Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Watch Free Hintai Online

ANNOUNCED

Public libraries will cease to be free? It came talking for a couple of years had the SGAE intention to charge a fee (other than digital) for the loan of books in public libraries considering that these violate the rights of authors. For a notice of 27/11/2009, which so far only found, on this page
, FEMP (English Federation of Municipalities and Provinces) and I quote: I think it's clear! Another political concessions to the SGAE! Not if the municipal and provincial libraries to pass on the cost of this concession to those users. But in the end no matter whether they are public are financed with public money and that public money is OUR MONEY, that of our taxes. O NO? ENOUGH
again, using our money to fund a private entity! And of course this news, so far has not published any national newspaper, only comments on blogs and little else including David Bravo Blog

. But much earlier date 30/01/2008.
documents that have nothing to do with libraries, but if I found relevant

FEMP-SGAE Convention Party and popular events



SGAE 2009 Rates apply to festivals

Another document which is not lost and no I think it was meant to come to light but is referenced by Google due to misconfiguration the server that hosts.

DRAFT REPORT ON COPYRIGHT AND LOCAL (4 July 2007)

Teodoro Cuesta, Facebook user and member of the Manifesto


"In defense of fundamental rights on the Internet"
has provided some details in my forum topic:


Facebook http://noalprestamodepago.






org / There is a Facebook group on the subject. The problem has not had the proper distribution by our own selfishness, as those who pay the fee to CEDRO (not SGAE) libraries are not the end users of the same, because we do not see the harm. This fee comes under the Directive 2006/115/EC transposed in the English State through the Law 10/2007 of June 22, of Reading, Books and Libraries, which provides a charge for users, provisionally fixed at 0.20 € for each work gained public libraries of more than 5,000 municipalities, although, frankly, those of PIG want a minimum of 20 cents per loan. Given that one of the biggest consumers, buyers of books is the state itself and the municipalities through the acquisitions made to public libraries, this charge is completely immoral.






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