ACTA puts Canadian copyright law at risk

i love P2P
ANDREW OLSVIK
The Brunswickan (University of New Brunswick)

FREDERICTON (CUP) ”“ When I crossed the border to the U.S. in September with my brother and his girlfriend, we had a relatively painless experience.

Although we were questioned inside the border office while our car was being searched, the whole ordeal took less than 20 minutes and we continued on our way with no problems.

Could you imagine how long the wait time at the border would be if the officials had the prerogative to search mp3 players for pirated material?

While wait time at the border is arguably the least pressing of the issues that could become a reality following implementation of the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA), it is perhaps the best example to demonstrate one of the most significant themes of ACTA — privacy invasion.

The proposed agreement is currently being discussed and drafted by a number of governments including those of the United States, Japan, the European Union and Canada in response to the increased trade of counterfeit goods and copyright piracy.

It should be made clear that ACTA is being crafted under extremely tight security and as a result, information circulating on the Internet about ACTA (and by extension, this article) is largely based on a handful of miraculous leaks, with little confirmation by the governments involved. Efforts to formally obtain information on ACTA in the United States were denied on the grounds of national security, though Canada has allegedly requested the right to disclose its own nation-specific documents in the future.

Another glimmer of hope came on Dec. 2, when Industry Minister Tony Clement said that ACTA, as it is not Canadian law, would be “subservient” to domestic law.

One of the most important things to understand about ACTA is that the civil and criminal enforcement provisions of the agreement do not deal exclusively with counterfeited or pirated property intended for profit. That rare EP you downloaded by your favourite band for personal use? Pirated.

Congratulations, you are a criminal. And although we don’t yet know the specifics, there is a list of penalties in ACTA including financial charges and even prison sentences — though I doubt possession of a downloaded Lil Wayne album will land you in the slammer.

Under ACTA, customs and border officials would find their powers drastically strengthened, possibly giving them the ability to search, seize and destroy, without compensation, what they believe to be counterfeited or pirated property.

In addition, current information on ACTA says that the information disclosure provisions in the agreement would require countries to openly share information on alleged counterfeiting operations and specific individuals suspected to be involved to other countries conducting investigations.

As if this wasn’t troubling enough, the Internet provisions are perhaps the most disturbing part of this whole mess. If ACTA is passed, Internet service providers may be required to enforce what’s become known as “graduated response” or “notice-and-termination” procedures similar to new Internet laws in France.

This means that under ACTA, Internet service providers would be responsible for the content stored or transmitted using their service. If you’re caught three times storing or transmitting content that infringes on the intellectual property rights of others — like, say, a pre-release of Lil Wayne’s Tha Carter IV — your Internet service will be shut down for one year.

While ACTA is still in the drafting stages, Dr. Michael Geist of the University of Ottawa speculates that ACTA could be in effect by 2012 unless something is done. Geist, a leading expert on copyright law and ACTA, has plenty of information on his blog, michaelgeist.ca.

Various Canadian and international organizations have taken stances against ACTA, including the Pirate Party of Canada and Creative Commons. You can visit pirateparty.ca and creativecommons.org to learn more about the threat of the ACTA and the alternatives.

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  • http://www.mincov.com Andrei Mincov

    The only reason ACTA can attract radically differing opinions from indisputably educated and intelligent people, is that it is based on the philosophy of a compromise, a balance of interests between creators and the public.

    In my new article, "ACTA: The Hidden Why" at http://mincov.com/articles/index.php/fullarticle/(http://bit.ly/aoa6Do), I explain why the only way to deal with mass violation of intellectual property rights on the Internet without creating a coercive mechanism of oppression, is to state clearly at the outset that intellectual property is being protected because no one has a right to use the results of another’s creative labour, other than on terms put forward by the creator or the subsequent copyright owner who voluntarily purchases said rights from the creator. It has nothing to do with whether the society benefits from such protection. Appeasement and compromise may temporarily create a "balance", but what this balance effectively does is that it subjects individual rights of one group of people to some undefinable "common good". It is only a matter of time until an elected or self-proclaimed representative of the interests of the whole society will make a case that, instead of vesting in authors exclusive rights to their works, the common good will be best served by nationalizing all works of art and imprisoning those who disagree.