LEAKED!
TPP: the Son of ACTA will oblige America and other countries to throw
out privacy, free speech and due process for easier copyright
enforcement
Cory
Doktorow
25
August, 201
The
Trans-Pacific Partnership is the son of ACTA, a secretive copyright
and trade treaty being negotiated by the Pacific Rim nations,
including the USA and Canada. As with ACTA, the secretive negotiation
process means that the treaty's provisions represent an extremist
corporate agenda where due process, privacy and free expression are
tossed out the window in favor of streamlined copyright enforcement.
If this passes, America will have a trade obligation to implement all
the worst stuff in SOPA, and then some. The Electronic Frontier
Foundation's Carolina Rossini and Kurt Opsahl explain:
TPP
article 16.3 mandates a system of ISP liability that goes beyond DMCA
standards and U.S. case law. In sum, the TPP pushes a framework
beyond ACTA[1] and possibly the spirit of the DMCA, since it opens
the doors for:
*
Three-strikes policies and laws that require Internet intermediaries
to terminate their users’ Internet access on repeat allegations of
copyright infringement
*
Requirements for Internet intermediaries to filter all Internet
communications for potentially copyright-infringing material
*
ISP obligations to block access to websites that allegedly infringe
or facilitate copyright infringement
*
Efforts to force intermediaries to disclose the identities of their
customers to IP rightsholders on an allegation of copyright
infringement.
Incredibly,
it gets worse:
If
the copyright maximalists have their way, the TPP will include a
“side-letter,” an agreement annexed to the TPP to bind the
countries to strict procedures enabling copyright owners to insist
material are removed from the Internet. This strict
notice-and-takedown regime is not new—in 2004, Chile rejected the
same proposal in its bi-lateral trade agreement with the United
States. Without the shackles of the proposed requirements, Chile then
implemented a much more balanced takedown procedure in its 2010
Copyright Law, which provides greater protection to Internet users’
expression and privacy than the U.S. Digital Millennium Copyright Act
(DMCA)’s copyright safe harbor regime.
Instead
of ensuring due process and judicial involvement in takedowns, the
TPP proposal encourages the spread of models that have been proven
inefficient and have chilling unintended consequences, such as the
HADOPI Law in France or the DMCA.
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