Wednesday, June 15, 2016

Brexit: It's Your Vote And Your Life

If UK voters are looking of another reason to for leaving the EU, here it is. We have no connection with Google or any other Internet news provider. We challenge anyone to prove otherwise.

In fact, Google recently censored us for 16 days for writing material like what we've been writing here since we first began. We defy them, Google, to deny what we just wrote. The censor came without reason. This is about the liberty of the Internet., keeping it out of the hands of indifferent, distant bureaucrats, and at large you're own personal liberty.

 We’ve written plenty of times about ridiculous European plans to create a so-called “snippet tax” which is more officially referred to as “ancillary rights” (and is really just about creating a tax on Google).
The basic concept is that some old school newspapers are so lazy and have so failed to adapt to the internet — and so want to blame Google for their own failures — that they want to tax any aggregator (e.g., Google) that links to their works with a snippet, that doesn’t pay for the privilege of sending those publishers traffic. As you may remember, Germany has been pushing for such a thing for many, many years, and Austria has been exploring it as well. But perhaps the most attention grabbing move was the one in Spain, which not only included a snippet tax, but made it mandatory. That is, even if you wanted Google News to link to you for free, you couldn’t get that. In response, Google took the nuclear option and shut down Google News in Spain. A study showed that this law has actually done much to harm Spanish publishers, but the EU pushes on, ridiculously.

As discussed a year ago, some in the EU Commission are all for creating an EU-wide snippet tax, and as ridiculous and counterproductive as that is, the Commission is about to make a decision on it, and the public consultation on the issue is about to close (it ends tomorrow). Thankfully, many, many different groups have set up nice and easy systems to understand and respond to the consultation — which you should do. Here are just a few options:
zerohedge.com/news/2016-06-15/eu-wants-impose-tax-sharing-links-internet

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