Thomas Vinje, a partner in the Brussels law firm Morrison & Foerster, whose clients include Nokia, shares the concerns expressed by the academics. He said Fourtou's amendments make a bad situation worse. "She is putting a dangerous weapon in the hands of, among others, the big record companies," he said.
Given that the internet in general is one large copying, caching, sharing network, the proposed law could essentially be used to criminalize networked information.
The craziest thing about this bizarre law is its main proponent. Janelly Fourtou, the MEP behind this thing, is the wife of Jean Fourtou, CEO of Vivendi, parent of Universal Music Group, and soon-to-be minority shareholder in the NBC Universal media combine.
