The proposed laws, which could have required the likes of Reddit to filter content and forced a so-called link tax on firms including Google, have been sent back to the drawing board.
Scooped by
Guillaume Decugis
onto Content curation trends July 6, 2018 6:55 AM
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This rejected law project targeted to amend copyright law in a very restrictive way at the request of copyright owners and publishing groups. Among its most controversial points was the limitation of the right to link to a web page - a complete nonsense in my opinion which would have been going against the very nature of the Web.
But apparently some people still have common sense to resist lobby groups at the European parliament. Which makes it another victory for content curators as well as a sign that online content curation is more and more established as a publishing practice.