U.S. Seeks to Revive ACTA Without European Support |
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Monday March 04, 2013
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The Canadian introduction of Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement compliance legislation on
Friday appears to have come in direct response to a new U.S.-led
effort to revive the discredited treaty. When the European
Parliament overwhelmingly voted to reject ACTA last July, many
declared it dead. But is not dead
yet: it is badly damaged and will seemingly never achieve the
goals of its
supporters as a model for other countries to adopt and to emerge
as a new
global standard for IP enforcement. But for the U.S., which
spent years pressuring ACTA participants to strike a deal, the
strategy now appears to revive the agreement by at least
garnering the necessary six ratifications for it to take effect. Comments (6)
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Scott
said:
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ACTA Canadians going to unify................or just let it happen then bitch about it later, as usual. |
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... Possible reason as to why we are having to deal with this treaty again could be due to getting Keystone approved: http://jkoblovsky.wordpress.com/2013/03/03/canada-possibly-sells-out-on-acta-to-get-keystone-approval/ ACTA maybe badly damaged, but as we've seen with our own copyright laws, that's not going to deter abuse of these new laws by rights holders. |
We want to enhance competition and investment in this country, and this is why we adopted this policy back in 2008 for the AWS spectrum. Let me say that the price went down by an average of 11% since then, and we will continue this way with the 700 megahertz spectrum. We launched consultation with the industry to make sure that we enhance competition and provide better choice and better rates for our consumers.