Somebody could try to argue for the principle of subsidiarity after the Lisbon treaty and characterise the specificities of internet access limitations as an issue of culture (some of us are dirty pirates by birth) and therefore in the competence of a national parliament. It has to be said that the cutting off an internet access today would result in a numerous transgressions against basic rights of a sufficiently well connected individual.
Somebody could try to argue for the principle of subsidiarity after the Lisbon treaty and characterise the specificities of internet access limitations as an issue of culture (some of us are dirty pirates by birth) and therefore in the competence of a national parliament. It has to be said that the cutting off an internet access today would result in a numerous transgressions against basic rights of a sufficiently well connected individual.