5.20.2012

TO ΙΠΤΑΜΕΝΟ ΤΣΙΡΚΟ ΤΗΣ ΑΚΡΟΔΕΞΙΑΣ ΣΤΗΝ ΕΛΛΑΔΑ Νο 2

AΠΟΦΑΣΗ ΠΡΩΤΟΔΙΚΕΙΟΥ ΓΙΑ ΤΗΝ ΚΑΤΑΠΟΛΕΜΗΣΗ ΤΗΣ ΠΕΙΡΑΤΕΙΑΣ





Για πρώτη φορά στην Ελλάδα διατάχθηκε η λήψη τεχνολογικών μέτρων παρεμπόδισης της πρόσβασης χρηστών σε ιστοσελίδες μέσω των οποίων διακινούνται παράνομα ψηφιακά έργα προστατευόμενα με δικαίωμα πνευματικής ιδιοκτησίας. 

Συγκεκριμένα, στις 16 Μαΐου 2012 δημοσιεύθηκε η απόφαση 4658/2012 του Μονομελούς Πρωτοδικείου Αθηνών, η οποία έκανε δεκτό αίτημα οργανισμών συλλογικής διαχείρισης δικαιωμάτων επί μουσικών και οπτικοακουστικών έργων να υποχρεωθούν εκτός άλλων οι ελληνικές εταιρίες παροχής υπηρεσιών σύνδεσης στο διαδίκτυο να λάβουν τεχνολογικά μέτρα προκειμένου να καταστεί αδύνατη η πρόσβαση των συνδρομητών τους σε διαδικτυακές τοποθεσίες μέσω των οποίων πραγματοποιείται παράνομη παρουσίαση και ανταλλαγή έργων. 

Η απόφαση εφαρμόζει ουσιαστικά για πρώτη το άρθρο 64 Α του ν. 2121/1993 που ενσωματώνει πρόβλεψη Οδηγίας της Ευρωπαϊκής Ένωσης για τη δυνατότητα λήψης ασφαλιστικών μέτρων κατά των διαμεσολαβητών (παρόχων υπηρεσιών διαδικτύου), οι υπηρεσίες των οποίων χρησιμοποιούνται από τρίτο για την προσβολή του δικαιώματος του δημιουργού ή συγγενικού δικαιώματος. 

Παρόμοιες αποφάσεις έχουν ήδη εκδοθεί σε άλλα κράτη μέλη της Ευρωπαϊκής Ένωσης και αποσκοπούν στην προστασία της πνευματικής ιδιοκτησίας στο διαδίκτυο χωρίς να θίγονται τα δικαιώματα των χρηστών.

Το πλήρες κείμενο της απόφασης μπορείτε να το βρείτε ΕΔΩ (απόφαση 4658/2012 Πρωτοδικείου Αθηνών).


http://www.skai.gr/news/technology/article/203457/apofasi-protodikeiou-athinon-gia-tin-adimetopisi-tis-diadiktuakis-peirateias/

GAP: SOCIALISM FOR THE RICH, POVERTY FOR THE MASSES..

Aν η τηλεόραση είναι το όπιο του λαού το MEGAsou είναι η μεθαμφεταμίνη του....

JP MORGAN CHASE ANALYST: IF GREECE EXTIS EURO 30% OF THE EUROZONE GDP WILL BE LOST


(...)Mackie said a Greek eurozone exit would see the country's gross domestic product shrink by as much as 25-30 percent.
In the streets of Athens, people expressed a mixture of apprehension over the future of the country and anger with politicians who let it come so far.
"For me, the political system needs to sit down and come to an understanding because they are killing our country, that is for sure," said Athens resident Georgia, who didn't give her last name. "If they don't do it, our country will be lost."
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PERSONAL AND SOCIAL CRISIS IN GREECE...




Cartoon by YANNIS IOANNOU, www.yannis-ioannou.com
By DEREK GATOPOULOS
ATHENS, Greece — Like many Greeks left unemployed by their country's economic tailspin, Dimitris Spachos finds it easier to talk about his nation's problems than his own.
Enormous debt accumulated over decades sent the country into a recession so deep it kills 200 businesses and 900 jobs every day. Elections this month failed to produce a government, and Greeks will vote again in June. Meanwhile, life for most Greeks continues to get worse.
"Every day I see more people sleeping rough on the street," said Spachos, 72. "They can't even wash their clothes or themselves. ... It worries me."
Spachos, who has been staying with different friends in recent months, may soon join them. A former doctor, he could not afford to retire and found work as a hospital orderly. But as Greece's woes mounted so did his own, and he lost his job, then two more: one as a gardener and one as a groundskeeper.
Now, he is unemployed and homeless, and spoke this week at a municipal soup kitchen, where he ate a plastic bowl of bean soup, a thick slice of bread and a banana.
"I am ashamed to be here," Spachos said, his eyes filling with tears. "My heart is broken."
"Greeks have fight in them, so maybe things will improve in a couple of years," he said, opening his shirt to reveal a scar from surgery to implant a pacemaker. "But I won't be around to see it."
Here is a look at some of Greece's problems as it struggles to pay its debts:
UNEMPLOYMENT
Over the past three years unemployment has roughly doubled, and Greece has lost more than 10 percent of its output.
Nearly 320,000 people lost their jobs in the 12-month period ending in February, pushing the unemployment rate to 22 percent. Greece's 3.8 million employed people are supporting the 4.5 million who don't work – 1.1 million officially unemployed and 3.4 million considered financially inactive.
BUSINESS WOES
Some 80,000 businesses were shuttered last year, and 136,000 more are expected to fail in 2012, according to estimates from the Athens Chamber of Commerce.
"Out of 900,000 businesses currently operating, that would be a major blow," said Constantine Michalos, the chamber's president. "I fear the (next) government may be called upon to administer the ruins of the Greek economy."

CRIME
The Public Order Ministry has reported an increase in nearly all categories of crime between 2010 and 2011, with murder up 5 percent and armed robberies in occupied homes up 110 percent.

HOMELESSNESSS
Homelessness, the most visible sign of Greece's financial despair, has risen by around 25 percent, according to estimates by a state-funded relief agency. That number includes more people from traditionally stable background such as high school and university graduates.

HEALTH PROBLEMS
Greece's Center for Disease Control and Prevention reported 954 new HIV infections in 2011, a 57 percent increase from the previous year. It attributes most of the rise to drug use.

DEPRESSION
All these problems have led to a general rise in depression. According to several state-funded health and relief agencies, rates of suicide, drug dependency and depression have all broadly risen by 20 to 25 percent since the financial crisis hit in late 2009.