I think that kind of highly emotive and wholesale rejection of the proposals is not actually very helpful. It's too highly charged, too wordy, and with too many long words and syllables. It would never have got past the subs desk on The Sun!
It is clear that there is a big problem with all this orphan stuff floating about the web, and that photographers' rights are already being abused wholesale, as it is. Something needs to be done, and at the very least this Bill represents an effort to address the situation to the
potential benefit of photographers. Though it is all a bit disconcerting, I'll agree

Just playing devil's advocate here...
To illustrate the dangers of the proposed Bill, the writer says it is like legalised TWOCing of cars - seeing a car with no number plate (or deliberately removing the number plate), paying a nominal fee and just driving away. Okay, but if the roads were actually clogged by 90% of the cars in existence (90% is the article's estimate of orphan images in existence) just sitting there, apparently without owners, doing absolutely nothing for ever and a day, then it would make sense to somehow make use of those cars for the common good, and to the owner's benefit if they could be traced. Just seems like an emotive but flawed analogy to me, that hasn't been thought through.
The article doesn't say how the Fair Dealing clause in existing legislation could be adapted to cover what the new Bill sets out to do. That would be more helpful, and give us some kind of comparitive measure.
As an aside, on the question of copyright, how many of the people on here have got permission to use the images in their avatars? Or are they orphan images, with untraceable owners? Hmm... That's a rhetorical question BTW
