- Online TV spats mean fewer free shows on Web
- LimeWire Shuts Down After Losing Court Battle With The RIAA
- German court sets file sharing damages at €15, not €300
- LimeWire: will users turn to legal alternatives?
- YouTube's Chad Hurley to step down as chief executive
- Scholars Say International Property Accord Needs Senate Approval
- The $105 Fix That Could Protect You From Copyright-Troll Lawsuits
- Broadcast networks blocking Google TV's access to shows on their Websites
- Leaked Letter Exposes Sarkozy’s Repressive Anti-Piracy Agenda
- Cinema iPhone pirate escapes jail in test case appeal
- Google must name YouTube cyber bullies
- Pirates In The Sky: Filesharers Want To Build Weather-Balloon-Hosted Download Site
- Legal P2P venture fails
- Google to digitize Dead Sea Scrolls
- YouTube clasps naked dancer to bosom
- Record companies lose illegal download case
- Harry Hill takes his comedy online
- EFF backs political site's Righthaven counter-suit
Sunday, October 31, 2010
News Roundup - October 2010
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Wednesday, October 20, 2010
Attack A.C.T.A.
The Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (A.C.T.A.) is a proposed multilateral treaty that aims to standardize the enforcement of intellectual property rights.
One of the key points of contention with the treaty is the level of secrecy that the talks are conducted under, and the lack of input from what the European Commission terms "civil society"[1]. According to the factsheet distributed on behalf of one of the A.C.T.A. negotiating parties, the agreement will not negatively impact individual's fundamental freedoms, or result in the harassment of consumers [2].
Dan Bull represents the anti-A.C.T.A. point of view in his own style below [3]:
While the methods of negotiation could be improved, it is desirable that something as amorphous as intellectual property rights enforcement is approached at the level of international cooperation. The major benefit of any kind of agreement such as A.C.T.A. is a perhaps a quantum of certainty that the law is sorely lacking right now, which would benefit both rights holders and content users alike.
Footnotes
1. http://ec.europa.eu/trade/creating-opportunities/trade-topics/intellectual-property/anti-counterfeiting/
2. http://trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/docs/2009/january/tradoc_142040.pdf
3. The Death of ACTA
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