EU adopts "Internet freedom" provision on Internet cut-offs
For weeks, the major governing institutions of the European Union have been locked in a battle over three-strikes laws, Internet disconnections, and the appropriate role of judges in the process. Just after midnight last night, the deadlock was broken and all parties agreed to a new “Internet freedom provision” that reinforces the presumption of innocence, the right to privacy, and the right to judicial review under any Internet sanctions. The Internet freedom provision was the final sticking point for the massive Telecoms Package, a body of reform laws that will give national regulators greater authority to pass network neutrality rules, will allow mobile and landline telephone users to change operators in a single day while keeping their old numbers, and requires the mandatory notification of consumers when their personal data has been breached.

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EU adopts "Internet freedom" provision on Internet cut-offs
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