ISPA announces Internet Hero and Villain shortlist
Tuesday 19 June 2012 10:21:43 by
Andrew Ferguson
In May ISPA announced the shortlist of finalists in the majority of
categories for the UK Internet Industry Awards 2012, the remaining categories were
the Internet Hero and Villain, which after much deliberation
the ISPA Council has whittled down to the lists below from the long list of
nominations by the public.
Internet Hero Finalists
- Broadband for the Rural North (B4RN): for bringing high speed internet into remote rural
communities, setting an example for others to follow
- Ofcom - for its independent assessment of the website blocking measures in
the DEA, which they found to be neither “practical” nor “desirable” and
“trivial” to circumvent
- Reg Bailey – for his government review into childhood sexualisation which
found that giving parents and carers an active choice over what content is
suitable for children and young people is preferable to default content
filtering
- Foreign Secretary Rt Hon William Hague MP – for recognising, at the London
Cyber Conference, that the future internet must be without ‘government control
or censorship’ where ‘innovation and competition flourish’ and ‘investment and
enterprise are rewarded’
- Court of Justice of the European Union - for its verdict on the
Scarlet-Sabam case, which found that an injunction requiring a “complicated”
and “costly” filter for copyright infringing material would not strike a fair
balance between “the right to protect intellectual property and the right to
conduct business”
Internet Villain Finalists
- The International Telecommunications Union – for its internet governance
land-grab which could lead to a less open and free internet, controlled by
governments in a top-down manner
- Karel De Gucht and Directorate-General Trade - for pushing IPR enforcement
standards through ACTA and disregarding the concerns from EU citizens and
European Parliament in relation to the threats against fundamental rights
- U.S. Representative Lamar S. Smith - for introducing SOPA: an ill-thought
out, draconian piece of legislation that would have stifled innovation and free
speech online
- Goldeneye International – for following in the dubious footsteps of
previous speculative invoicing, by demanding £700 in damages from account
holders who had allegedly downloaded copyright infringing material, relying
solely on IP matching and claiming that bill payers were liable for any
infringement
While the ISPA Council will between now and 3rd July decide the winner in
these two categories, a seperate panel of
judges picks the winners in the other categories.
I suggest that four villain awards should be made this year because all four finalists thoroughly deserve it!