EU-Digest
EUROPEAN PIRATE PARTY MOVEMENT- Swedish Pirate Party MEP Christian Engström: ‘Europe stronger than US’ - by Waldemar Ingdahl
"The Swedish pirate party program claims three things: to strive to reform laws regarding copyright and patents, strengthening the right to internet and daily privacy and increasing the transparency of government administration. The pirate party gained one seat in the 736-strong European parliament after winning 7.1% of the Swedish vote in June 2009, coming fifth after the social democrats, greens, liberals and the moderate party. It would acquire another if the Lisbon treaty is ratified; the EU aims to see that in force by 2010. 26 EU countries have ratified the treaty, except for Ireland, who are due to hold a referendum due on 2 October. On 25 June, Christian Engström joined the green bloc, a move to avoid being marginalized in the EP. But the pirate party, now the third largest party in Sweden, is a representative of a set of ideas of its own; is it setting sail towards further success or facing its first gust of ideological high seas?"
Engström was an open source software developer and entrepreneur in the first wave of Swedish internet expansion in the nineties. He was a volunteer activist for the foundation for a free information infrastructure (FFII). Between 2004 and 2005 he lobbied in the European parliament in a dispute over the software patents directive. The struggle was a great success for Engström as the parliament rejected the directive in its second reading. The success of the free software movement, in combination with a continuing increase in the conflict between internet pirates and the record industry, gave the impulse for a new set of ideas. The ground was particularly favorable in Sweden.
According to the Pirate Party, intellectual property laws written pre-internet are just out of date. Today the entire Internet is based on copying stuff. Each time you load a web page, your computer is, in fact, copying a set of files from another computer. You could argue that digital copying is so seamless that nearly everyone could become a "pirate" by virtue of the technology. At least, that's what pirate parties across Europe are saying – and they’re in many countries. You can find them in Spain, Portugal, Italy, France, Netherlands, Denmark, Germany, Finland, Sweden, Ukraine, Russia, Austria and Switzerland. There's also the Czech Pirate Party and the Estonian Pirate Party. Both were founded last month. And now there’s one in Switzerland. The pirate parties are calling for shorter copyright terms, the elimination of patents and broader online privacy rights. So far, the European Pirate Parties don’t have much political power, but last month, a German member of Parliament left the Social Democrats and joined the Pirate Party. And the Swedish Pirate Party did well enough in the recent European Union parliamentary elections to secure one of the country’s seats.
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