| By Roger Strukhoff | Article Rating: |
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| February 11, 2012 08:45 AM EST | Reads: |
1,894 |
It's looking like the politicians of the world are waking up and realizing that pirates are pirates and non-pirates are not pirates.
Pirates would be those homicidal, old-style drunken English guys with eye patches and wooden legs, and those modern, drug-hazed Somalians who ransom and sometimes kill people. Non-pirates would be people who visit YouTube.
The latest development is the reported decision by the German government not to sign ACTA - the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement - a global version of the noxious, proposed SOPA and PIPA legislation in the US.
Our friends in Canada as well as the Obama Administration have already signed on. ACTA would create a new, independent body with responsibility for prosecuting manufacturers and purveyors of counterfeit goods, generic drugs that are verboten in commercial quantities, and trademark and copyright counterfeiting.
As with SOPA, the legislation proposes to criminalize what has traditionally subject to civil litigation. And like SOPA, the ACTA would wield a blunt instrument that equates fake Armani and Gucci with generic blood-pressure medicine and downloaded video clips and songs.
In Europe, activists and politicians have taken to wearing those Guy Fawkes masks associated with the Anonymous black-hat hacker movement. It seems ironic that opposing a Hollywood power grab and massive rewrite of centuries of copyright law and is considered revolutionary.
In any case, there are rumblings from many in Europe who had previously signed onto ACTA. One Slovenian politician, who apparently reads proposed legislation as closely as do most American politicians, said she "did not pay enough attention" to what she was signing, according to a report by the Washington Post. One could surmise she is hardly alone among her Euro-peers.
Germany is the central, driving force behind all that Europe does, so one can imagine some dominoes falling if the German government does, in fact, now actively oppose ACTA. We just saw numerous US politicians cave in the face of loud opposition - what Rupert Murdoch has tweeted as "terrorism" but many interpret as "exercising rights in a democracy." Now the other shoe appears to be dropping on the far side of the pond.
Published February 11, 2012 Reads 1,894
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More Stories By Roger Strukhoff
Roger Strukhoff is Executive Director of the Tau Institute (@TauDir), focused on global ICT research, including the growth of cloud computing. Offices are located in Illinois and Makati City, Philippines. He also writes for Cloud Computing Journal, Computerworld Philippines, and CloudEcosystem.com. He holds a BA from Knox College, Technical Certificate from UC-Berkeley, and MBA from Cal State (Hayward).
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