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Thursday October 13, 2011 |
U.S. Senator Ron Wyden has written
to U.S. President Barack Obama to raise questions about the U.S. plans
to implement the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement without
Congressional approval.
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Thursday October 06, 2011 |
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The International Economic Law and Policy Blog asks
whether ACTA is enforceable in the light of its vague dispute resolution
mechanisms.
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Monday October 03, 2011 |
Canada became an initial
signatory to the Anti-Counterfeiting
Trade Agreement
over the weekend in Japan. Other countries to sign the agreement
include Australia, Japan, Morocco, New Zealand, the Republic of Korea,
Singapore and the United States. That leaves out the majority of
countries that were part of the negotiations as all the European Union
countries, Switzerland, and Mexico attended the ceremony but did not
sign. Canada's decision to sign is not surprising given its
participation throughout the negotiation process and the flexibility
that was built into the agreement. While there are many concerns with
ACTA (both procedural and substantive), it is not the agreement the
U.S. envisioned when it started the process several years ago.
The signing of the agreement does not mean the agreement is enforceable
yet. ACTA stipulates that it takes effect when six countries have
deposited instruments of ratification, acceptance, or approval. In
other words, most countries must still ratify the agreement (much like
the WIPO Internet treaties, signing indicates general approval of an
agreement but being bound by the terms requires ratification).
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Thursday September 29, 2011 |
Contrary to reports that Canada will be signing the Anti-Counterfeiting
Trade Agreement this weekend, that may not be the case. I asked
the
Department of Foreign Affairs for an update and received the following
statement:
Canada has demonstrated our
commitment to working with the international community to develop
effective tools to protect and enforce intellectual property rights.
Canada is one of 36 countries that participated in the negotiations
leading to the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement. We are currently
working to complete the processes necessary to prepare for signing the
ACTA.
Canada clearly intends to sign ACTA, but perhaps not this weekend.
Update: Minister Ed Fast has issued a release
that he is visiting Japan this weekend to sign some international trade
agreements. That sure sounds like Canada will be signing this weekend
after all.
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