We support Kiwi creatives and think encouraging greater legal content to be available online would be more effective than this law which makes it cheaper and faster for large, very-profitable corporate media companies to enforce their old distribution models.
Under this new law, it is the account holders who are liable for all infringing on their account, even if it is a flatmate, a computer virus or a hacker using an open Wi-Fi network who actually shared the files.
Even the Speaker of Parliament, as account holder, will be liable for all infringing on the Parliamentary internet account and could face fines. For small businesses, libraries and universities who are responsible for the actions of the staff or customers, this may come with big costs.
It's disappointing the Government hasn't done enough to prepare and inform the public or schools for the introduction of this law.
The most controversial element of the bill was internet termination as a third-strike remedy. Termination should have no place on our law books given copyright infringing is a civil, not criminal offence.