Meet SOPA's Evil Twin, ACTA

FORTUNE -- It's only fitting that a loud, global outcry over ACTA, an international agreement to govern intellectual property, began just after the anti-piracy bills SOPA and PIPA were shelved by the U.S Congress in the face of massive public pressure. If "copyright maximalists" can't get legislation passed, writes TechDirt's Mike Masnick, "they resort to getting these things put into international trade agreements, which get significantly less scrutiny."
Not that the "maximalists" -- including the movie and music industries -- were following such a timeline, exactly. ACTA -- the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (PDF) -- is their backup, and they've been working on it for years. It's stirring protests now because Poland, Ireland and the European Union announced they would sign on this week, moving the pact closer to reality.
Like many trade agreements, ACTA is a confusing mess. Even its signatories don't agree on how it's supposed to work. The way it's been pushed forward has also been unruly -- talks have been held in secret, without any kind of legislative oversight or input from citizens or public-interest groups. The public only became aware of it in 2008, a couple of years after discussions began, when Wikileaks published a discussion paper. Since then, drafts of the pact have been released to the public, each successively less onerous to critics. Reportedly, though, big media and pharmaceutical lobbyists have been privy to the talks all along
Not that the critics are appeased. People in Poland are even marching in the streets in protest. The online vandals of Anonymous have attacked governments and businesses around the world.
Part of the confusion, and ire, comes from the fact that ACTA combines counterfeiting and piracy as if they were similar, when in reality, they're very different. Counterfeiting is when a customer is duped into buying, say, a fake iPod or a knockoff Gucci handbag. Piracy is when someone, for instance, distributes an unauthorized copy of a movie or song. Different kinds of laws apply to each, or are supposed to. Copyright holders (movie studios, record labels, etc.) often try to meld anti-piracy measures with those aimed at counterfeiting, which are usually less controversial. SOPA and PIPA were similar to ACTA in this regard.
The whole thing is so muddled that it's not entirely clear what effect it will have on U.S. law or how it's enforced -- though proponents insist that it merely supports current laws by providing a basic legal framework for their enforcement. Critics say it will put Internet service providers in an untenable position, making them potentially liable for their customers' alleged actions and thereby forcing them to comply with requests from copyright holders for user data, with no due process. It's one thing when a judge orders you to hand over data. It's quite another when the order comes from Viacom.
Masnick says the biggest problem with the pact isn't that it will change U.S. law -- it "probably" won't, he writes -- but that it will lock down current law that governs enterprises, like technology and Internet media, that are in constant flux and are driven by innovation. To comply with the agreement, "the US needs to retain certain parts of copyright law that many reformers believe should be changed," he writes.
Critics also say that activities such as non-commercial file-sharing, which are normally handled by civil courts, could be turned into crimes because the agreement is unclear on precisely what "commercial-scale" piracy is. Piracy for commercial gain is covered, but so is "significant willful copyright or related rights infringements that have no direct or indirect motivation of financial gain." It all depends on what the meaning of "significant" is. In other words, if you download a movie -- or maybe it has to be three movies, or 300 -- it's possible that rather than a summons-server knocking on your door, it would be a cop. But again, this isn't entirely clear because the language is so vague and because it's impossible to tell how U.S. enforcement agencies will interpret it.
There are lots of other problematic provisions in ACTA, having to do with seed patents, generic drugs and other matters (watch this space for more), but the loudest criticisms so far have to do with its copyright provisions. In 2010, 75 law professors signed a letter to President Obama urging him not to sign the pact.
They went unheeded. Obama signed the pact -- which was originally developed by the United States and Japan -- last year. Other current signatories include Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Morocco, Singapore, and South Korea.
There are questions as to whether it was even legal for Obama to sign without the consent of Congress. Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon thinks it wasn't. In October, he sent a letter to Obama demanding an explanation. Wyden was a vociferous critic of SOPA and PIPA, and has been critical of ACTA as well -- particularly the opacity of its development. In particular, he decried the failure "to give the public a say over issues that so profoundly affect their lives."

http://tech.fortune.cnn.com/2012/01/26/meet-sopas-evil-twin-acta/
 
I cant post the website where I found this, but it gives a description of ACTA:

The procedure for drafting the text of the agreement and the text of the agreement itself have received numerous complaints. The negotiations and draft texts of this agreement were kept secret until finalized. Civil rights groups and developing countries were excluded from the negotiations but the MPAA, RIAA and pharma lobby were constantly consulted on the text.

Multiple groups and organizations that defend civil liberties have come out against ACTA saying that the treaty will restrict fundamental civil and digital rights, including the freedom of expression and communication privacy.

According to an analysis by the Free Software Foundation, ACTA would require that existing ISPs no longer host free software that can access copyrighted media, and DRM protected media would not be legally playable with free software.

Nate Anderson with Ars Technica pointed out that ACTA encourages service providers to collect and provide information about suspected infringers by giving them “safe harbor from certain legal threats”.

Under ACTA, copyright infringement on a commercial scale will be criminalized, but the standard for commercial scale is set low.

ACTA also allows criminal investigations and invasive searches to be performed against individuals for whom there is no probable cause: your laptop or iphone could be searched when you cross the border.

Oxfam says that ACTA will impact access to affordable medicines in the EU by curbing generic medicine competition. Put simply, it will make it harder to compete with big pharma. As if this is what we need right now, during harsh economic times, higher prices on medicine.

European Digital Rights (EDRi) says that, with ACTA, the interests of rightsholders are put ahead of free speech, privacy, and other fundamental rights. ACTA pushes Internet providers to carry out surveillance of their networks and disclose the personal information of alleged infringers to rightsholders.

ACTA would therefore place the regulation of free speech in the hands of private companies.

 

Will E Worm

Conspiracy...
So, SOPA and PIPA were a smoke screen for ACTA?

They just need to leave us alone on the net.
 
I have been trying to provide some information to people around here about the ACTA but most don't seem to care or are too busy to care or say that this will not be as it is and things will change and so on and so forth. Yesterday, when i told them that ACTA was signed by the EU Comission, most freaked out, most stayed the same (don't care, doesn't affect them, bla bla) or just simply tried to show interest but in their own words they just simply dropped one big pile of *you know what* of that matter. Here, as with most countries, don't care or don't know since the media doesn't even touch this subject. It's up to us, the internet community to make them aware of this before it's too late in the EU otherwise, the internet as we know it will be destroyed, like it almost happened in the states with PIPA/SOPA. For the past 3 years i've been very vocal, mostly on forums and emails sent to people i know, about this. For the past week/week and a half, i completely 'blew up' in being vocal on this, either on the net or in person. Like i said, most people i talk to don't care or it's too much for them and they rather wait it out to pass. They don't seem to understand that this WILL affect us all in almost all levels of communication and not just communication. Some other things too. I told those people that i've been 'warning' about this for a very long time so they could get informed and be vocal about it. Now it's like i said and i replied mostly that "Then when it happens, if it happens like they intend to, don't come crying to me or anyone else for that matter, when i myself and a few others warned you about it and you could have done something."

Anyway, i just don't know what to say more for the time being since i haven't slept the whole night, again, because of this thing. :facepalm:
 

LukeEl

I am a failure to the Korean side of my family
Is it me or do these SOPA's and ACTA's sound like failed government agencies.
 
I'm certainly almost as tired as Zull is with this shit. RIAA, MPAA and other Mafiaa organizations and their ability to ever be able to have any power over legislation needs to be completely destroyed. That's what they deserve based on their track record so far.

By the way, the ACTA bullshit started around 2008 already. Not that most of you know or care about it. Motherfucking piece of shit! I hope a strike of a similar magnitude as with SOPA will light up this time..
 
Latest news! These are from the 27th/28th of this month...

EU Parliament Will Vote on ACTA Without Delay! (La Quadrature Du Net)
http://www.laquadrature.net/en/eu-parliament-will-vote-on-acta-without-delay

MEPs reject plan to refer ACTA to the ECJ (European Voice)
http://www.europeanvoice.com/article/2012/march/meps-reject-plan-to-refer-acta-to-the-ecj/73985.aspx

ACTA: Showdown Imminent, Battle Stations, Battle Stations! (Falkvinge on Infopolicy)
http://falkvinge.net/2012/03/27/acta-showdown-imminent-battle-stations-battle-stations/

ACTA Battle Nears Climax in Europe (T0rrent Freak)
http://*******freak.com/acta-battle-nears-climax-in-europe-120328/
 
If i'm reading this right, and if my feelings are correct, which might not be, then they have been lying to us all this time, giving us false hopes. :mad: WE ARE ALL DOOMED! EVERYTHING AND ALL!!! Read on...

ACTA: Unredacted Docs Show European Commission Negotiation Failures

Newly unredacted European Commission notes for four of the negotiation rounds for ACTA show that the Commission failed to negotiate effectively on behalf of European citizens and businesses. That’s the assessment of digital rights organization EDRi and AccessNow, who gained access to the previously censored documents.

This week and next there will be several key votes in European Parliament Committees on ACTA, the controversial Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement.

In advance of these votes, European digital rights group EDRi and AccessNow managed to obtain documents showing European Commission notes on four of the earlier negotiation rounds.

The notes, which were previously redacted, cover the meetings in Paris during 2008, Rabat and Seoul in 2009 and Guadalajara in 2010. EDRi have conducted their analysis and are disappointed with their findings.

“The documents made public today provide an extensive guide to the failures of the European Commission to negotiate effectively on behalf of European citizens and businesses. They also provide an insight into the ways in which the Commission’s public relations ‘spin’ seeks to hide these failures,” EDRi explain.

Ever since the very existence of ACTA was confirmed, the issue of transparency (or lack of it) has been high on the agenda. Little surprise then that this area is the first to receive criticism.

“From the earliest stages, the Commission made weak and unsuccessful efforts to have a transparent process,” EDRi reports. “The EU ultimately agreed to work to keep all versions away from the public.”

The documents also show that the Commission failed to handle the United States effectively, having agreed to be bound by a confidentiality agreement that created a huge advantage for the US.

“Specifically, [the agreement] permitted the US to show ACTA documents to ‘selected stakeholders’ under non-disclosure agreements while the EU had no equivalent mechanism, thereby giving a big advantage to the stakeholders selected by the US authorities,” EDRi add.

Perhaps of even more concern were problems closer to home experienced with the Swedish Presidency of the European Council. At one stage the Presidency proposed not keeping other Member States in the picture “..with the explicit intention of preventing Italy and the United Kingdom from raising concerns about penal sanctions for online infringements.”

The much-discussed “3 strikes” regime for dealing with illicit file-sharing also raises its head as a thorny issue. After the Commission first denied but was then forced to admit that negotiations on disconnections for infringement had taken place, it later said that all such proposals had been completely rejected. However, the meeting notes show no such discussion or conclusion.

The criticisms by EDRi continue through several more pages of apparent failures, including that the Commission knew that it was lying when it said that ACTA is “only about enforcement and not about substantive law.” For Europeans, EDRi’s conclusion is damning.

“The comprehensive failure of the European negotiators is concerning for a number of reasons, and begs the question of what kind of influence the EU would have in the unelected ACTA Committee if the Treaty passed and was implemented.

“It also underlines the fact that this agreement, from beginning to end, was driven by the United States — the documents were drafted in the image of US copyright law, do not include particular aspects of IP that are considered important to the European economy, and even on such seemingly trivial aspects, like defining what is meant by ‘digital environment’ could not be achieved by the European representations,” EDRi concludes.

So what next for ACTA?

“There are four committee votes coming up – three this week and one next week,”
EDRi Executive Director Joe McNamee told T0rrentFreak. “It is now or never.”

The four newly unredacted documents can be found below (pdf)


This is from T0rrentFreak...

Like i said, if i'm right, which i might not be, then it's over. :mad: For me it's over. The mess that my life has been, fighting all these years against this, one of my family members not being so good (i love that woman more than anything), much more stuff that i'm not going to bother you with, and now this. :mad: For the last few days i've been "feeling" something, but didn't knew exactly what it was, or that it was related to this. Now look at this. :mad: That's it for me. No wonder i have a nervous depression and almost got killed twice in the last 34 years of my (miserable) life... :'(
 
Just found this article. Like it says, this is really our best hope to win this fight! Contact your MEP's and don't waste a minute more. The real battle starts now!

Page to find/contact your MEP's: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/meps/en/search.html

ACTA: Unredacted Docs Show European Commission Negotiation Failures

Source: Open Enterprise (by Glyn Moody / Published 10:23, 28 May 12)

I have been writing about ACTA here for what seems several centuries. The good news is that I will stop doing that soon, because the key vote on ACTA will be taking place in the European Parliament at the beginning of July. Contrary to some reports, ACTA is not dead: although there have been some important shifts in the last few months - actually, pretty staggering ones when you consider the situation at the end of last year - votes in the European Parliament are notoriously hard to predict. This means we must assume that the battle is still on, and not become complacent.

The key thing to remember is that if the MEPs vote against ratification, ACTA is effectively dead, since without the EU it will be pretty weak (although I suspect the US will carry on regardless, just as to preserve face.) However, if ratification takes place, then it will come into force - and we will have lost.

That makes the next four weeks absolutely critical, because all MEPs will come under huge pressure from lobbyists to vote for ACTA. It is therefore vitally important that they hear the other side of the story too. In particular, we need to contact the members of the European Parliament Committees known as ITRE (industry committee), JURI (legal affairs committee), LIBE (civil Liberties committee) and DEVE (development committee) that will make their recommendations to the main INTA (international trade) committee which then submits the final recommendation to the European Parliament before the vote.

As ever, the key resource here is La Quadrature du Net, which has put together a summary of what is happening when. It also provides a page linking to comprehensive lists of all the committees and their members, complete with email addresses and phone numbers.

Over the next few days I will be concentrating on each of the four committees mentioned above in turn. I will pull out all the UK MEPs on those committees to make it easier to contact them. And, as usual, I will post my own email to them. I think at this stage these need to be kept short, since MEPs will probably be suffering ACTA fatigue. What will really impress them, I think, are lots of different submissions from concerned citizens, and I therefore urge you to write to as many of the committees as possible. This really is our last chance to stop ACTA and all the misguided thinking it represents - let's not waste it.

ACT NOW!
 
After three victories, this is not over yet! The next committees are DEVE and INTA. Those are the remaining two before the vote goes to the European Parliament. From now on the battle is towards those two (or three), not forgetting the previous committees rulings/decisions because, as we all know, one does not know what kind of tricks they have up their sleeves. The DEVE committee is on June 4th (next Monday) and the INTA committee is on June 21st (a Thrusday). Around July 3rd, 4th or 5th is the European Parliament. Concentrate on those not forgetting the previous ones because, as i said, you never know what might happen!

Stopping ACTA: DEVE Committee

Source: Open Enterprise (by Glyn Moody / Published 16:36, 30 May 12)

Most people have concentrated on the ITRE, JURI and LIBE committees (as I did in my previous posts this week). But there's a fourth committee that is meeting to decide upon its recommendation to INTA: that of Development. Here's how it describes itself on its home page:

More than a billion people around the world live in extreme poverty. Many more face hunger and disease or have no access to healthcare or education. And, increasingly, people in poor countries face the devastating effects of climate change.

The citizens of Europe firmly believe that the EU has a duty to put a stop to poverty and suffering in a world where there is enough for everybody, if fairly shared.

That reference to sharing is interesting in the context of ACTA and its evident intent to put a stop to that sort of thing.

Here are the DEVE members from the UK:

linda.mcavan@europarl.europa.eu

michael.cashman@europarl.europa.eu

nirj.deva@europarl.europa.eu

fiona.hall@europarl.europa.eu

bill.newtondunn@europarl.europa.eu

And here's what I've sent them:

I am writing to you in connection with the imminent submission of your committee's opinion on ACTA. As you know, this has become an extremely contentious issue, with much misinformation flying around. Since I appreciate that time is short, and you will be very busy on this topic, I just wanted to point out four basic reasons why I feel ACTA is problematic, and should be rejected.

ACTA is a "country club" treaty that is biased against developing countries

ACTA was negotiated among a small group of self-selecting nations. The vast majority of these have mature economies, and ACTA reflects their preoccupations. In particular, the concerns of developing countries are ignored.

For example, thanks to ACTA's harsher policing of trademarks, we are likely to see shipments of generic drugs seized at the borders of ACTA signatories. Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has produced a detailed document explaining why, for these and other reasons, it is "deeply concerned about the impact of the enforcement agenda on the production and supply of affordable, legitimate medicines" (http://www.msfaccess.org/content/acta-and-its-impact-access-medicines).

ACTA deliberately avoids protecting civil liberties

As the important court case in the European Court of Justice recently established (http://curia.europa.eu/juris/docume...=en&mode=lst&dir=&occ=first&part=1&cid=291042):

a fair balance [must] be struck between the right to intellectual property, on the one hand, and the freedom to conduct business, the right to protection of personal data and the freedom to receive or impart information, on the other

The problem is that ACTA is completely one-sided on this question: it provides no safeguards for civil liberties. Disturbingly, it tries to hide this fact in a particularly troubling way. Here's what Amnesty International wrote on the subject (https://www.amnesty.org/en/news/eu-urged-reject-international-anti-counterfeiting-pact-2012-02-10):

Amnesty International is also gravely concerned about the ACTA’s vague and meaningless safeguards. Instead of using well-defined and accepted terminology, the text refers to concepts such as “fundamental principles” and even invents a concept of “fair process”, which currently has no definition in international law.

“Worryingly, ACTA’s text does not even contain references to safeguards like ‘fundamental rights’, ‘fair use’, or ‘due process’, which are universally understood and clearly defined in international law,” said Widney Brown.

That is, ACTA deliberately uses language that literally has no meaning in the context of an international treaty: "fundamental principles" and "fair process" simply do not exist, and are therefore worthless as safeguards for civil liberty. What's worrying is that ACTA negotiators would have known this - this was a deliberate attempt to give the appearance of balance and proportionality while ensuring that the resulting wording of the treaty would in practice be entirely one-side in favour of enforcement. That is, this is not just bad drafting, but drafting in bad faith, with a deliberate intention to deceive.

ACTA has dangerously vague wording that could criminalise trivial online activities

Throughout the treaty, measures are couched in very vague terms. It means that the European Parliament is being asked to ratify something whose real-world effects are unknown.

For example, Article 23 of ACTA is as follows:

Each Party shall provide for criminal procedures and penalties to be applied at least in cases of wilful trademark counterfeiting or copyright or related rights piracy on a commercial scale. For the purposes of this Section, acts carried out on a commercial scale include at least those carried out as commercial activities for direct or indirect economic or commercial advantage.

The definition of "commercial scale" is crucially important, because it is used throughout ACTA, and triggers the application of criminal sanctions (which would include, for example, extradition to the US - as you know, a particularly hot topic in the UK at the moment.)

The section above says "acts carried out on a commercial scale include at least those carried out as commercial activities for direct or indirect economic or commercial advantage." But no minimum level is set here or elsewhere - something that would have been easy to do. Instead, we have "at least those carried out as commercial activities for direct or indirect economic or commercial advantage".

Because of the imprecision of this wording, that would include a Web site where Google ads were being run. Now imagine that someone posted a link on that site to an unauthorised copy of material elsewhere on the Net, and that this causes people to visit that page with the link, and sometimes to click on the Google Ads. The posting of the link would then be a commercial activity for indirect economic gain, and the person running the site would fall foul of laws implementing ACTA.

The vague, over-broad wording of ACTA means that it is likely to applied in a completely disproportionate fashion. The fact that the ACTA negotiators chose not to avoid that problem by specifying a minimum level below which it did not apply suggests that they were happy with this extreme interpretation.

ACTA won't - and cannot - achieve what it sets out to do

The European Commission has emphasised the damage that counterfeit goods are doing to the European economy, and the threat they represent to jobs. Here, for example, is what it said in its latest ACTA press release (http://europa.eu/rapid/pressRelease...format=HTML&aged=0&language=EN&guiLanguage=en):

ACTA is an international trade agreement that will help countries work together to tackle more effectively large-scale Intellectual Property Rights violations. Citizens will benefit from ACTA because it will help protect Europe's raw material - innovations and ideas

….

As Europe is losing billions of Euros annually through counterfeit goods flooding our markets, protecting Intellectual Property Rights means protecting jobs in the EU. It also means consumer safety and secure products.
The EU's national customs authorities have registered that counterfeit goods entering the EU have tripled between 2005 and 2010.
Statistics published by the European Commission in July 2011 show a tremendous upward trend in the number of shipments suspected of violating IPR. Customs in 2010 registered around 80,000 cases, a figure that has almost doubled since 2009. More than 103 million fake products were detained at the EU external border

But the Commission's own statistics on counterfeiting, referred to above, have the following to say (http://europa.eu/rapid/pressRelease...format=HTML&aged=0&language=en&guiLanguage=en):

In 2010, 85% of the total amount of articles infringing IPR came from China. This represents an important increase compared to 2009 (64%). Other countries were the main source of provenance for different product categories, notably Turkey for foodstuff, Thailand for non-alcoholic beverages, Hong Kong for memory cards and India for medicines.

None of those countries is a signatory to ACTA. This means that even if ratified, ACTA will have zero effect on those countries' output of counterfeits. ACTA will only affect signatories, and the only signatory that is mentioned in the Commission's own list of top counterfeits is Greece, which supplies 0.91% of counterfeit goods in the EU. In other words, 99.09% of counterfeit goods will be unaffected if ACTA goes into effect. ACTA will do nothing to protect European citizens against counterfeits, which must be tackled with the laws we already have. We simply don't need ACTA.

Follow me @glynmoody on Twitter or identi.ca, and on Google+

Tags: acta, country club, development, generic drugs

EU Politicians Snub European Commission: Do Not See IP Protection As Key To Internal Security Strategy

Source/u]: TechDirt (by Glyn Moody / Fri, Jun 1st 2012 1:08am)

Filed Under: acta, edri, european commission, european union

One of the most dishonest aspects of ACTA was its attempt to equate genuinely dangerous products like fake medicines with totally harmless ones like unauthorized digital copies. Fortunately, that's such an absurd equivalence that more and more people have voiced their concerns over it -- including the Liberals and Democrats in the European Parliament, who cited it as one reason why they would be voting against ACTA:

ACTA wrongly bundles together too many different types of IPR enforcement under the same umbrella, treating physical goods and digital services in the same way. We believe they should be approached in separate sectoral agreements, and following a comprehensive and democratically debated mandate and impact assessment.

EDRI points out that the European Commission has just suffered a major defeat at the hands of the European Parliament thanks to this lazy kind of coupling in its proposed "Internal Security Strategy" (ISS) for Europe:

In a piece of what the Commission appears to have believed to be a piece of masterful political syllogism, it explained in its Internal Security Strategy (adopted at the end of 2010) that dangerous counterfeit goods are a threat for human health. These counterfeiting offences are infringements of intellectual property rights (IPR). "Piracy" is also an infringement of intellectual proprety rights. Consequently, the fight against "counterfeiting and piracy" must be included in the EU's Internal Security Strategy.

This is part of the wider strategy, as seen in ACTA, to treat all IPR as if it were the same, with dangerous medicines being considered as important as unauthorised downloading and vice versa. The obvious problem, as has become obvious in the ACTA, is that treating serious and trivial infringements as if they were of equal importance will inevitably result in either the serious infringement being treated as if it were trivial or vice versa.

But something that might have been simply waved through before ACTA has now been met with skepticism:

The European Parliament, however, far more sensitive now to the questionable approach of the European Commission to intellectual property rights as a result of the ACTA discussions, recognised this crude attempt to push its so far unsuccessful approach to an even higher level of hysteria. Whatever else one can say about downloading a song without authorisation, the number of deaths that it is likely to cause is, we believe, comparatively low.

As a result, and by a huge majority, the members of the European Parliament adopted a resolution on the ISS that includes the following major slap-down for the European Commission:

...it does not appear fully justified or appropriate to take action in the field of the enforcement of intellectual property rights – a matter which is part of a specific in-depth debate – within the framework of the ISS;

That is a noteworthy refusal, and suggests that ACTA's attempt to lump online sharing with counterfeit medicines, and to make them subject to the same severe civil and even criminal sanctions, has backfired badly. It might be too much to take this ISS snub as an indication of what will happen when the European Parliament votes on ACTA later this summer, but it certainly suggests a new-found wariness in this area.

Follow me @glynmoody on Twitter or identi.ca, and on Google+


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