French Three-Strikes Law Ruled Unconstitutional 195
An anonymous reader was one of several to write with this news: "The French 'Conseil Constitutionnel' just ruled that the recently voted 'Hadopi' law, which enforces a 'three strikes and you're out' system, is actually unconstitutional [article in French; here's an English-language article at Ars]. They mainly make two points: 1) They argue that removing Internet access is equivalent to hindering a person's freedom of speech, and as such can only be decided by appointed judges. This removes all punitive power from the administrative body supposed to enforce the three-strikes rule; all it can do now is warn you that 'they're watching you.' 2) When illegal filesharing is detected, users have to prove their innocence. This is obviously contrary to the constitutional principle of presumption of innocence."
Good News For Once (Score:5, Interesting)
The French "Conseil Constitutionnel" is a joke compared to the US Supreme Court, but for once they made the right decision.
At a minimum, the right to defend yourself and face your accuser was sorely lacking from the "3-strike" legislation. The French legal system already has the equivalent of the US small claims court, so there was no reason for the ISPs to become judges.
The other good news is that the court is basing its decision on the fact that a right to communication (speech, really, if you translate into US constitution lingo) includes the right to access the Internet. That's pretty cool potentially!
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pour les developpeurs qui n'habitent pas dans la Silicon Valley: FairSoftware [fairsoftware.net]
Re:Good News For Once (Score:5, Informative)
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Nope, there are treaties in force and directives (Score:2)
The EU passes directives (between the Council, Commission and Parliament), that have to be implemented by national legislative bodies. The European Court of Justice (not ECHR) rules on European directives and their implementation.
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> ...[while] the [S]upreme [C]ourt is a judicial body, ruling over a court case.
The U.S. Supreme Court's function is to interpret the U.S. Constitution, not to hear general court cases. The appeal of court cases that involve novel interpretations of the Constitution, and that haven't already been adequately addressed by the Court, may be reviewed by the Court at its sole discretion.
Re:Good News For Once (Score:5, Informative)
Wrong, the United States Supreme Court can review and declare a law unconstitutional.
Only in connection with a court case brought by an entitled petitioner.
Re:Good News For Once (Score:4, Insightful)
Which is a MAJOR problem. You have to knowingly break the bad law and then take it to the Supreme Court on your own dime. If they disagree with you, you go to jail.
Re:Good News For Once (Score:5, Informative)
But SCOTUS can only rule a law unconstitutional based on a court case. Someone affected by the law must sue the appropriate government entity before any court can rule on it.
For example, in the original case that led to D.C. v Heller [wikipedia.org] from last year, the plaintiffs had to have applied for a firearm permit under the current system, and been denied. Then the denial would be the basis of the case.
Re:Good News For Once (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah, unfortunately our three branches system lacks an entity charged with removing laws with no effect.
The courts won't do it. Congress doesn't care. The executive likes them because they can threaten people with them, or ruin someone's life with them, then drop the case before it gets to the court and is thrown out.
A fourth body, who job it was to review all laws, and propose a list each year (based on criteria like "law on the books for a decade with no convictions based on it" or similar) that would be automatically stripped from US code unless congress and the president specifically re-approved and re-signed them.
That should be one of congress's jobs, but they have no interest in spending time on "old business".
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Yeah, unfortunately our three branches system lacks an entity charged with removing laws with no effect.
You don't need a "fourth body" for this. You need to pass a "sunset law" that basically says, "all laws which have not been used [by some standard to be decided] within a given time period [say 20 years] are null and void unless specifically re-approved"
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unless specifically re-approved
So once a decade someone passes an omnibus bill containing all the existing legislation. They'll justify it based on just one out the 50,000 laws set to expire, and say "This one is important, we can't let this go... and there are many more like it. Lets renew all of them just to be safe... thinkofthechildren! terrorists. 9-11. 9-11.
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There really does need to be a "sunset law" for all laws, a "fourth body", or even one committee in congress that focuses on repealing or revising outdated laws in national, state, and local governing bodies.
There really is no reason for whaling to be illegal in so many land-locked US states.
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Totally agree. I would like to be able to buy booze before noon on Sunday in Texas...because the only time the lines are short at the grocery store is when the locals are praying.
Re:Good News For Once (Score:4, Interesting)
I could imagine some important laws like those relating to treason or war-time crimes might not get used much but they still need to be on the books. You'll have to figure something out to handle those cases in your sunset law.
Also keep in mind that most modern law is really a delta/patch that gets applied to the United States Code (USC), so automatically repealing a law gets tricky if other laws have later amended or reference it.
(Laws older than about 50(?) years are generally not in the USC, but there is a current government project to repeal those laws and pass replacements into the USC. My understanding is that they annually send a bill with their latest work through congress and the bill almost always passes. Nevertheless, they still have quite a backlog. A project to remove unneeded laws could work the same way but would likely have the same slow pace and backlog. It would also be more politically charged (i.e. who gets to choose what laws are "unneeded").)
Finally, I wonder we could get some inspiration from the mechanisms the military uses for keeping the Uniform Military Code of Justice (UMCJ) up to date. My understanding is that the UMCJ is remarkably un-crufty due to the military revising it as needed.
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Personally, I favor mandatory sunset clauses. Any law which can't maintain a simple majority vote in its favor gets thrown out automatically after so many years. Repealing a law before it expires should require no more than a 2/3 majority at two suitably-spaced sessions; actually passing a new law should require the maintenance of at least a 4/5 majority for three sessions.
Re:Good News For Once (Score:4, Insightful)
The problem with that attitude is that by the time you can start the process of removing a bad law, it's already done damage. I'd prefer the approach where the stupidity isn't allowed to happen in the first place - no-one gets hurt and less resources are spent.
Also, if a law has no effect, then IMO it should be gotten rid of. It will still cause unnecessary overhead by having to be checked for effect in potentially related cases.
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This isn't really a problem is the government would stick to their roles and follow the constitution. The constitution says they have to swear an oath to uphold and protect it as well as making it clear that all laws have to be in accordance with i
Re:Good News For Once (Score:4, Interesting)
Actually, it isn't vague at all. The problem there is that society has moved and definitions as well as writing styles have changed since the time of it's writing. This means that in order to understand the meanings, you have to get into the time it was written and verify it by the debate surrounding the clauses.
The argument against the bill of rights was similar in both directions too. One common argument against the bill of right basically stated that the bill of right was unnecessary because the constitution specified what the Federal government was allowed to do and without it being allowed to do more, then obviously protecting people against what the government can't do is unnecessary.
I other words, the constitution itself was supposed to be the exclusive list of what the government was allowed or required to do where the bill of rights was the most obvious concerns over potential abuse.
Now, if the government would stick to their constitutional role and limits, a lot of the laws on the books would have been impossible to implement. Also the vagueness wouldn't have been an issue because lawmakers would all be informed of not only the meanings but the intent of the constitution and it's amendments.
I remember watching the news when Samuel Alito was being confirmed to the SCOTUS and they interviewed some California congress women who said they needed to take the hearing seriously because they can't have a court judge ruling everything congress does unconstitutional- congress can't do the work of the people that way. It's obvious to me that some need a refresher course in what the constitution is and what it means.
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Actually, it isn't vague at all.
Really?
Is prohibiting personal possession of a few ounces of marijuana "necessary and proper" for regulating interstate commerce? I think it's not. Congress, The President, and The Supreme Court thinks it is. Who's being unreasonable?
Why did the Supreme Court order a rehearing of Brown v. Board of Education and related cases on the grounds of determining what was intended by the 14th Amendment, only to not reach any real conclusion? ("This discussion and our own investigation
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If you don't want to break even an unjust law, then it does affect you.
Let's say you wanted a "speech code" law overturned. The only way to do that, other than lobbying for the legislature to repeal the law, is to break the law by speaking in an illegal manner, and getting arrested. At this time, you now have recourse to try to get the law overturned. This is essentially what happened with the famous Scopes Trial [wikipedia.org]. John Scopes intentionally broke the law by teaching evolution, for the purpose of testing the
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It depends on the law and how it is written. A speech l
Re:Good News For Once (Score:5, Informative)
Except that's exactly the opposite of what did happen, isn't it? People who tried to challenge the law had their case thrown out because they couldn't prove that they had been subject to a warrantless wiretap. They were in a catch-22 because the government wouldn't confirm that the plaintiffs had been wiretapped, refusing subpoenas from the plaintiffs on national security grounds, and the court wouldn't give the plaintiffs standing unless they could prove it had happened to them.
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They were in a catch-22 because the government wouldn't confirm that the plaintiffs had been wiretapped, refusing subpoenas from the plaintiffs on national security grounds, and the court wouldn't give the plaintiffs standing unless they could prove it had happened to them.
Thank goodness for the incompetence of the government, then, since the geniuses accidentally delivered transcripts of tapped phone calls to the group they had been tapping. LOL [cbsnews.com].
And that means you're taking a risk. (Score:5, Informative)
Let's say you wanted a "speech code" law overturned. The only way to do that, other than lobbying for the legislature to repeal the law, is to break the law by speaking in an illegal manner, and getting arrested. At this time, you now have recourse to try to get the law overturned.
And that puts you at risk: You have to carry through and win - which may take years and millions of dollars. Unless you win (and UNTIL you win) your rights are reduced because of the accusation of lawbreaking and the ongoing legal proceeding. And if you lose (or drop out) you also have a penalty applied for your "criminal behavior" in breaking the law in order to obtain the standing to argue for its unconstitutionality.
Not only that, but you have to take it all the way to the supreme court to make it stick nationally (or you and others have to take it to the appellate level in all of the federal circuits). And you have to LOSE at the trial level (and either lose at the appellate level or win but have the prosecutor appeal your win) to get to the supremes. And you have to have the prosecutor keep pushing rather than throw in the towel on your PARTICULAR case - something he may not do if you're fighting back and have a good point. And at the appellate level it may take two passes - once with a three-judge subset, a second time with the full set. Also: Once you've lost at the appellate level there's no guarantee that the Supremes will agree to hear the case - and they usually won't unless there are divergent rulings on two near-identical cases in two appellate districts.
To get through that process you need some people typically more expert in law than you to think that you're wrong. So that means your case has to be iffy. Which means you might not win even if you navigate the maze correctly and the Supremes deign to spend time on you. You're playing "court roulette" with only one empty chamber in the revolver.
I think this is one piece of politics/law where the French have a better idea.
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As the saying goes: "Freedom isn't Free." It takes someone standing up and defending freedom. Sometimes that is on a battlefield with a gun. Sometimes its in a jail cell waiting for a court date.
Agreed.
Yet it would be nice if there were a way to bring a constitutional test of a law to court without having to bet your life, fortune, and sacred honor to do it.
After all, the congresscritters can pass as many unconstitutional laws as they think they can get away with just by doing a few hours of office work -
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Depends what you mean by affected.
I think that the data retention laws is a violation of my privacy, and therefore effect me.
But the courts do not see it that way.
I also think all the internetfilters is a violation of freedom of speech.
That also will not be easy to take to court.
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Just because the court doesn't see it the same as you doesn't mean the system is broke. It more likely you don't understand your free speech rights or rights to privacy.
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Man, you're stupid. Effect does indeed mean bring about, but that's the same as cause. It sure as hell doesn't mean influence or change. By some coincidence that's surely down to a conspiracy against you, that's precisely what the other spelling means.
By the way, the adjectival form (and past participle) of "force" is "forced". This isn't exactly a rare construction.
Just admit you were wrong and get over it. Really, being a barely literate and fairly ignorant cunt is one thing, but don't try and deny i
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Re:Good News For Once (Score:5, Informative)
France uses civil law which means a court's decision is not a law, the US uses common law so deciding a court case there can very well make a new law. So in the US being a court implies being able to make or remove laws while in France that's a separate set of permissions.
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Wrong, the United States Supreme Court can review and declare a law unconstitutional.
Only when it's through the appeal of a court case. You know, sort of what the GP said.
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...those [U.S. Supreme Court] cases set precedent for future interactions with that law.
Which is actually a significant difference from the French model of civil law [wikipedia.org]. French civil law lacks the concept of precedent, at least in theory, while English common law (from which the U.S. system draws) embraces it. For example, the concept of a corporation as a "person" is a product of centuries(?) old common law, despite no legislation dictating it. In France, that result would have to be explicitly legislated.
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French civil law lacks the concept of precedent, at least in theory, while English common law (from which the U.S. system draws) embraces it.
Ah. So in the French system, a case is decided on it merits, rather than which prior case it happens to be most similar to ?
Re:Good News For Once (Score:4, Interesting)
Exactly.
I don't really know which system I prefer. The French system evaluating laws without a court challenge is, in my opinion, better than the U.S. approach of requiring a court challenge, since a court challenge requires a lot of effort by a single person for marginal personal benefit. "Squeaky wheel gets the grease" is not a cliché I like to see when it comes to the law. On the other hand, there are some cases where the ability of justices to effectively dictate freedoms and rights without worrying about the next election allow for progress that might otherwise not accomplished by the legislature in a reasonable period of time. Many of the decisions of the Warren Court not only predated legislation, but may have pushed Congress into action it might otherwise have avoided.
One significant advantage to civil law is the comparative simplicity. Yes, the laws tend to be more extensive, but they are theoretically less ambiguous, easier to reference, etc. The sheer volume of training and research required to be a lawyer in a common law system means that talented people are taken from productive work to apply the law, and the costs are commensurately higher without the long term benefits they might create in a research, engineering or even artistic discipline. By contrast, lawyers in a civil law system, while still requiring a certain minimum ability, need not be the best and brightest the country has to offer, and constitute a lower "overhead" cost to maintain the legal system.
Re:Good News For Once (Score:5, Insightful)
lets hope that (the world) takes this further and embraces the right to encrypted speech as well as free speech.
you know what I'm referring to. those that listen in, just because they're too bored or unable to find the real 'bad guys'.
if internet access is a 'right' then the ability to communicate without some 3rd party listening in should also be a right.
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An usual, when someone does not mention special cases (eg the encrypted access), the global version (all kinds of access) is assumed.
Besides, who says that "garbage data" is no "speech", when accessing the Internet is part of the freedom of speech?
So let me freely say,
-----BEGIN PGP MESSAGE-----
Version: GnuPG v2.0.11 (GNU/Linux)
(Filter error: That's an awful long string of letters there.)
-----END PGP MESSAGE-----
Re:Good News For Once (Score:5, Informative)
To clarify a bit, the "Conseil Constitutionnel" in France is supposed to check that new laws respect the principles of the French Constitution, which is supposed to respect the principles of the "Men and Citizens's Right Declaration" from 1789.
From now Internet in France is recongnized as a fundamental right, associated to the right to communicate freely.
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It's more likely to end up as a nasty positive right than as a defense of free speech.
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Since when has France moved away from the "guilty until proven innocent" stance?
Apparently, from doing the unthinkable (reading TFA), since "the Declaration of 1789". I'm going to have to go to wikipedia to see when that was passed.
right again (Score:5, Interesting)
Excellent. Yet more proof that p2p users have the weight of ethics on their side.
Re:right again (Score:5, Funny)
Not all p2p users are ethical. Some don't seed.
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And these are the people the RIAA don't go after.
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Any forms? So, according to you, I'm unethical for using apt-p2p for my Ubuntu updates?
I'm pretty sure that's not what he's saying, at all. He's simply pointing out that just because something is legal, does not necessarily make it ethical. Basically, whether or not something is legal, has little, if anything, to do with whether it is ethical.
apt-p2p'ing is ethical whether it's legal or not.
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> apt-p2p'ing is ethical whether it's legal or not.
Ooh.. you're making a bold claim there. If you're on a shared connection, which you are if you have residental cable/DSL, your apt-p2p:ing causes harm to your neighbour's bandwidth. Sure, the fault is at the ISP for oversubscribing lines, but when you are aware of that fact, wouldn't your apt-p2p:ing then be unethical?
I know that this is splitting hairs, but you simply can't go claim something is ethical like that without thinking. Now, I haven't really
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Ooh.. you're making a bold claim there.
Yeah. It is a little more broad than I intended.
Now, I haven't really figured out who decides what is ethical or not, but I'm pretty sure it's not you.
Well... Yeah, I do decide what is ethical, for me. So does everyone else. Even if there were some sort of oracle which could tell me the ethical thing to do, I'd have to make the choice to act upon it, which would require some sort of meta-ethics. Those meta-ethics couldn't come from the oracle (because I'm still trying to decide if I should listen to it at all); they are internal to myself. So, yeah, ultimately, I decide what is ethical, for me. And, you for
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By your logic using any bandwidth harms by neighbor's bandwidth, and thus any internet use is unethical. That argument is on its face nonsense, and thus your reasoning is as well.
It was unethical for the ISP to oversubscribe their lines. I do not know if my neighbors have internet access from the same ISP or not; it is not unethical in and of itself to use a product I've purchased. How I'm using it (in this case, meaning the content I send or receive) might matter, but merely using the bandwidth does not
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Strawman alert!
Nope, I didn't say that any usage is unethical. Compare this to a party, where the host has provided a piece of cake for everyone. It's not polite to gobble up half the cake when there are lots of people to share. We can of course argue that host (ISP) is not a good host for not providing all the cake (bandwidth) you can eat.
Same with ISPs, they provide enough bandwidth for basic usage, but if you are going to serve out half of Ubuntu's updates, it's polite to pay for a pipe that is designed
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Reading non-comprehension alert!
Your argument is bullshytt. If the ISP sells me a 'Unlimited Internet access' it cannot be unethical of me to make unlimited use of it when any externalities result from the ISP's fraud (oversubscribing). The ISP isn't offering my neighborhood a fixed amount of bandwidth (that is what they are delivering, but it is NOT what they are trying to sell).
Your cake analogy would be more accurate if the host said "Eat all the cake you want, I've got tons of it in the freezer." The
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I'm paying for the bandwidth, therefore it is ethical for me to use it. Now if I were to go to the neighborhood cable patch box and re-arrange a few jumpers so I get *more* bandwidth than I'm subscribed for, that would be unethical. If I were to deliberately spam my neighbor's router with tailored packets so that it fell off the Internet, that would also be unethical.
Using a communications service that I have contracted to buy at specific rates and terms is ethical for me. It may not have been ethical for t
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You're deliberately mis-quoting. You posted "Any and all", but disputed "any". Yes, there are legitimate forms of p2p. There are also unethical forms of p2p. As GP said, not ALL forms are ethical.
Karma bonus foregone, 'cuz I'm just correcting a dumb-ass, not contributing anything useful.
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Wow my first Slashdot troll in years of being a member.
I have to admit, if I didn't have the word "all" in there, this is easy misinterpret. It's my fault for using the word "any" for emphasis.
Why? To be fair, if I had said "deluded to think any P2P is ethical", it can be ambiguous. It can be interpreted that "thinking there exists an ethical form of P2P is delusional".
On the other hand I used the word "are", which to me implies that "any" in this case is interchangeable with "all". And it should convey to
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Reading comprehension fail!
"ANY AND ALL" is an idiomatic phrase in English which loosely means "EVERY"
"ANY AND ALL" \approx "EVERY"
Get it now?
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Yet more proof that p2p users have the weight of ethics on their side.
Er, no. This has nothing to do with a person who is illegally downloading music/movies/etc. being ethical in any way, only that such a person should be treated the same way as anyone else accused of a crime, i.e. they are assumed to be innocent until they are found guilty by a court, and only a court can remove their rights upon finding them guilty.
pretty good week for people (Score:5, Insightful)
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Bad week if you are trying to force your failing business model to stay relevant like the RIAA
I don't know, my "I'll trade you a handmade spear for that hamburger" buisiness is actually doing much better this week.
Sorry (Score:5, Insightful)
Court's self interest (Score:3, Insightful)
It sort of makes sense, when you think about it. Why should the courts cede power to a non-judicial "administrative body" to rule against people. Stands to reason the courts would like a monopoly on those types of judgements.
Re:Court's self interest (Score:5, Informative)
Except that the Conseil Constitutionnel is not a court.
whats to stop (Score:2)
American perspective (Score:5, Interesting)
When a 3 strikes law passes here in the US, I wouldn't expect such a good result from our courts. The first problem is that freedom of speech in America doesn't guarantee you access to a forum to be heard. Second, there is no presumption of innocence in our Constitution. The closest we get is a right to trial by jury, but that only applies in criminal proceedings.
Re:American perspective (Score:5, Informative)
Second, there is no presumption of innocence in our Constitution.
The words "presumption of innocence" are not in the U.S. constitution, but it does guarantee "due process" in the fifth amendment.
The U.S. constitution was not written in a legal/historical/social vacuum, although, based on my first-hand experience talking with knowledgeable Americans, many of them seem to presume that the Founding Fathers were the first to invent or recognize the rights guaranteed in the constitution. But it is basically about guaranteeing rights that Englishmen had but that the American colonists were being denied. The U.S. Founding Fathers were quite insistent that they had certain "rights as Englishmen" that they were being unfairly denied.
So "due process" is not a meaningless phrase in the constitution - it means the sorts of process and protections that were common in the English system (i.e. common law), which is the inheritance of the U.S. and other countries, like Canada.
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Not believing that there is a god is different from believing that there is no god. The latter is atheism, the former is 'not believing in God(s)'. So no I'm not saying that that is a religion. That is, in fact, agnosticism.
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The difference here would be on the lack of adjudication. Any penalties imposed by a law has to have an adjudication where those effected can argue their innocence and contest the claims. There are even lines of thought that civil and punitive penalties outside the actual loss requires a criminal trial to fit with the constitution.
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When a 3 strikes law passes here in the US, I wouldn't expect such a good result from our courts.
The difference is that three-strikes laws in the US (at least the ones I've heard about) are about three convictions by a court, not three accusations by a private company. I'm not saying I agree with any three-strikes laws in the US, but at least they do go through the judicial system.
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The closest we get is a right to trial by jury, but that only applies in criminal proceedings.
Presumption of innocence is inherent in the burden of proof, which even for a civil trial is still the preponderance of evidence. If the prosecution/plaintiff can't present any evidence that you are guilty/at fault then there's no reason for you to present evidence that you are innocent, because that is in fact the assumption barring evidence to the contrary.
So yeah. Presumption of innocence is indeed part of our
Clarification (Score:2)
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I would agree only to the extent that there are multiple ISP's in your area which aren't operating because of a grant of the public.
In many locations, the only high speed ISPs are those who have public utility status and therefore have access rights that get past some of the technical restrictions barring competitors. Cable internet and Phone company DSL are examples of this.
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In many locations, the only high speed ISPs are those who have public utility status and therefore have access rights that get past some of the technical restrictions barring competitors.
Who does the blame lie with for these circumstances? The ISPs, or the city government? Who is enforcing the monopoly? Should a company be forced to comply with government requests because the government is withholding property for its own purposes and creating the monopoly?
The solution is not to regulate the ISPs further, but to get rid of the regulation preventing competition from existing.
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In many cases, the ISPs. Most phone companies (DSL) and cable companies (cable Internet) would only run service in an area on the condition that the government would grant them exclusive access to the right-of-way for that kind of service. So for the government it wasn't a choice between giving the cable company exclusive access or leaving it open to competition, it was between granting them exclusive access or them not serving that area. The usual argument they made was that they needed a guaranteed custom
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In many cases, the ISPs. Most phone companies (DSL) and cable companies (cable Internet) would only run service in an area on the condition that the government would grant them exclusive access to the right-of-way for that kind of service.
What right does the government have to enforce such a condition? If I tell the mafia that I'll only deal with them if they exclude my competitors from their black market, am I to blame for the black market, or is the mafia?
Of course, if a community of property owners all agreed and signed a contract permitting exclusivity on their properties to one ISP, then they should be bound to that contract. It would have been foolish of them to sign such a contract without some exceptions in case the ISP tries to s
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The government doesn't enforce that condition. The ISPs enforce it through the courts, by suing the local government if it breaches the contract it signed with them.
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The solution is not to regulate the ISPs further, but to get rid of the regulation preventing competition from existing.
Yes... because regulations are the only barrier to entry. After all, it's dead easy to get the rights to lay your own copper, right? And I'm sure it doesn't cost very much to do that kind of infrastructure rollout...
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Yes... because regulations are the only barrier to entry.
It's the only force-backed barrier to entry, yes.
Given that nobody has a right to internet access, there can be no compelling an ISP to offer services in any area where it doesn't want to offer services.
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Given that nobody has a right to internet access
Getting back on topic, that's exactly opposite of what France just ruled; Internet access has become a necessary means of communication and therefore is a right of all people.
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It's the only force-backed barrier to entry, yes.
Uh, those aren't the only kind that lead to natural monopolies. Just FYI.
Honestly, you really need to take a basic course in economics... it'd do you some good.
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To answer in line,
The people, city and state governments. But only at their benefit which is why this isn't so important. If the ISP is there because of other agreements to benefit the community, then they can't or shouldn't take actions that counter that. It is the agreement that they benefited from all along after all.
Well, the answer actually goes through several agencies and governmen
Interesting development (Score:4, Insightful)
Gah, I've been too slow! (Score:2, Informative)
Ah well, I can't say I'm surprised that several people have been faster than myself to submit that story.
Anyway, since I'd be offtopic if I posted just to say that, here's a link to the reaction of the association "La Quadrature du Net", spearhead of opponents to the law: Hadopi is dead: "three strikes" buried by highest court. [laquadrature.net] They deserve credit for their hard work.
US Congress please pay attention (Score:3, Insightful)
I would much appreciate if US Congress took this to heart and forced ISPs to stop the anticompetitive behavior. Sure, if these corporations really want to charge exorbitant amounts for their top-tier services, that's their right as a business. But there is little reason to have such price gouging and consumer-abusive practices and horrible, out of date service. Yes, we have disadvantages like large rural expanses and suburban sprawl, but I would like to finally see some legal teeth put in place to get this country to where it should be.
Liberté, Egalité, Fraternité (Score:5, Interesting)
No presumption of innocence in France. (Score:3, Interesting)
There isn't a presumption of innocence.
There isn't quite a presumption of guilt either. As the wiki says:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Napoleonic_Code [wikipedia.org]
The possibility for justice to endorse lengthy remand periods was one reason why the Napoleonic Code was criticized for de facto presumption of guilt, particularly in common law countries. However, the legal proceedings certainly did not have de jure presumption of guilt; for instance, the juror's oath explicitly recommended that the jury did not betray the interests of the defendants, and took attention of the means of defense.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
In fact there is. The most supreme text in law is the Constitution, and its preamble is the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen [hrcr.org], which at article 9 states:
"As all persons are held innocent until they shall have been declared guilty, if arrest shall be deemed indispensable, all harshness not essential to the securing of the prisoner's person shall be severely repressed by law."
Re: (Score:2)
"As all persons are held innocent until they shall have been declared guilty,
Declared is a far cry from Proven.
Re:No presumption of innocence in France. (Score:4, Informative)
You are correct.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Government_of_France [wikipedia.org]
Apparently this changed in 1958.
A popular referendum approved the constitution of the French Fifth Republic in 1958, greatly strengthening the authority of the presidency and the executive with respect to Parliament.
The constitution does contain a bill of rights in itself, but its preamble mentions that France should follow the principles of the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen, as well as those of the preamble to the constitution of the Fourth Republic. This has been judged to imply that the principles laid forth in those texts have constitutional value, and that legislation infringing on those principles should be found unconstitutional if a recourse is filed before the Constitutional Council.[1] Also, a recent modification of the Constitution has added a reference in the preamble to an Environment charter that has full constitutional value.[2]
Among these foundational principles, one may cite: the equality of all citizens before law, and the rejection of special class privileges such as those that existed prior to the French Revolution; presumption of innocence; freedom of speech; freedom of opinion including freedom of religion; the guarantee of property against arbitrary seizure; the accountability of government agents to the citizenry.
the article repeats and enforces this later:
Trial by jury is virtually unknown in France, except for severe criminal cases which are the jurisdiction of the Courts of Assizes. A full Court is made up of a 3-judge panel and a petty jury of 9 jurors (vs. 12 jurors on appeal), who, together, render verdicts, and if a conviction is handed down, also determine a sentence. Jurors are selected at random from eligible voters. Pre-trial proceedings are inquisitorial by nature, but open court proceedings are adversarial. The burden of proof in criminal proceedings is on the prosecution, and the accused is constitutionally presumed innocent until proven guilty.
Reading here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Napoleonic_code [wikipedia.org]
It looks a little more complicated.
Bonaparte himself was against presumed guilt and for presumed innocence.
But, in practice, people could still be put into jail for long periods before the trial's preceeding serious crimes.
However, speaking from personal experience- in Texas, a person we found innocent (clearly innocent) had spent more than a year in jail for a medium crime (non-injury arson) because he couldn't afford jail. So effectively he was imprisoned for a year on a false accusation made by a convicted felon.
--
The summary is that presumption of innocence started under Bonaparte and grew in 1958. And people probably still sit in jail unable to make bail (just as they do elsewhere).
I'd always thought France had a presumption of guilt and *based* on Napoleon. I was completely wrong. Interesting.
Re: (Score:2)
Yes.. an evil typo... unfixable courtesy of /. 's lack of editing.
Stop the Presses! (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Presumed innocense? (Score:2)
Quote:
This is obviously contrary to the constitutional principle of presumption of innocence.
Question:
Does France have such a presumption?
Not trolling, I really don't know.
Art. 9 declaration of the right of man, 1789 (Score:3, Informative)
"tout homme etant presume innocent jusqu'a ce qu'il ait ete declare coupable..."
Oh, and /.: IMPLEMENT UTF-8
Re: (Score:2)
Declared is a far cry from Proven.
Re: (Score:2)
Considering (considérant) that most legal (légaux) terms (termes) of the English language (langage) come from French, I figured (figuré) it would be obvious.
Re:Art. 9 declaration of the right of man, 1789 (Score:4, Interesting)
See you can tell the parent poster really is French because he doesn't bother to translate the quote!
Come roots are so obvious:
the rest
So a literal translation is
Any man is presumed innocent until he has been declared guilty
Englishspeakers don't understand the chance they've got to master a language half germanic/half roman. You've got everything you need to decypher most western european languages.
Can we now go back to the correct name for fries? (Score:2)
Although, in this case "freedom" does indeed apply (without the sarcasm).
Re:So what? People stay at bat all day?? (Score:5, Funny)
Welcome to cricket...
Re: (Score:2)
I just figured the law was rejected because the French don't like an analogy to an American sport. Instead they will replace the "three strikes and you're out" law with a "one goal on each side and then you have a shootout" law.
Re: (Score:2)
Going with an English sport instead? Are you nuts?
I'm betting the French would dispute that just on principle. Sure a lot of the modern rules were made in England, but it dates back to well before them, and FIFA is a French acronym so there you have it!
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
To be fair to the submitter, the phrase "three strikes and you're out" has been used for a while to describe this law. I'm not sure who started to.