State Of The Union Address Highlights The Dirty Trick Of Hiding More Draconian IP Rules In 'Trade Agreements'
from the keep-up dept
As we've been discussing, it's great that the anti-SOPA/PIPA protests have awakened many to the horrors of ACTA. It seems that this may also help people finally learn about the nefarious practice of industry trade groups and governments to sneak bad IP legislation through "international agreements." With President Obama mentioning the importance of trade agreements and dealing with infringement in his State of the Union address, many people were wondering if it was a signal about SOPA/PIPA.However, as Harold Feld explains, it's much more likely he's talking about these new international agreements and treaties, like ACTA and (the even worse) TPP agreement that's currently being negotiated (in secrecy, of course). Feld also highlights how these things always "ratchet up." He points to the infamous US-Korea Free Trade Agreement ("KOROUS"). The agreement, which had a lot to do with protectionism for Hollywood, rather than actual free trade, was held up for years as the kind of "good" trade agreement that the US should be negotiating with others. In fact, when complaints about ACTA first came out, the USTR kept saying that ACTA was merely modeled on the "successful" KOROUS agreement. Of course, the impact of that agreement has been pretty bad in Korea -- leading to an extreme increase in secondary liability for internet service providers, making it tougher to do business and causing them to shut off useful features. And all of this despite the fact that the Korean entertainment industry was thriving by adapting to a changing market.
But, as Feld points out, the efforts behind SOPA and PIPA show that the same entertainment industry who insisted that the trade agreement with Korea was so perfect, is now whining that the agreement is "too weak." And, apparently, that's why we need TPP. To make an already bad agreement much worse.
The good news here is that the public is becoming aware of this practice of hiding bad rules in trade agreements and then demanding we change our laws to "meet international obligations." President Obama's message may not have been directly about SOPA/PIPA, but it was an unfortunate signal about the continued use of questionable "trade agreements" to not just force the rest of the world into bad and damaging (for their own economies) IP rules, but to then turn around and use them to ratchet things up back here in the US as well.
One thing that anyone just becoming aware of these fights needs to know: the entertainment industry lobby is very, very good at what they do, and they never put all their eggs in one basket. While they love pushing for ever more draconian federal laws, they're always working multiple angles, including international trade agreements, laws in foreign countries and... state laws around the US, which they can then leverage to get other states to follow suit. If SOPA/PIPA really fails on the federal level, you'll see the same ideas pop up in all of those other places. In fact, we're already hearing stories of such plans in all three things, which we'll be covering in the days and weeks ahead.
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Filed Under: acta, copyright, free trade agreements, korous, pipa, protect ip, sopa, tpp, trade agreements
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Political Mindsets
"Nevermind that shit; we've got to regulate it!"
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Re: Political Mindsets
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Re: Political Mindsets
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Tinfoil Hat Question
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Too late
I'm of the belief that the SOPA/PIPA push was indeed a big loss for the **AAAs (the extra A is for A-hole), but that they'll be back in short order and end up getting what they want in a much sneakier manner, or at least trying.
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Re: Tinfoil Hat Question
So ACTA is still toothless at the moment.
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If you're smart, you'll go to the table and work with the creative industries and work out your differences before government does it for you.
The tech industry is not going to be allowed to hold captive IP holders and make them their serfs. It isn't going to happen.
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There is a preview of what is to come, like cellphone monitoring, web censorship, deputizing of ISP's, Internet companies, telcos, banks, financial institutions, 3 strikes, more criminalizing of acts that are today legal.
That report is the roadmap to hell.
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The Content industry is not going to be allowed to hold captive the Tech industry and make them their serfs. It isn't going to happen.
There FTFY.
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uh no. Might want to check yer figures there, pal...
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President Obama- SOTU speech 1/24/12
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If you're smart, you'll go to the table and work with the creative industries and work out your differences before government does it for you.
The tech industry is not going to be allowed to hold captive IP holders and make them their serfs. It isn't going to happen.
Yes, because we all know that the world has to revolve around the entertainment industry. Frankly, I don't see why the various governments of the world don't just simply hand of their countries over to Hollywood. I'm sure we'd all be much better off with them making the rules. Get rid of all those illegal infringement devices like the VCR/DVR, iPod, Netflix...
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But they are, aren't they?
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in 40 years all that people you pissed off will be taking office somewhere and they will remember vividly what a monopoly is all about.
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How many politicians the industry can bribe?
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Did you know that YouTube receives over one hour of video footage every second!
That's so many cat videos. And so many people watch them.
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Please go far away from the internet and die.
How can I bully you people more?
Tell me I want to know.
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Get every service provider to use AcousticID to filter things out.
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Great,
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Here muppet.
A robust image fingerprinting system using the Radon transform
Now remove all your filth from my beloved internet now!
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It's important they know how you really feel.
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You know, I've seen/heard people in power tell the people they control (or think they control) thoughtout most of recorded history. That's very much the attitude a bunch of priveledged nobility gave a colinists in the mid 1700's. In the end it's not going to work for you anymore than it worked for them.
If you're smart, you'll go to the table and work with the creative industries and work out your differences before government does it for you.
Yeah, the tech industry and the general public (at least those who were aware of the issue) offered, asked, almost pleaded for a seat at the table when they negotiated ACTA. They did the same with SOPA/PIPA. Your ptrecious IP industry gave us the finger and told us to kiss their collective ass. They insisted that it was all going to be on their term, end of story.
So now that they have discovered they aren't the all powerful wizards they convinved themselves they were, and have been exposed as hacks behing a curtain, NOW they want to deal? I DON'T THINK SO. You will not treat me like shit when you think you have the upper hand and the expect me to compromise when you suddenly discover it is YOU on the defensive.
No I will not negotiate.
No I will not compromise.
You were offered the opportunity time and again when you had (or thought you had) the high ground, so you're just going to have to deal with the consequences now.
The tech industry is not going to be allowed to hold captive IP holders and make them their serfs. It isn't going to happen.
You seem to be mistaken. It's the IP industry trying to hold people captive and make everyone their serfs. IP has become just a twisted form of welfare, these days, and like welfare, some of you people choose to vastly abuse the system. Well, your about to be taken off the bottle, so start getting used to it.
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Come to it, the tech industry is holding no one capitve. That the "content industry" can't or won't adapt to reality is no reason to change reality to suit them.
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IP, a term I believe is terribly misleading, only adds ambiguity to discussions since it is merely a reference to a body of law, and nothing else.
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And what makes you think the Internet can't or won't step up to fill the hole left?
It could start to get real lonely in that closed, walled garden no one can get into or out of. So why produce content no one will ever see?
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The horror stories about the provisions in ACTA as a matter of substantive law are simply inaccurate. It is, however, quite fair game to question whether or not the policies associated with ACTA are appropriate.
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Economics does.
The current content industries want to legislate inefficiency into distribution markets through IP and copyright. History has proven efficiency will always win. It benefits both the producers and consumers.
If a company does not take advantage of what new technology has to offer, there is some other company in the wings who will. And there are plenty of other content producers out there.
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The figures are accurate.
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Just askin'
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Go for it!
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Maybe they will. I've already seen what that would look like:
http://www.soundclick.com/default.cfm
Have fun with that if it became your only choice.
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Praise IP!
If you don't believe in IP you're going to hell (or jail; thank you Kim Dotcom).
One nation under IP!
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IP laws are at the front and center of all this debate they are the very reason censorship laws are being proposed because now the old laws don't work so good and neither will new ones, but I want to see any person inside society that will be willing to give up freedom and democracy for IP holders.
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People warned everybody that it was bad,, we all saw it and understood what it meant and how it would be implemented in our own countries.
The long tail goes like this:
Monopoly ▶▶ Copyright ▶▶ ACTA ▶▶ SOPA/PIPA/OPEN ▶▶ Censorship ▶▶ Harm to market competition = Erosion of democracy/reduction of economic activity.
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- Takes pride in the fact that his people can buy politicians.
- Keeps saying to everyone to trust him and inumerous times was proven wrong.
- Supports a monopoly.
- Supports censorship.
- Supports erosion of the legal system for self serving reasons.
Oh that is just reach, what was that you said about SOPA again?
Was it not "Trust me, SOPA will pass and you freetards are screwed!" was not you saying all that BS?
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Please, at least include a version number. And it would be better to say "One nation under IPv6!" because the number of IP addresses in IPv4 are just about all used up.
At least you didn't say "One nation under LANE!" or we would have had to giggle derisively at you.
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https://www.cdt.org/report/list-organizations-and-individuals-opposing-sopa has a short list of 24 about a third of the way down the page, and this blog has pointed to others who have come out against those bills.
Also, way to completely dismiss artists that aren't part of the current system. That's cool. There are plenty of good content creators who primarily use the internet to independently distribute their works, whether it be for free or at a premium.
This discussion has never been about protecting creators, or whether people will create in the future. There will always be artists as long as there is intelligent life, because people make art for the love of art. It was done that way for a long time before copyright laws and it will continue to happen in the future no matter what. This is about enormous marketing/production industries holding on to old methods of distribution and not giving their consumers what they want. They have tried to hold technology back at every turn and have continuously failed. This time will be no different. Even if they win this battle, as technology makes production less expensive and people learn to use the internet to market for almost no cost they will lose in the end.
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While you're at it, how about forwarding some pages about Chris Dodd. You know, the ones where he said that he'll stop paying MPs if they stop being his lapdogs.
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fer sure.
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"I'm telling. waaah"
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He's just as bad as the Congresscritters he yells at.
Arresting people in the dark of the night, taxing the wealthy at 30%, etc, These are just empty promises to get ppl to vote for him.
So far, he's been one of the most dishonest politicians we have had, ever.
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Definition of 'Industry Lifecycle
i. Early Stages Phase - alternative product design and positioning, establishing the range and boundaries of the industry itself.
ii. Innovation Phase - Product innovation declines, process innovation begins and a "dominant design" will arrive.
iii. Cost or Shakeout Phase - Companies settle on the "dominant design"; economies of scale are achieved, forcing smaller players to be acquired or exit altogether. Barriers to entry become very high, as large-scale consolidation occurs.
iv. Maturity - Growth is no longer the main focus, market share and cash flow become the primary goals of the companies left in the space.
v. Decline - Revenues declining; the industry as a whole may be supplanted by a new one.
http://www.investopedia.com/terms/i/industrylifecycle.asp#ixzz1kZLPLo3v
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I have a question...The Game Industry
I wonder if that is because they are still in the innovation stage?
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Re: Tinfoil Hat Question
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ACTA and Wikipedia
To protect electronic rights management information,16 each Party shall provide
adequate legal protection and effective legal remedies against any person knowingly
performing without authority any of the following acts knowing, or with respect to civil
remedies, having reasonable grounds to know, that it will induce, enable, facilitate, or
conceal an infringement of any copyright or related rights:
(a) to remove or alter any electronic rights management information;
(b) to distribute, import for distribution, broadcast, communicate, or make
available to the public copies of works, performances, or phonograms,
knowing that electronic rights management information has been
removed or altered without authority
My question is : Is wikipedia in danger because of this article? or is this article only attacking sites dedicated to infringing IP??
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This takes a lot of money. Quit giving it to them.
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