French Protestors take to the streets to Fight Copyright Proposals
French protestors have started disputing against the ruling by the government which suggests outlawing file-sharing.
The law, being debated by the French Senate, will prohibit the illegal downloading of copyrighted files.
It follows a decision by the government in March to scrap a bill to sanction downloading in return for a flat fee.
The draft copyright law introduces fines of between 38 and 150 euros (£26-£104) for people pirating music or movies at home.
Demonstrators also attacked plans to bolster digital rights management technology, which prevents commercial files from being freely shared over the internet.
Apple, which runs the iTunes music store, has condemned the draft law for the opposite reason.
The law calls upon Apple and rivals Sony and Microsoft to share their proprietary copy-protection - to guarantee that digital music can be played on any player, regardless of its format or source.
At present most online stores lock consumers into their own downloading systems and players.
Apple countered by stating that one digital rights management system would leave legal download services vulnerable to illegal file-sharing.
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