More Countries React To ACTA; Brazil Says ACTA Is Illegitimate
from the act-now dept
We've already covered how the EU Parliament is skeptical of ACTA. Ditto the Mexican Senate. In the US, which will undoubtedly sign the agreement, at least some politicians are asking questions about the document. Now news is coming out in a few other countries as well. Down in Australia, unlike in the US, they're planning to go through a full scrutiny process involving the Parliament and the public. On the flipside, it sounds like Singapore can't sign the document fast enough.Of course, what may be most interesting is how countries who are not a part of the negotiations feel about this. Many people feel that the whole ACTA process was set up outside of WIPO and the WTO in order to avoid having to deal with the BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia, India and China), which are all developing rapidly, and have a very different viewpoint on intellectual property than the countries involved in the negotiations. So, it's interesting to see that Brazil has already slammed the agreement (Google translation from the original Portuguese). A Brazilian official said that the agreement was not legitimate, negotiated by a closed group without considering all of the issues at play.
ACTA negotiators have said that they hoped, after their own countries agreed to sign onto ACTA, that the BRIC countries would follow down the road. Of course, if they wanted that to happen, perhaps they should have asked them to join the discussions. But, what would that accomplish, since the goal appears to have been to keep many stakeholders out of the negotiations, rather than being inclusive.
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Filed Under: acta, australia, brazil, negotiations, signapore
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But the funny part is that the Asian nations involved really want this agreement because they are confident they will murder the competition coming out from the U.S., they will turn this agreement into something every American will regret even the rich.
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Doesn't matter
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What is the C for ?
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Cool Beans ...
That by itself should make the whole thing invalid.
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@7
THUS you wont see it happen and even in this attempt i hope it cost the "industry" millions to gt no where
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Re:
Original Interpol report >The links between intellectual property crime and terrorist financing http://www.interpol.int/public/ICPO/speeches/SG20030716.asp
Note the Recommendations at the bottom have now been totally twisted to not be reacting for Terrorist funding but now to be able to go after any one for any even slight violation Thanks to RIAA, MPAA, and other such special interest groups.
Here is an article also from 2004 http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/search/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1000528473 Showing the Hollywood Report and both MPAA and RIAA/s presidents responses.
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Re: Doesn't matter
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Re: ACTA
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