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[185.60 --> 191.64] directive, which is the first time the region is updating its copyright laws since 2001.
[192.16 --> 197.74] They're ostensibly trying to modernize them, but it kind of looks like it's a war between
[197.74 --> 203.54] content creators like movie studios and the record business.
[204.08 --> 204.64] Business.
[204.64 --> 209.86] Versus the giant decentralized internet of people who just want to remix and create and
[209.86 --> 210.22] upload.
[210.50 --> 211.12] Like memes.
[211.72 --> 213.92] That's been at the center of this for a little while.
[214.08 --> 216.82] That's how a lot of people have actually heard about this is the meme problem.
[217.06 --> 219.44] But it has to do with a lot of other things as well.
[219.52 --> 220.40] And the link tax.
[220.98 --> 221.14] Yeah.
[221.14 --> 227.00] So there's two articles within the big thing, which we have linked in the WAN doc here.
[228.22 --> 233.48] So if you are watching this later on, you can check the WAN doc in the link below the YouTube
[233.48 --> 234.54] video or SoundCloud.
[234.98 --> 238.10] Yes, there is an audio only version of this, actually.
[238.10 --> 240.16] And you'll be able to find it there.
[241.10 --> 247.92] The first article is Article 11, which will require websites to pay a fee to link to news
[247.92 --> 250.68] publications or to use snippets from their articles.
[250.68 --> 256.60] So if you're on Facebook and you see an embedded snippet or an embedded link to another article
[256.60 --> 260.72] where you've got a little thumbnail image, a part of the title and maybe a description
[260.72 --> 261.44] of the content.
[262.10 --> 266.66] Facebook wouldn't be able to show that unless they paid some kind of license fee to the
[266.66 --> 267.68] owner of that content.
[267.68 --> 272.74] I think, yeah, it's pretty, like, it's ridiculous.
[272.90 --> 274.76] As if, as if.
[274.76 --> 275.26] That's difficult.
[275.34 --> 279.82] As if Facebook is just going to spend all day, every day licensing all the different
[279.82 --> 281.92] pieces of content that get uploaded to the internet that day.
[282.20 --> 283.02] It doesn't make any sense.
[283.74 --> 285.24] Check out this one quick thing.
[285.48 --> 289.40] I just want to show, oops, how wonderful this is.
[289.58 --> 293.42] We're able to stream, but I can't even like load web pages.
[293.48 --> 294.18] Priorities, baby.
[294.34 --> 294.50] Yeah.
[294.80 --> 295.94] We got this though.
[295.94 --> 296.12] Yeah.
[296.30 --> 297.28] The stream is working.
[297.68 --> 298.96] But I can't see the chat.
[299.10 --> 303.62] So, you know, I am actually not 100% convinced that it's working, but it might be.
[304.36 --> 304.92] I'm going to go.
[305.10 --> 305.86] Hashtag pre-recorded.
[305.98 --> 306.22] Yeah.
[306.36 --> 306.52] Yeah.
[306.56 --> 306.68] Yeah.
[307.28 --> 308.84] I'm going to go with yes while this.
[309.20 --> 309.64] Unintentionally.
[311.90 --> 313.60] Apparently there's an exception in there.
[314.30 --> 320.44] People were concerned about link tax where if you've got some text and part of that text
[320.44 --> 325.92] is highlighted because it's a hyperlink, like check out our last review on this here that
[325.92 --> 329.94] you wouldn't be able to have that here hyperlink without paying the tax.
[330.02 --> 331.82] But I think there's an exemption for that.
[331.88 --> 332.22] Okay.
[332.42 --> 332.62] Yeah.
[332.62 --> 333.64] Because that would just break the entire.
[333.70 --> 335.10] That's what the internet's based on.
[335.24 --> 336.84] That's what Google is based on.
[336.84 --> 337.28] Yeah.
[338.28 --> 338.48] Yeah.
[338.48 --> 344.28] And there is another exemption that allows search engines to use your input snippets.
[344.28 --> 345.00] I was just going to say.
[345.00 --> 345.72] Because you still want to be found.
[346.00 --> 346.28] Yeah.
[346.46 --> 348.50] You want to be found because that's good for your bottom line.
[348.66 --> 348.94] Yeah.
[349.08 --> 350.78] But you don't want to be linked to.
[351.20 --> 356.42] And you don't want to lift up other platforms that are aggregators basically because they're
[356.42 --> 359.36] just profiting off your content without paying you enough.
[359.36 --> 364.40] Or like be used as an image sharing host when that's not where you're supposed to be, etc.,
[364.40 --> 364.62] etc.
[364.82 --> 365.12] Yeah.
[365.12 --> 370.46] A big part of it is like the amount of money that a lot of music artists are not making
[370.46 --> 372.74] from YouTube that they are making from Spotify.
[373.50 --> 373.68] So.
[374.60 --> 375.08] Okay.
[375.16 --> 375.50] We're good.
[375.64 --> 382.04] Opponents want these musicians just to renegotiate with YouTube and not kind of stain the whole
[382.04 --> 383.70] internet with a shotgun blast.
[384.10 --> 384.26] Yeah.
[384.40 --> 384.62] Okay.
[384.68 --> 387.22] So my webpage finally loaded.
[387.22 --> 389.62] So Twitch chat people, there's the link.
[389.80 --> 390.24] There you go.
[390.48 --> 391.24] Sorry about the delay.
[391.40 --> 391.60] Yeah.
[391.76 --> 392.70] So there's another article.
[392.80 --> 393.58] That's article 11.
[394.10 --> 394.24] Yeah.
[394.44 --> 399.70] Then there's also article 13, which requires websites to filter user submissions and check
[399.70 --> 401.12] them against copyrighted work.
[401.18 --> 406.86] That is so brutal and would just like crush the forum and everyone's forum.
[406.98 --> 407.28] Yes.
[407.28 --> 407.32] Yes.
[407.36 --> 407.60] Yes.
[407.86 --> 413.38] Any online platform that allowed users to post text images, sounds, or code would need to
[413.38 --> 415.64] assess and filter that content.
[415.64 --> 416.60] What?
[416.60 --> 421.80] Which has a bunch of brutal implications, which are nicely summarized by this like party,
[422.30 --> 423.42] this pirate party of Europe.
[423.42 --> 427.98] Every single UGC site, user generated content site would just be.