Telecommunication reform of the EU - National authorities will not be able to disconnect internet users only suspected of illegally downloading music or movies
Rada Ministru EU 20/11/2009 jednomyslně schválila balíček opatření k reform Telekomunikácie The EU, the European Commission first proposed in 2007. The Council decided, after being on the package reached political agreement on the landmark meeting of the European Parliament and the Council of 5 November (MEMO/09/491). The new rules provide greater certainty for companies investing in high-speed optical and wireless networks, thereby strengthening competition and investment in the European telecommunications market. With the package is also available frequency bands for new mobile services. Next week, the European Parliament plenary session in Strasbourg voted to be formally approved by the telecoms package. The reformed telecommunications law will become EU law, once in December 2009 published in the Official Journal of the European Union.
information on the twelve most important reforms of the new telecoms package, the EU can be found in MEMO/09/491 report.
Next steps:
final vote on the reform package during the third reading in the plenary session European Parliament (scheduled for 24 November 2009);
entry into force of a package of measures to reform the telecommunications publication in the Official Journal of the EU (December 2009);
establishment of the Office of the European Regulators in Telecommunications tibia (spring 2010);
implement a package of measures to reform the national telecommunications legislation of 27 Member States of the EU (June 2011).
More information:
Provisional edition approved the reform package:
http://ec.europa.eu/information_society/policy/ecomm/tomorrow/index_en.htm
MEMO/09/513
National authorities will not be able to disconnect internet users only suspected of illegally downloading music or movies. will first have to allow them to defend. Arbitrary disconnecting from the Internet will be possible only in cases of suspected terrorism, organized crime and trafficking in child pornography.