Discontent With Secrecy And One-Sided Nature Of TPP Spreads Among Participating Nations
from the partnership-of-the-unequal dept
Last week Mike wrote how frustration at the unremitting secrecy surrounding TPP, and the refusal to allow members of the public in whose name it is being negotiated to express their views, has led to the creation of a new participatory Web site by the "Fair Deal Coalition." Many of the best-known groups fighting for more balanced copyright laws in the US, Canada, Australia and New Zealand have signed up, including Techdirt.
But they are not the only ones that have had enough of this lack of transparency. An interesting article in the leading Malaysian newspaper The Star shows that people there too are getting fed up with being kept in the dark, even as negotiations are taking place in their country behind closed doors:
Based on a blog post last week, [former Malaysian Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad] seems to be more vehemently opposed to the talks than the 70 other NGOs against it.
But it's not just about the secrecy. The same article notes that another high-ranking figure has come out against TPP for different reasons:
"A partnership of the unequal, of the strong to take advantage of the weak," he wrote.
Twelve countries, including Japan, the latest to join the group are involved in the 18th round of talks targeted to be concluded by October.
The United States and the others -- Malaysia, Singapore, Brunei, Vietnam, Australia, New Zealand, Peru, Chile and Canada -- are believed to have concluded discussions on 14 of the 29 chapters.
For those who are against it, the major point of contention is the lack of transparency.Chile's former chief negotiator [for TPP], Rodrigo Contreras, who quit in February, dropped a bombshell by openly denouncing the pact.
If enough influential people in other countries taking part in the negotiations start to voice their concerns, meeting that October deadline for finalizing the agreement will start to look even more unrealistic than it does now.
"It is a threat to our countries. It will restrict our options for development in health and education, in biological and cultural diversity, design of public policies and the transformation of our economies," he wrote in Peru's Caretas weekly.
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WHAT exactly are the "more balanced copyright laws" you favor?
But hey, I do admire the self-inflation of your phrase: "best-known groups ... including Techdirt."
FOR THE RECORD: I'm certain that TPP is only in the interests of various corporate cartels and gov't, not the people, and so I oppose it, while yet FOR reasonable copyright derived from common law.
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People starving, economies crashing, crackdowns on knowledge and education.
That kind of evil.
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Re: WHAT exactly are the "more balanced copyright laws" you favor?
Is there any reason Techdirt needs to have a yes/no position though? Can't it just report facts and developments as they pop up, like journalism sites are supposed to? Really, your demands still sound unreasonable.
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Before it's too late
Discontent with secrecy. This is the biggest key. Secret laws, secret interpretations, secret courts, next secret police.
Wake up America.
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Re: WHAT exactly are the "more balanced copyright laws" you favor?
The problem you have is that you assume that the purpose of copyright is to make money for rights holders (rather than promote science and the useful arts), and that any thing that takes power away from rightsholders and gives it to the public is wrong.
Your idea of balance appears to be to keep piling on benefits to rightsholders. However the legal contract we established to promote creation, creativity and innovation is currently being used to stifle free speech, slow the pace of innovation, and Hamper creativity and creation. Techdirt points out where this is happening to highlight the need for solid protection of Fair Use, De Minimus useage, and the public domain, as well as a reduction in copyright terms which last long beyond the financial interest in most copywritten works.
Take Sony's rationalle that the PS4 isn't going to be backwards compatible, because their isn't enough market for it. They have included some streaming process and are considering some emulation, but the market wasn't worth designing the console to read and play these games. The market for them is small. PSN Classics on PS3/Vita went from "EVERY WEEK" to "whenever we kinda feel like it" because even though porting them isn't too hard or expensive, PSN classics didn't sell well enough. But its still a good Century before these games become Public domain. Will they still exist? Optical Media is a relatively fragile data storage medium. How much of these games will last that long? As Fan Fiction indicates, there is a wealth of creation that can happen around these games, but they will be locked up till long past memory of them fades.
But no, balance has nothing to do with the public's rights.
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you got it!! god ol' US of A!! the hub of democracy (i don't think!!)!!
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Re: Re: WHAT exactly are the "more balanced copyright laws" you favor?
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"It is a threat to our countries. It will restrict our options for development in health and education, in biological and cultural diversity, design of public policies and the transformation of our economies." - Chile's *former* chief negotiator for TPP, Rodrigo Contreras
Are there any quotes by *current* government employees? Was the latter one, Rodrigo, replaced with someone with a more favorable stance towards TPP or did Chile do the right thing and walk away from negotiating this corporate toilet paper? Lastly, if it's done in secrecy, it's no law and nobody should feel obligated to obey any of its (draconian) rules and prohibitions.
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Re: which country?
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