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Video Recordings Act

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29-698: Video Recordings Act may refer to: Video Recordings Act 1984 in the United Kingdom Video Recordings Act 1987 in New Zealand Video Recordings Act 2010 in the United Kingdom Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Video Recordings Act . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change

58-549: A march starting at Hyde Park and finishing at Trafalgar Square . The second, on 24 July, followed the same route with numbers estimated between 20,000 and 50,000. The larger turnout was partly attributed to a mobilisation from the Socialist Workers Party and with them placards reading "Kill the Bill", but it also created a degree of "political tension" with the other founding groups. The third demonstration

87-476: A rave from an impending attack of riot police. In 1993, the band Dreadzone released a single, "Fight the Power", in opposition to the proposed Criminal Justice Bill, featuring samples from Noam Chomsky discussing taking action and "taking control of your lives", advocating political resistance to the proposed bill. The track also features on a 1994 compilation Taking Liberties, released to raise funds to fight

116-542: A song by electronic dance acts the Prodigy and Pop Will Eat Itself , was written as a direct response to the bill. A quotation in the booklet of the Prodigy's 1994 album Music for the Jilted Generation read "How can the government stop young people having a good time? Fight this bollocks." The album featured a drawing commissioned by the band from Les Edwards depicting a young male rebel figure protecting

145-466: A young shadow home secretary shocked almost everyone by deciding not to oppose the bill at the final reading. At the time it was assumed that he decided to let the bill through so as not to look soft on crime, or hand a propaganda victory to the Tories. In doing so, he sacrificed several cornerstones of British civil liberties on the altar of political expediency. His name? Tony Blair. Fifteen years on, there

174-631: Is an act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom that was passed in 1984. It states that commercial video recordings offered for sale or for hire within the UK must carry a classification that has been agreed upon by an authority designated by the Home Office . The British Board of Film Classification (BBFC), which had been instrumental in the certification of motion pictures since 1912,

203-553: Is educational, or to do with a sport, religion or music and does not depict violence, sex or incite a criminal offence. The BBFC may also require cuts to be made, either to receive a certain age rating, or to be allowed a classification at all. The act was a legislative reaction to a moral panic concerning " video nasties " that was sparked by tabloid newspapers in Britain during 1982 and 1983. Sport , music , religious , and educational works are exempt from classification under

232-439: Is little pleasure to be gained from saying "we told you so". But the manner in which a law designed to prevent the wholesale mayhem of Castlemorton can now be used to foreclose a birthday party should serve as a stark warning to those currently considering a raft of other illiberal legislation, from the coroners and justice bill to the various ID card proposals. Those who deride the contributors to liberty central when they warn about

261-570: The Digital Economy Act 2010 . In December 2014 streaming and on-demand services were brought under the remit of this act via the Audiovisual Media Services Regulations 2014 . Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994 The Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994 (c. 33) is an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom . It introduced a number of changes to the law, most notably in

290-494: The traveller festival circuit, which was steadily growing in the early 1990s, culminating in the 1992 Castlemorton Common Festival . Following debates in the House of Commons in its aftermath, Prime Minister John Major alluded to a future clampdown with then Home Secretary Ken Clarke at that year's Conservative Party conference . At the 1993 conference, Michael Howard , who had become Home Secretary , announced details of

319-575: The Act. Exemption may be forfeited if the work depicts excessive human sexual activity or acts of force or restraint associated with such activity, mutilation or torture of humans or animals, human genital organs or urinary or excretory functions, or techniques likely to be useful in the perpetration of criminal acts or illicit activity. The Act was accompanied by the Video Recordings (Labelling) Act 1985 , which set out regulations governing

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348-606: The amendment exempts video games (except if they depict criminal activity which is likely to any significant extent to stimulate or encourage the commission of offences). The current labelling regulations are The Video Recordings (Labelling) Regulations 2012. In August 2009 it was discovered that the Act was unenforceable as the European Commission was not notified about it, as required by Directive 83/189 (see now Directive 98/34). Directive 83/189 had to be implemented by 31 March 1984 (12 months after its notification to

377-485: The bill. The B-side to Zion Train 's 1995 "Dance of Life" single included a track entitled "Resist the Criminal Justice Act". The Six6 Records compilation album NRB:58 No Repetitive Beats (1994) was released in opposition to the proposed Bill. The album's liner notes said: For every copy of No Repetitive Beats sold Network will pay a royalty to D.I.Y. / All Systems No! (an advance payment of £3,000

406-621: The definition of music in the Act as "repetitive beats" by using 65 distinctive drum patterns. The EP bore a warning advising DJs to "have a lawyer and a musicologist present at all times to confirm the non-repetitive nature of the music in the event of police harassment". The fifth mix on the Internal version of Orbital 's Are We Here? EP was titled "Criminal Justice Bill?". It consisted of approximately four minutes of silence. In their 1995 track Sad But New , Orbital incorporated samples from John Major 's 1992 conference speech. "Their Law",

435-692: The display of certificates awarded by the BBFC on published recordings. The act was amended in the Video Recordings Act 1993 but underwent no significant changes. It was amended again in the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994 to deal with the growing issue of "video violence". In addition, the amendment extended the definition of a video recording to any device capable of storing electronic data, which invariably includes works available on DVD as well as CD and CD-ROM , although

464-635: The government introduced new legislation, the Video Recordings Act 2010 , which repealed and immediately revived the Video Recordings Act 1984, after the required notification was provided to the European Commission in October 2009. This legislation, which was enacted under the "fast-track" procedure (and therefore was expedited through Parliament ), made the 1984 Act enforceable once again, as well as allowing it to be amended by

493-414: The incessant creep of police powers, or who scoff at "slippery slope" arguments around civil liberties, should bear in mind that we stood at the top of one of those slopes only 15 short years ago, and we have slid a long way down it since. The British IDM duo Autechre released the three-track Anti EP in support of the advocacy group Liberty . The EP contained "Flutter", a song composed to contravene

522-416: The legislation in Bill form, "It's about politicians making laws on the basis of judging people's lifestyles, and that's no way to make laws". George Monbiot described it as "crude, ill-drafted and repressive". The Act was described by Professor of Cultural Studies Jeremy Gilbert as a "piece of legislation which was "explicitly aimed at suppressing the activities of certain strands of alternative culture",

551-535: The legislation was still under debate, the groups Advance Party and Freedom Network coordinated a campaign of resistance. The group was composed of an alliance of sound systems and civil liberties groups. A movement against the bill grew across "the overlapping squatting, road protest and free party scenes". Three demonstrations were organised in London throughout 1994. The first of these took place on 1 May ( May Day ), with an estimated 20,000 people taking part in

580-427: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Video_Recordings_Act&oldid=1194328872 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Video Recordings Act 1984 The Video Recordings Act 1984 (c. 39)

609-488: The main targets being squatting , direct action , football fan culture , hunt sabotage and the free party . The sections which specifically refer to parties or raves were, according to Professor of Sociology Nigel South, "badly defined and drafted" in an atmosphere of moral panic following the Castlemorton Common Festival . The law's attempt to define music in terms of "repetitive beats"

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638-459: The member states). Until this situation was rectified, it was legal to sell and supply unclassified videos and computer games, although many retailers had agreed to observe the regulations voluntarily. Then pending prosecutions under the Act were abandoned, but the government claimed that past convictions could not be challenged. The government's view was upheld in 2010 when two appeals against earlier convictions were dismissed. In December 2009

667-415: The new Criminal Justice Bill. Despite protests and discord against the bill, the opposition Labour Party took an official line to abstain at the third reading, and the Act passed into law on 3 November 1994. Key measures of the act that received public attention included: 63(1)(b) "music" includes sounds wholly or predominantly characterised by the emission of a succession of repetitive beats. Whilst

696-543: The police were overpowered and backed off. Riot and mounted police reinforcements arrived shortly afterwards, and reportedly charged at protesters in an attempt to disperse the estimated 1,500-person crowd. The civil liberties group Liberty opposed many of the measures proposed by the act at the time, regarding them as "wrong in principle and likely to violate the European Convention on Human Rights ". Jon Savage , author of books on youth culture, said of

725-408: The restriction and reduction of existing rights, clamping down on unlicensed rave parties, and greater penalties for certain "anti-social" behaviours. The Bill was introduced by Michael Howard , Home Secretary of Prime Minister John Major 's Conservative government , and attracted widespread opposition. A primary motivation for the act was to curb illegal raves and free parties , especially

754-468: Was called on 9 October, with police estimating 20,000 to 30,000 people attending, while organisers put the figure at over 100,000. The day ended in a riot in Hyde Park that continued into the evening. Accounts stated that, around 5   pm, a confrontation occurred between protesters and police when protesters attempted to bring two sound systems into the park. With such a large number of protesters,

783-610: Was described as "bizarre" by Professor of Law Robert Lee. Reflecting on the time, the journalist Ally Fogg wrote in The Guardian : Few listened to our warnings then. After all, we were just a bunch of social outcasts with silly hats and questionable personal hygiene. Beyond some welcome support from Liberty and a handful of progressive trades unions, we stood pretty much alone against the whole political and media establishment. This most draconian and illiberal of Conservative laws could only eventually pass through parliament because

812-412: Was designated as the classifying authority in 1985. Works are classified by the BBFC under an age-rated system (see motion picture rating systems ); it is an offence under the Act to supply video works to individuals who are (or appear to be) under the age of the classification designated. Works that are refused classification cannot, under the Act, be legally sold or supplied to anyone of any age unless it

841-547: Was made before the release of the album). The monies will be used by D.I.Y. / All Systems No! towards the cost of a sound system which will be on hand to replace any sound equipment seized by the police using draconian powers granted to them by the Criminal Justice Bill to stop music "wholly or predominantly characterised by the emission of a succession of repetitive beats". The Bill is unjust and tramples across common sense and civil rights. If you want to help throw

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