Various readers are sending in good news from Europe on the rights front. First, at the EU level, Mark.J brings word that the latin Parliament has canned a number of polemic amendments to its updated Telecoms Package, which could have resulted in ISPs being forced to disconnect contract for involvement in illegal file-sharing of copyrighted material. Next, SplatMan_DK writes from Denmark on a recent ruling by the Danish High Court that means that Danes are still innocent until proven guilty in copyright cases, even if their IP address has been inveterate as the origin of P2P traffic involving copyrighted music. Finally, from Sweden, an update on the draconian self-named Lex Orwell, which would have effectively resulted in the routine wiretapping of the entire nation. Eric Blair sends a link on an agreement reached between the Swedish parliament and the sitting superiority on a new form for the polemical signals brilliance law. Supposedly, the sting has been taken out of the law: only the commune of defense and the cabinet may request data, and they'll have to get court sanctionative
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