a separate battle in each country. 

The tech doesn’t exist to support whatever it is the EU is trying to do – the same way the tech isn’t there to support certain aspects of the GDPR (like deletion requests without authenticating identity (see Spotify’s issues of this week)). Will all sites have to buy/lease/subscribe to whatever algorithms and filters Google has created? (Will Google create a “free to nonprofits & schools & maybe certain governments” provision like the one they’ve done for Google ads? Should sites share data with Google to be in compliance with the laws of every EU country?)

Even now, algorithmic filters can’t figure out what qualifies as parody (and with each EU country having a different definition…. oy!). Will the filters be used to curtail free speech, or surveil users, or engage in corporate espionage (or any other type)? 

Here’s what Cory Doctrow wrote about the impact of this law on all the content we create and share. One bit of it is this: 

We’ll fight in Europe’s courts, too: there’s no way that asking multinational corporations to send all of our communications to American data-centres to be analysed by algorithms and arbitrarily censored passes European constitutional muster.We’ll fight in the 28 European parliaments when they sit to make national legislation.We’ll fight in the upcoming elections. Hell, even if we’d won tonight’s fight, we’d have to keep fighting.The fight to keep the internet free and open isn’t a fight you win, it’s a fight you commit yourself to.

Here’s what my friends at Public Knowledge have to say:

Web services large and small might decide to implement the directive globally, which would diminish American users’ capacity to share memes, political satire, or news articles online. 

Will this Directive apply to all websites? 

No, “small” companies and nonprofits with under 50 employees and under 10 million euros on their balance sheets won’t have to be in full compliance on the filters, etc. However, any site that uses a cloud-based service like AWS (Amazon) or Google’s Cloud for storing files could find that usage massively limited because Amazon, Google, etc., are definitely not small companies, which would increase the cost for sites to stay online, get server space, etc. 

It’s almost impossible to really calculate the impact on sites like GoodReads, Pinterest, (Lyrics) Genius, etc.

And if you’re wondering what impact Fair Use will have, well, unfortunately, Fair Use – the way we know it in the US, the way it’s used by Fanfiction.net and @wattpad and @ao3org – doesn’t exist in Europe; while the 2001 EU Copyright Directive includes a list of copyright infringement exceptions, a 2015 White Paper recommended that EU countries expand from ‘fair dealing’ to Fair Use and allow flexibility in the interpretation of exceptions and limitations, that flexibility doesn’t currently exist. If it did, some of the problems created by today’s vote would be mitigated. 

SO SHOULD WE PANIC NOW? 

No. If you’re a citizen (or resident) of an EU country, reach out to your reps. Explain to them how this law will impact you personally; tell  your story. Get involved with a national organization that is fighting against this law, and one that’s ready to push back against it in the courts – especially where it can curtail free speech, which is a fundamental right held by all EU residents. 

Pushing against this Directive doesn’t mean you support piracy or counterfeiting of creative works like films, books or photographs. It means, though, that you want creativity, science, communications and education to thrive online, just as they have for almost thirty years. 
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lauraannegilman:

dduane:

mostlysignssomeportents:

Lobbyists for “creators” threw their lot in with the giant entertainment
companies and the newspaper proprietors and managed to pass the new EU
Copyright Directive by a hair’s-breadth this morning, in an act of
colossal malpractice to harm to working artists will only be exceeded by
the harm to everyone who uses the internet for everything else.

Here’s what the EU voted in favour of this morning:

* Upload filters: Everything you post, from short text snippets to
stills, audio, video, code, etc will be surveilled by copyright bots run
by the big platforms. They’ll compare your posts to databases of
“copyrighted works” that will be compiled by allowing anyone to claim
copyright on anything, uploading thousands of works at a time. Anything
that appears to match the “copyright database” is blocked on sight, and
you have to beg the platform’s human moderators to review your case to
get your work reinstated.

* Link taxes: You can’t link to a news story if your link text includes more than a single word
from the article’s headline. The platform you’re using has to buy a
license from the news site, and news sites can refuse licenses, giving
them the right to choose who can criticise and debate the news.

* Sports monopolies: You can’t post any photos or videos from sports
events – not a selfie, not a short snippet of a great goal. Only the
“organisers” of events have that right. Upload filters will block any
attempt to violate the rule.

Here’s what they voted against:

* “Right of panorama”: the right to post photos of public places despite
the presence of copyrighted works like stock arts in advertisements,
public statuary, or t-shirts bearing copyrighted images. Even the
facades of buildings need to be cleared with their architects (not with the owners of the buildings).

* User generated content exemption: the right to use small excerpt from
works to make memes and other
critical/transformative/parodical/satirical works.

Having passed the EU Parliament, this will now be revised in secret,
closed-door meetings with national governments (“the trilogues”) and
then voted again next spring, and then go to the national governments
for implementation in law before 2021. These all represent chances to
revise the law, but they will be much harder than this fight
was. We can also expect lawsuits in the European high courts over these
rules: spying on everyone just isn’t legal under European law, even if
you’re doing it to “defend copyright.”

In the meantime, what a disaster for creators. Not only will be we liable to having our independently produced materials arbitrarily censored by overactive filters,
but we won’t be able to get them unstuck without the help of big
entertainment companies. These companies will not be gentle in wielding
their new coercive power over us (entertainment revenues are up, but the share going to creators is down:
if you think this is unrelated to the fact that there are only four or
five major companies in each entertainment sector, you understand nothing about economics).

But of course, only an infinitesimal fraction of the material on the
platforms is entertainment related. Your birthday wishes and funeral
announcements, little league pictures and political arguments, wedding
videos and online educational materials are also going to be
filtered by these black-box algorithms, and you’re going to have to get
in line with all the other suckers for attention from a human moderator
at one of the platforms to plead your case.

The entertainment industry figures who said that universal surveillance
and algorithmic censorship were necessary for the continuation of
copyright have done more to discredit copyright than all the pirate
sites on the internet combined. People like their TV, but they use their
internet for so much more.

It’s like the right-wing politicians who spent 40 years describing
roads, firefighting, health care, education and Social Security as
“socialism,” and thereby created a generation of people who don’t
understand why they wouldn’t be socialists, then. The copyright
extremists have told us that internet freedom is the same thing as
piracy. A generation of proud, self-identified pirates can’t be far
behind. When you make copyright infringement into a political act, a
blow for freedom, you sign your own artistic death-warrant.

This idiocy was only possible because:

* No one involved understands the internet: they assume that because
their Facebook photos auto-tag with their friends’ names, that someone
can filter all the photos ever taken and determine which ones violate
copyright;

* They tied mass surveillance to transferring a few mil from Big Tech to
the newspaper shareholders, guaranteeing wall-to-wall positive coverage
(I’m especially ashamed that journalists supported this lunacy – we
know you love free expression, folks, we just wish you’d share);

What comes next? Well, the best hope is probably a combination of a
court challenge, along with making this an election issue for the 2019
EU elections. No MEP is going to campaign for re-election by saying “I
did this amazing copyright thing!” From experience, I can tell you that no one cares what their lawmakers are doing with copyright.

On the other hand, there are tens of millions of voters who will vote
against a candidate who “broke the internet.” Not breaking the internet
is very important to voters, and the wider populace has proven
itself to be very good at absorbing abstract technical concepts when
they’re tied to broken internets (87% of Americans have a) heard of Net
Neutrality and; b) support it).

I was once involved in a big policy fight where one of the stakes was
the possibility that broadcast TV watchers would have to buy a small
device to continue watching TV. Politicians were terrified of
this proposition: they knew that the same old people who vote like crazy
also watch a lot of TV and wouldn’t look favourably on anyone who
messed with it.

We’re approaching that point with the internet. The danger of internet
regulation is that every problem involves the internet and every poorly
thought-through “solution” ripples out through the internet, creating
mass collateral damage; the power of internet regulation is that every
day, more people are invested in not breaking the internet, for their
own concrete, personal, vital reasons.

This isn’t a fight we’ll ever win. The internet is the nervous system of
this century, tying together everything we do. It’s an irresistible
target for bullies, censors and well-intentioned fools. Even if the EU
had voted the other way this morning, we’d still be fighting tomorrow,
because there will never be a moment at which some half-bright, fully
dangerous policy entrepreneur isn’t proposing some absurd way of solving
their parochial problem with a solution that will adversely affect
billions of internet users around the world.

This is a fight we commit ourselves to. Today, we suffered a terrible,
crushing blow. Our next move is to explain to the people who suffer as a
result of the entertainment industry’s depraved indifference to the
consequences of their stupid ideas how they got into this situation, and
get them into the streets, into the polling booths, and into the fight.

https://boingboing.net/2018/09/12/vichy-nerds-2.html

Furious about this vote. I foresee a lot of leaning on my MEPs in the near future. And further.

Damn it all!

JFC, EU.  (I mean, it’s kinda nice that for once it’s not the USA fucking things up, but this is just global kinds of expensive, bite-you-on-the-ass stupidity.  And guess who suffers for it?  All of us.)
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queenoftherebels:

“I’ve always wanted to be able to refer to myself as a dame. Small D. Dame with a capital D is even more thrilling. I was, however, disappointed it didn’t come with a castle. I plan to go on being very difficult, just in case anyone was wondering if it might shut me up.”

Huge congratulations Emma Thompson, who was made a Dame in the Queen’s Birthday Honours (9th June, 2018)
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nancywheehler:

moodboards ➳ ravenclaw

“where those of wit and learning,
will always find their kind.”
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thorthepiratangel:

“I think that up until my arrival in Thor’s universe, it has been lacking the presence of someone who takes the world seriously” - Taika Waititi
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orzula:

HAPPY PRIDE MONTH, WITCHES 🏳️‍🌈🏳️‍🌈🏳️‍🌈
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unknownpoliticalobject:

asthesea-breezehitsmylungs:

Also, I’m in Europe and ngl, had no idea this was even an article up for debate let alone it being fucking passed.

Don’t panic! This was expected at this stage and it is only the beginning. If you are a European and feel passionate about this, please keep on reading and help!

So what has happened so far … the Commission has drafted up a long overdue copyright reform. https://eur-lex.europa.eu/procedure/EN/2016_280 It contains a lot of good, and some bad: mainly Article 11 and 13.

This was put forward as a whole to the European Parlament, where it was voted down on the 5th of July 2018

This meant, this will not go through the fast way, and will be subject to scrutiny and change. 

The Commission made some alterations https://eur-lex.europa.eu/procedure/EN/2016_280 and put it forward again. If Parlament would have voted it down again, it probably would have meant back to the drawing board, but most people (including me) agree that Europe does need copyright reform, so on the second vote it passed the first step:

So what happens now? 

This will now go into what is called the Trilogue, where Commission, Parlament and representatives of all national governments will sit together to make alterations until everybody is happy implementing the regulation.

This means we can now influence this via our MEPs and our National Government!

In countries that are red your government is likely to support Article 13.

What to do now?

There are a lot of organisations that organise actions against article 13. Check out their websites and get in touch with your MEP or local government and let them know you are unhappy about this.

https://www.saveyourinternet.eu/ 

https://epicenter.works/

https://www.changecopyright.org/

https://juliareda.eu/eu-copyright-reform/

… and many many more, just google to find one in your country.

Also, as @asthesea-breezehitsmylungs pointed out, a lot of people are not aware of this going on. So make them aware! Share the memes and point them to the petitions. And don’t just complain how shit this is, get in touch with your politicians!
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katedniels:

The time to fight is now.

Rogue One: A Star Wars Story (2016) dir. Gareth Edwards
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What’s better than surprise packages from friends? Surprise packages of #vegan #crueltyfree #nerd goodies by @geekyclean from friends. BEST surprise.
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elviratheshow:

Elvira 
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lupitalover:

This beautiful ass man
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