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Sunday, 19 April 2015

More Wikileaks revelations about the TPP

Sony emails reveal TPP concerns
Leaked emails between executives of Sony Pictures have revealed concerns in the United States over the secrecy of talks related to the Trans-Pacific Partnership.

19 April, 2015


The emails about the proposed 12 country accord are included in documents stolen from Sony by hackers last year, and now made public on a special database set up by WikiLeaks.

US Trade Representative Mike Froman (C) speaks at a press conference for the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), in Sydney last year.US Trade Representative Mike Froman (C) speaks at a press conference for the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), in Sydney last year. - Photo: AFP/FILE


One email from a Sony executive invited the company's chief executive to meet the United States trade representative Michael Froman to discuss Sony promoting the Trans-Pacific Partnership.

It said President Barack Obama and Mr Froman were keen for the company to talk up the partnership, though it noted the talks were a closed process so the way intellectual property was being handled was a secret.

Another email also revealed calls by IT companies for secrecy over IP and copyright issues related to the deal to be lifted, so they could judge what was on the table.

Meanwhile, a key opponent of the Trans-Pacific Partnership has said the leaked emails reveal the intimate relationship between American trade negotiators and top US industries.

Auckland law professor Jane Kelsey said many key industries know exactly what is on the table.

"Not only do industry representatives sit on the committee that advises the negotiators, and we believe actually have access to the text, but they were even clearing their press releases in response to the leaked text past the trade negotiator before they were released."

And she said Mr Obama's introduction of the American trade bill as reassurance for TPP countries was do or die.

She said far from being a sure thing, the Democrats are deeply divided over whether to pass the legislation.

"There is very little chance it would get through the House of Representatives, Obama needs to rely on the Republicans, there is a huge Democrat groundswell against it, so the chances of it passing are in fact pretty minimal."

Ms Kelsey says it would be a massive risk to commit to the proposed TPP until that bill is passed


SONY EMAILS SHOW INDUSTRY EXECS PUSHING FOR TRADE DEAL
BY LEE FANG


Featured photo - Sony Emails Show Industry Execs Pushing for Trade Deal





















19 April, 2015


(This is an item from our new blog: Unofficial Sources.)

Broadcast media has not devoted much air time to the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade deal, an agreement that will greatly impact 40 percent of the global economy. But hacked emails from Sony reveal that media industry executives have been engaged in active discussions about the agreement behind closed doors.
On April 17, 2014, Steven Fabrizio, the general counsel of the Motion Picture Association of America, sent out an update to industry executives — including Maren Christensen of NBC and Alan Braverman of Disney, the parent company of ABC News — detailing lobbying efforts by the MPAA. “Finally, in regard to trade,” Fabrizio wrote, “the MPAA/MPA with the strong support of your studios, continue to advocate to governments around the world about the pressing need for strong pro-IP trade policies such as TPP and the proposed EU/US trade agreement (TTIP).”
In an email dated February 20, 2014, MPAA president Chris Dodd shared a letter he wrote concerning the TPP deal with executives from NBC, Viacom, Disney and Time Warner, the parent company of CNN. The letter to U.S. Trade Representative Michael Froman decried the potential inclusion of “fair use” doctrine in the TPP, telling Froman that “the potential export of fair use via these agreements raises serious concerns within the community I represent.” Dodd also said he was worried about “indications from the US government that the ISP liability provisions in the TPP are going to be weakened.”
On November 7, 2013, Keith Weaver, a senior executive for Sony’s government affairs department, wrote to Michael Lynton, the chief executive of Sony Pictures, to tell him about a meeting about the trade deal, following up on an earlier one at the White House:
I understand you may be contacted by [Disney chief] Bob Iger or United States Trade Representative, Michael Froman to invite you (+ one) to a meeting at Disney next Friday (the 15th). While I’m not aware of the details of this meeting (time or agenda), my sense is that much of the discussion will center on the TRANS-PACIFIC PARTNERSHIP (TPP, which is a pending multilateral trade agreement with 12 countries that boarder the Pacific Ocean) – you’ll recall this was one of the key topics of your meeting with Froman and your peers at the White House last year.
As I’ve reported in the past, Time Warner, Comcast, and Disney, despite failing to devote air time to the TPP trade deal, have registered lobbyists to promote the deal.
A Media Matters report found that a “transcript search of the CBS Evening News, ABC’s World News Tonight, and NBC’s Nightly News from August 1, 2013, through January 31, 2015, found no mention of the Trans-Pacific Partnership.” The same report found that The Ed Show on MSNBC was the only cable news program to devote significant coverage to the issue. “During the same 18-month period, CNN and Fox News each mentioned the TPP during two broadcasts.”
Photo: Henning Schacht-Pool/Getty


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