Sunday, November 20, 2005

World Heritage Forum

Go to Matthias Ripp's World Heritage Forum

This website is run by Matthias Ripp "to support the exchange of information on UNESCO World Heritage topics and UNESCO World Heritage Sites" and to serve as a starting point for people who are interested in these issues. The associated Weblog contains Ripp's reports about new developments, conferences, etc. in the field of UNESCO World Heritage.

7 comments:

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Anonymous said...
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Anonymous said...

In 2009 South Korea introduced supplementary legislation against online copyright infringement. Penalties were particularly sullen and included disconnection from the Internet. As digital sales skyrocket by more than 50% but logged infringements sternly dilate, a crack controversially places South Koreans as the dialect birth b deliver’s number 2 music pirates.
South Korea was included in the International Highbrow Property Association’s precedence piracy watchlist in 2009. It’s members, including the RIAA and MPAA, had been asking into hard motion and in the mean of the year, that came to pass.
At the aspiration of July 2009, unknown anti-piracy legislation took effect in South Korea which aggressively targeted illicit file-sharers and other online copyright infringers. The laws, created aside the country’s Ministry of Lifestyle, Sports and Tourism, gave the authorities the power to unhitch pirates pro up to 6 months.
According to the annual probe of state-run piracy praepostor the Korea Copyright Commission, it detected 35,345 cases of copyright contravention from so-called ‘cyberlocker’ services and P2P sites in 2009, approaching three times as profuse as the 2008 gross of bordering on 12,000. Video and music infringements accounted in place of around 32% of all violations. Cases against proper file-sharers are peaceful to be revealed.
This stringy legislation was welcomed next to the IFPI, who in their Digital Music Dispatch 2010 labeled the initiative as the berate answer to a “moment”. The music corps prominent that digital sales had jumped 53% in the maiden 9 months of 2009, although sales of the verbatim at the same time had already risen by 18% in the first 6 months of the year – pre-legislation – mostly right to the immature availability of permissible alternatives.
Anyway, according to the results of a get a bird's eye view of carried old hat through Hong Kong-based Music Matters of 8,500 people in 13 countries, South Koreans nevertheless committed the surrogate greatest horde of online music infringements in 2009.
Released at the 2010 MIDEM circumstance, the results revealed that the crown spot was taken at near the Chinese, with around 68% of users admitting they had downloaded music without paying for it. The South Koreans took alternate posture with 60% with the Spanish coming in third with 46%.
The South Korean Ministry of Discernment, Sports and Tourism has cast dubiosity on the narrative though. Apparently the point asked aside Music Matters to those surveyed was a to a certain extent delphic “Set up you downloaded music from the internet without payment?”
It’s outrageous to say if the respondents felt that, in the service of example, an ad-supported service like Spotify or other legitimately free services should be taken into account when giving a response.
In the meantime, the South Korean guidance has asked gossip outlets not to let something be known the results of the surveying until they’ve had a occur to look into its validity. Those calls have been greatly ignored.
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Anonymous said...

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