[Ecommerce] [Fwd: [Broadcast-discuss] IPJ Media Release: WIPO Steps Up Pressure on "Special Interest" Broadcast Treaty]

Manon Ress manon.ress@cptech.org
Thu Nov 18 00:39:01 2004


---------------------------- Original Message ----------------------------
Subject: [Broadcast-discuss] IPJ Media Release: WIPO Steps Up Pressure on
"Special Interest" Broadcast Treaty From:    "IP Justice Media Release"
<announce@ipjustice.org>
Date:    Wed, November 17, 2004 9:45 pm
To:      announce@ipjustice.org
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QbroadcastXtreatyipXjusticeXmediaXreleaseX~ 18QnovemberX2004
Qcontact:QrobinXgross, ipQjusticeXexecutiveXdirectorX  p

IP Justice Media Release ~ 18 November 2004

Contact: Robin Gross, IP Justice Executive Director
  Phone: (+41) 79-434-51-26 (in Geneva)
  Email: robin@ipjustice.org


WIPO Steps Up Pressure on "Special Interest" Broadcast Treaty:
Ignores Concerns of Developing Countries and Artists

(Geneva) The World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) opened its
12th session of the Standing Committee on Copyrights and Related Rights
(SCCRR) yesterday in Geneva to push forward on its efforts to pass a
treaty to create new rights for broadcasting companies.

The proposed treaty would create sweeping new rights for broadcasting
companies that would severely undermine the public interest and subvert
the rights of creators to large broadcasters.

Despite Brazil and India's request at the last committee meeting that the
treaty draft allow for the possibility of removing provisions
designed to prevent consumers from bypassing technology locks that
broadcasting companies place on information and entertainment, no option
to delete these provisions was included in the latest draft treaty. These
controversial provisions, similar to the US Digital Millennium Copyright
Act (DMCA), have been shown to harm to freedom of expression, consumer
rights, technological innovation, and market competition.  Now WIPO
proposes to grant an additional layer of rights for broadcasters, on top
of the rights of copyright holders, to prevent consumer and scientific
circumvention of technology locks on broadcasts.  If the treaty passes,
consumers will be unable to access public domain
programming that is locked up by broadcasting companies.  Artists will
also be required to seek permission from broadcasting companies if they
want to use their own performances.

"It is not the role of the WIPO Secretariat to tell Member States what
their new laws will be, but rather to facilitate Member States'
expressed will," said IP Justice Executive Director Robin Gross in a
statement to the WIPO copyright committee.  "Self-determination is an
indispensable component of legitimate democratic law-making processes.
Unfortunately, it appears that the 'tail is wagging the dog' in this
case," added Gross in Geneva.

Although the treaty purports to merely "update" existing laws, in
reality it would create a broad range of new rights for broadcasters that
currently exist nowhere in any national law.  For example, the United
States proposed that the treaty's scope be broadened to also control
webcasting.  Over a dozen Member States and the European
Community urged that webcasting be removed from the scope of the
treaty's regulation at the last meeting, but that provision, supported
only the US, also remains in the draft treaty.  Including webcasting in
the scope of this treaty would allow traditional broadcasting companies to
squeeze out innovative Internet companies.

The proposed Broadcasting Treaty also severely undermines the goals of the
"Development Agenda," which was adopted by the WIPO General Assembly in
October to refocus WIPO's work away from continuously ratcheting up
rightsholders' rights and toward incentivising access to knowledge.
Unfortunately, WIPO's copyright committee has yet to heed the calls from
developing countries and remains focused on "special interest" laws such
as the proposed Broadcasting Treaty.

WIPO is pushing to conclude the committee's discussion this week and call
for the convening of a Diplomatic Conference to begin official drafting of
the Broadcasting Treaty.  If WIPO is successful and a
Diplomatic Conference is called for, public interest organizations will
not be permitted to attend the Diplomatic Conference to monitor the treaty
making process under WIPO rules.


For more information, see:
http://www.ipjustice.org/WIPO

IP Justice Statement to 12th Session of WIPO Copyright Committee:
http://www.ipjustice.org/WIPO/november04stmt.shtml

IP Justice Analysis of the WIPO Broadcasting Treaty:
"Excessive Rights for Broadcasting Companies Threatens Public Domain and
Technological Innovation":
http://www.ipjustice.org/WIPO/broadcastingtreatyreport2004.shtml

Development Agenda:
http://www.wipo.int/documents/en/document/govbody/wo_gb_ga/pdf/wo_ga_31_11.pdf

"Geneva Declaration" on the Future of WIPO:
http://www.ipjustice.org/WIPO/genevadeclaration.shtml

Alternative NGO Proposal for a Broadcasting Treaty:
http://www.ipjustice.org/WIPO/NGO_Treaty_Proposal_v2.8.pdf

Joint Statement by Artists and NGOs Opposing WIPO Broadcasting Treaty:
http://www.ipjustice.org/WIPO/Joint_Statement.pdf

IP Justice Top 10 Reasons to Reject the WIPO Broadcasting Treaty:
http://www.ipjustice.org/WIPO/Top_10_reasons_WIPO.html

WIPO Draft Broadcasting Treaty:
http://www.ipjustice.org/WIPO/sccr_12_2.doc

IP Justice is an international civil liberties organization that
promotes balanced intellectual property laws. IP Justice defends
consumer rights to use digital media worldwide and is a non-profit
organization based in San Francisco. IP Justice was founded in 2002 by
Robin Gross, who serves as its Executive Director. To learn more about IP
Justice, visit the website at http://www.ipjustice.org.


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