The ACTA "treaty" "negotiations" are quite the interesting thing to read about -- or, what real information you can get about it from leaks, that is. It almost seems to intentionally exclude public comment or participation in these discussions and only allow a token number of likely opponents into their meetings, but only after signing nondisclosure agreements. Here in the US last year, the USTR invoked "national security" as reason to withold their meeting notes and the ACTA documents from public view. Ummm....excuse me? Unfortunately while I hate putting on a conspiracy-theory hat, when it comes to the influence of the IP industry and the Net, I must presume there's ulterior motives -- but that's for another debate/discussion in and of itself. IMHO these matters generally emphasize measures to preserve fading business models and organisational legitimacy in the era of the Internet and technological innovation and indepdendence. Many IP industries (movies and music in particular) are built upon Industrial Age business models and ended up being dragged kicking and screaming into the Information/Internet Age --- and now are trying to ensure their legitimacy and relevance in this new and undiscovered country. As for ACTA, I am more than a bit puzzled/worried at the amount of secrecy being placed on the activities and documents regarding this commercial "treaty" -- that to me is quite suspicious and, absent any hard evidence to the contrary, only further slides my perception of ACTA into the "conspiracy theory" camp and leads me to believe that if passed, it's more than likely that the citizen/netizen will be the one who suffers as a result. Just my own off-the-cuff response here. Morning coffee is brewing... -rf On Jan 25, 2010, at 06:02 , Mathieu ONeil wrote:
<!-- @page { margin: 2cm } P { margin-bottom: 0.21cm } --> Thought some people might be interested in this.
cheers m
====
La Quadrature du Net - For immediate release
Permanent link: http://www.laquadrature.net/en/acta-attacks-internet-lets-attack-acta
ACTA Attacks Internet! Let's Attack ACTA!
*** Paris, Jan 25th 2009 - Negotiations on the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) [1] will take place from January 26th to January 29th in Mexico. ACTA aims at controlling the Internet, while conveniently circumventing democratic processes. Unelected negotiators - carrying out the orders of the entertainment industries - are attacking the very essence of the Internet. Let's attack ACTA! Let's expose its negotiators so they face their responsibilities! ***
- From Jan 26th to Jan 29th, representatives of a handful of countries (including the EU represented by the Commission) will meet in Mexico to decide the future of the Internet and other issues such as access to medicine. With no supervision from international organizations and no democratic oversight, conditions are ideal for entertainment lobbies to dictate their dream: enforcing a fundamentally unadapted copyright regime in order to control the Internet and access to knowledge. More than 80 NGOs from all over the world (including Consumers International, Reporters without Borders, the Free Software Foundation and the Electronic Frontier Foundation) already signed an open letter strongly opposing ACTA [2].
The last leaked analysis of the European Commission [3] unmasks the global intent of the text: imposing extra-judicial "voluntary" agreements between Internet service providers and rights holders to combat copyright infringements through "three strikes" schemes or automated content filtering or removal. To force Internet operators into accepting such access restrictions, ACTA will make them liable for the copyright infringements done by their users.
"By creating legal uncertainty for the Internet operators, ACTA will force them to bend under the pressure of entertainment industries. ACTA will compell Internet service providers to filter and remove content and services, turning them into private police and justice auxiliaries. We cannot tolerate that restrictions to fundamental rights and freedoms be imposed by private actors. Such a modification of criminal law by governments themselves, in total opacity, shows how much the people behind ACTA hate democracy." analyzes J?r?mie Zimmermann, spokesperson for the citizen advocacy group La Quadrature du Net.
La Quadrature du Net calls on every citizen to participate in raising awareness on the dangers of ACTA (see policy brief [4]) and to expose its negotiators in order to make them accountable. A dedicated participative campaign page [5] is provided for this purpose: http://www.laquadrature.net/wiki/Attack_ACTA
"Obeying to the music and movie industries, unelected negotiators are deciding the future of the Internet. We must make them accountable and make sure they face the consequences of their decisions." concludes Zimmermann.
* Reerences *
1. See our web-dossier about ACTA: http://lqdn.fr/ACTA
2. ACTA: A Global Threat to Freedoms - open letter: http://www.laquadrature.net/en/acta-a-global-threat-to-freedoms-open-letter
3. http://sharemydoc.org/files/philip/ec_analysis_of_acta_internet_chapter.pdf
4. http://www.laquadrature.net/files/LaQuadratureduNet-20100124_Policy_Brief-Sh...
5. Campaign page "Attack ACTA" on La Quadrature's wiki: http://www.laquadrature.net/wiki/Attack_ACTA
** About la Quadrature du Net **
La Quadrature du Net is an advocacy group that promotes the rights and freedoms of citizens on the Internet. More specifically, it advocates for the adaptation of French and European legislations to respect the founding principles of the Internet, most notably the free circulation of knowledge.
As such, La Quadrature du Net engages in public-policy debates concerning, for instance, freedom of speech, copyright, regulation of telecommunications and online privacy.
In addition to its advocacy work, the group also aims to foster a better understanding of legislative processes among citizens. Through specific and pertinent information and tools, La Quadrature du Net hopes to encourage citizens' participation in the public debate on rights and freedoms in the digital age.
La Quadrature du Net is supported by French, European and international NGOs including the Electronic Frontier Foundation, the Open Society Institute and Privacy International.
List of supporting organisations : http://www.laquadrature.net/en/they-support-squaring-net-la-quadrature-du-ne...
** Press contact and press room **
Jeremie Zimmermann, jz@laquadrature.net, +33 (0)615 940 675
http://www.laquadrature.net/en/press-room
****
_______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
Join the Association of Internet Researchers: http://www.aoir.org/