I don't want to write about Greta, the fantastic champion of her generation and its survival. Others do that - and if benevolently and kindly. The Greta revolution does not need me, and that is a good thing. But something else that happened in March 2019 and where old men were once again able to pull their stick out of the bag must be addressed here. The censorship law against uploading content on the Internet. Driven forward by terrible lawyers in the EU Parliament, paid portugal rcs data for by us taxpayers of course (doesn't Switzerland just want to transfer a billion there without any earmarking?), but above all by the really big media houses and the copyright associations. They have constructed a law that - and this is where we come full circle - is intended to prevent phenomena like Greta from arising in the first place.
Because this "censorship machine" "Die Zeit", which has become law here, will make it impossible to freely upload content to social media platforms in Europe. I want to show again, using our Greta, how this can have a concrete impact on the daily lives of (younger) people in Europe:
Let's say you like a video of Greta performing that you found in the SRG media library. Now you want to share it with your friends. For God's sake, don't do it! That could be a copyright infringement.