Member log in

Trade deal raises internet liability concerns

Long-time free trade critic Professor Jane Kelsey has had another crack at the Trans-Pacific Partnership agreement, this time over internet liability.

“A campaign by the US entertainment industry to use the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPPA) to make internet firms liable for illegal downloads by their users needs to be headed off at the pass,” said Professor Kelsey, a strong critic of the proposed free trade deal.

Proposals for “secondary liability” for Internet firms when users infringe copyright created a huge furore in New Zealand last year.

The US had demanded secondary liability was included in the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA), on behalf of its immensely powerful entertainment industry and despite opposite from the likes of Google who deemed it unjust and unworkable.

Under intense international pressure the US withdrew its demand and secondary liability remains a matter for national governments to decide, Professor Kelsey said.

“Having failed in ACTA, the US industry is pushing to revive secondary liability through the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPPA). According to Inside US Trade on 14 January 2011 that has sparked a major conflict between the US entertainment industry and the Internet firms.”

“That controversy will reignite the hugely successful international campaign against secondary liability that followed the leak of the ACTA text.”

In April 2010 the New Zealand critics of ACTA presented the government with the Wellington Declaration with over 1,000 signatures.

The declaration stressed the importance of protecting and encouraging the role of intermediaries, such as ISPs, web site hosts, and search engines, including by safe harbours from unsanctioned copyright violations by users.

“The declaration also condemned the secrecy of the ACTA negotiations. Noting that public scrutiny and accountability were crucial in a free society and essential to ensure there were no unintended consequences, it called for “full transparency and public scrutiny of the ACTA process including release of the text after each round of negotiations.”

“The government needs to reassure New Zealanders that it remains true to the position it took last year and opposes any such provisions in a TPPA,” said Professor Kelsey.

“It must also learn the lessons from ACTA’s secrecy and secure agreement from all the parties during the Chile negotiations to release draft texts for public debate after each negotiating round, and not simply once the decisions have been made.” 

More by Niko Kloeten

Signup to free NBR email alerts here

Comments and questions
7

these commnets proudly sponsored by the labour party, the green party and the kelburn flat earth society ! Come on Jane, read something new !

Read and think about her comments. An extended analogy that is not so absurd in the minds of attorneys and courts in secondary liability context is that the telephone company is partly responsible when someone steals all your savings selling you a pyramid or Ponzi scheme over the phone. We already see shooting victims attempting to sue the gun maker allowed to do so by California, the land of loony tunes and merry melodies, Courts; didn’t succeed though, other than increasing revenue for plaintiff and defendant attorneys.

Kelsey is a twit still living in the early 1900's. There are competent people around so NBR don't waste my time.

Looks like Private Acts of Copyright Infringement and threes are secretly being put back to arrest people even if they don't have a computer. Sing 3 songs in shower, making 3 home movies, sharing 3 secret recipes over the phone, and it's full frontal lobotomy and indefinite prison time.

TPPA (AKA ACTA version 2) will require phone companies everywhere in the Pacific and even in North and South America to act as the "Phone Police" to monitor your calls and wireless surveillance cameras and tiny microphones will be installed in between the walls of your house to be monitored by the RIAA, MPAA, the Japanese RIAA branch called the RIAJ. In other words, any song you sing, any home movie you do, and everyting you say or do the MPAA, RIAA, the Copyright Alliance, RIAJ, the DOJ, and the FTC doesn't like, will be censored, full-frontal lobotomized, and possibly imprisoned or banished never to be seen or heard from again.

Welcome to 1984. We are living in End Times.

sdadasd

Website Design Cumbria - UK businesses looking to promote their websites on the internet and through the search engines.

Post new comment or question

Login to use your NBR member name
Full HTML is not supported but you can use the following tags in your comments:
Link: <url>link</url>
Quote: <quote>text</quote>