[Ecommerce] (IP-Watch) Rita Hayes on DRM and casters' treaty at OECD

Jeff Williams jwkckid1@ix.netcom.com
Fri Feb 3 07:56:13 2006


Manon and all,

What bothers me about this article is some of Ms. Hayes remarks
regarding content, specifically the following:
=93Without attractive and innovative content, the Internet would be a
barren landscape,=94  I found this interesting specifically because
it seems to me and most of our members that there is already
attractive and innovative content, and said content is becoming
even more attractive and innovative as time rapidly passes.  So I
can only read such as she believes that without more copy right
modification in additional protection of content will lead to less
 attractive and innovative content.. I wonder if this is not
code for doing away with public domain content as a matter
of (WIPO) advised policy...



Manon Ress wrote:

> http://www.ip-watch.org/weblog/index.php?p=3D211&res=3D1024_ff&print=3D0
>
> 2/2/2006
>
> Top WIPO Copyright Official Promotes DRMs, Stresses Cooperation
>
> posted by William New @ 12:29 pm
>
> ROME - The top official for copyright issues at the World
> Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO) this week told a gathering
> of experts that standards are needed to protect content online, and
> stressed cooperation among institutions and others in the field.
>
> =93Our work together is gaining increasing importance and increasing
> urgency,=94 said Rita Hayes, deputy director for copyright and related
> rights at the UN World Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO).
>
> Speaking at an 30-31 January event sponsored by the Organisation for
> Economic Cooperation and Development, Hayes called for greater
> cooperation.
>
> OECD officials also stressed cooperation. Secretary-General Donald
> Johnston highlighted the OECD=92s involvement in digital content,
> including in education, e-government, and science. He said the OECD=92s
> role is as analyst, and said that it informs governments in their
> decision-making.
>
> Hugo Parr, chairman of the OECD committee on information technology
> policy told Intellectual Property Watch that there is no threat to
> WIPO of the OECD moving into the area.
>
> =93International organisations should take care not to duplicate work,=94
> he said. =93I think the OECD is broad enough and has a broad enough
> mandate in terms of total economic perspective of its member nations
> that it has interest in IPR as one factor of the economy, among many.
> But I don=92t see it becoming a competitor to WIPO, for instance.=94 Parr
> said the OECD=92s expertise lies in =93assisting governments with
> analysis and policy recommendations.=94
>
> Hayes also emphasised the importance of intellectual property.
> =93Intellectual property has moved to centre stage,=94 Hayes said, noting
> its increasing role in the economies of many nations. Intellectual
> property, though it is intangible, is the basis for entire
> industries, she said.
>
> Hayes said estimates are that intellectual property accounted for US
> $3 trillion in global trade last year, and that is expected to double
> to more than US$6 trillion by 2020. The creative industries are
> growing faster than any other sector, she added.
>
> There are many different views about copyright protection, she said,
> but everyone shares a common interest in content, which is the
> =93currency =85 across the Internet.=94 =93Without attractive and innovat=
ive
> content, the Internet would be a barren landscape,=94 she said.
>
> Hayes said WIPO stresses the importance of intellectual property
> protection, and named three key factors to be pursued. These are to
> establish an inclusive and sound legal framework, efficient
> enforcement regimes, and an intellectual property environment that
> encourages the development of creative industries.
>
> On the legal framework, WIPO is focused on getting nations=92 adherence
> to its 1996 treaties related to the Internet, the WIPO Copyright
> Treaty and the WIPO Performances and Phonograms Treaty, she said.
> Hayes promoted digital rights management, and said further work is
> needed, such as in developing standardisation and helping with
> interoperability of systems, and in reducing legal obstacles.
>
> =93Without a common approach to DRM standards, key issues regarding
> compatibility between digital devices and copyright-protected digital
> content will remain unresolved,=94 she said in her prepared remarks.
> =93This would be an obstacle to increasing the legal availability of
> copyrighted content on the Internet.=94
>
> WIPO also is considering =93ways to address the interplay between
> limitations and exceptions and DRM-protected content =96 particularly
> in regard to accessibility issues,=94 she added.
>
> Michael Geist, University of Ottawa law proferssor, highlighted in
> his blog after the event that it is the content industry view that
> interoperability among electronic gadgets is the problem with DRMs.
> This, he said, runs contrary to the consumer or user view that DRMs
> get in the way of their use of technologies.
>
> Hayes also touted the negotiation at WIPO for a treaty on the rights
> of broadcasters. Some later speakers criticised the idea as outdated
> because it reinforces an older broadcast-driven thinking about
> content, and also because it would potentially give new, unnecessary
> rights to broadcasters.
>
> Hayes highlighted several principles behind WIPO. The organisation is
> member-driven; has a legal framework that strikes a balance between
> the needs of stakeholders (reflected by the recent inclusion of
> exceptions and limitations for education and disabilities in the
> agenda of the WIPO Standing Committee on Copyright and Related
> Rights); is flexible; and is focused on IP protection.
>
> A key issue facing WIPO is the debate over expansion of its
> development agenda. Hayes mentioned that there has been a =93meaningful
> discussion=94 on development. But she did not discuss the development
> agenda. Instead, she mentioned the digital divide, noting that as of
> 2005, there were over 640 million people online, but only 1.5 percent
> of the African population is online compared with 67 percent in the
> United States.
>
> Strong partnerships and cooperation will be critical for the future,
> she concluded.
>
> This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License. All of the
> news articles and features on Intellectual Property Watch are also
> subject to a Creative Commons License which makes them available for
> widescale, free, non-commercial reproduction and translation.
>
> William New, the author of this post, may be reached at wnew@ip-
> watch.ch.
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>
> ************************************************
> Manon Anne Ress
> manon.ress@cptech.org,
> www.cptech.org
>
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Regards,

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