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I have a GREAT idea: Why don't we let the RIAA write our copyright laws?

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Joanne98 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue May-27-08 07:49 AM
Original message
I have a GREAT idea: Why don't we let the RIAA write our copyright laws?
Tue, 27 May 2008 04:59:00 -0700


________________________________________
From: David P. Reed
Sent: Tuesday, May 27, 2008 7:55 AM
To: dewayne-net@warpspeed.com; David Farber
Subject: Re: I have a GREAT idea: Why don't we let the RIAA write our copyr=
ight laws?

A tactic adopted recently to bypass Congress in the US was taken by
WIPO's attempt to negotiate a treaty creating a new "X-cast" (broadcast
and webcast) synthetic property right. This property right does not
fit in the US Constitution's terms "copyright" and "patent".

Clever lawyers understand that any treaty becomes US law when it is
ratified. Such ratification is (when not contested) far more easily
accomplished than (say) introducing a bill in the House or Senate, then
getting both houses to formulate compromises.

This sure looks like another example of the "treaty route" to getting a
US law that would not be passed in Congress.

The X-cast right was blocked by exposure of the tactic.

New synthetic inventions of property rights by self-interested parties
though a legal backdoor are abhorrent. New versions of copyright
through the same legal backdoor seem almost as bad.

>
> From: Randall Webmail
> Date: May 26, 2008 8:59:43 PM PDT
> To: dewayne@warpspeed.com, dave@farber.net, johnmacsgroup@yahoogroups.com
> Subject: I have a GREAT idea: Why don't we let the RIAA write our
> copyright laws?
>
> Proposed secret copyright deal takes aim at iPods, providers
>
> Vito Pilieci
> The Ottawa Citizen
>
> Saturday, May 24, 2008
>
>
> The Canadian government is secretly negotiating an agreement to revamp
> international copyright laws which could make information on iPods,
> laptops and other personal electronic devices illegal and greatly
> increase the difficulty of travelling with such devices.
>
> The agreement could also impose strict regulations on Internet service
> providers, forcing those companies to hand over customer information
> without a court order.
>
> Called the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA), the new plan
> would see Canada join other countries, including the United States and
> members of the European Union, to form an international coalition
> against copyright infringement.
>
> Details of the agreement, which is expected to be tabled at July's
> meeting of G8 nations in Tokyo, were leaked on the Internet yesterday.
>
> The agreement is being structured much like the North American Free
> Trade Agreement, except it would create rules and regulations
> regarding private copying and copyright laws. Federal trade agreements
> do not require parliamentary approval.
>
> The agreement would create an international regulator that would turn
> border guards and other public security personnel into copyright
> police. The security officials would be charged with checking laptops,
> iPods and even cellular phones for content that "infringes" on
> copyright laws, such as ripped CDs and movies.
>
> The guards would also be responsible for determining which content
> infringes on copyright laws.
>
> The agreement also proposes that any content copied from a DVD or
> digital video recorder be open for scrutiny by officials -- even if
> the content was copied legally.
>
> "If Hollywood could order intellectual property laws for Christmas,
> what would they look like? This is pretty close," said David Fewer,
> staff counsel at the University of Ottawa's Canadian Internet Policy
> and Public Interest Clinic.
>
> "The process on ACTA so far has been cloak and dagger. This certainly
> raises concerns."
>
> The leaked ACTA document states officials should be given the
> "authority to take action against infringers (i.e., authority to act
> without complaint by rights holders)".
>
> Anyone found with infringing content in their possession would be open
> to a fine. They may also have their device confiscated or destroyed,
> according to the four-page document.
>
> The proposal includes "civil enforcement" measures which would give
> security personnel the "authority to order ex parte searches" (without
> a lawyer present) "and other preliminary measures."
>
> In Canada, border guards already perform random searches of laptops at
> airports to check for child pornography. ACTA would expand the role of
> those guards.
>
> On top of these relatively small-scale enforcement efforts, ACTA also
> proposes imposing new sanctions on Internet service providers. It
> would force providers to hand over personal information pertaining to
> "claimed infringement" or "alleged infringers" -- users who may be
> transmitting or sharing copyrighted content over the Internet.
>
> Currently, rights holders must collect evidence to prove someone is
> sharing copyrighted material over the Internet. That evidence is then
> presented to a judge who can issue a court order telling the Internet
> service provider to identify the customer.
>
> Mr. Fewer has been following the progress of ACTA and has exhausted
> every avenue at his disposal to gain insigh
http://www.mailbucket.org/ip-6514728.html

He makes a good point. The corporations are now using international trade agreements to bypass Congress. This needs to be stopped. The summit is July 8th. Not much time.

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