Archive for April, 2009

Goldstein Introduces Patent Reform Bill To Ease Access To Medicines

For many years, countries such as Canada have avoided the uncomfortable truth that millions are dying in the developing world due partly to legal barriers that render access to medicines unaffordable.  In 2003, the World Trade Organization reached agreement designed to facilitate the export of medicines by opening the door to a compulsory licence for developing countries without manufacturing capabilities. Canada became an early adopter of the agreement by reforming the Patent Act to allow the Canadian Commissioner of Patents to issue a compulsory licence to a pharmaceutical company to allow for the manufacture and export of an eligible drug or medical device to an eligible importing country. Titled the Jean Chretien Pledge to Africa Act after the former Prime Minister’s commitment to development support in Africa, the reforms were touted as an illustration of Canadian leadership on development issues.  

My weekly technology law column (Toronto Star version, homepage version) notes that several years later, most agree the policy have been a near-total failure.  The law has only been used once and the company involved in the process found it so burdensome that it has vowed not to repeat it.  Moreover, other countries, including the European Union, the Netherlands, Switzerland, China, India and South Korea, have also implemented the WTO reforms in a manner that leaves the Canadian Access to Medicines Regime (CAMR) looking unduly restrictive and outdated by comparison.

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April 14, 2009 2 comments Columns

15 Years of Anti-Piracy Warnings

TechDirt points to Guardian collection of anti-piracy warnings, dating back to video cassettes.

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April 13, 2009 1 comment News

Korean Version of ACTA Timeline

IP Left, a Korean NGO, has created a Korean-language version of my ACTA Timeline post.

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April 13, 2009 Comments are Disabled News

Patent Reform Would Ease Path For AIDS Medicines To Africa

Appeared in the Toronto Star on April 13, 2009 as Easing the Passage of AIDS Medicines to Africa For many years, countries such as Canada have avoided the uncomfortable truth that millions are dying in the developing world due partly to legal barriers that render access to medicines unaffordable.  In […]

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April 13, 2009 Comments are Disabled Columns Archive

Wikileaks Posts ACTA Documents Revealing Enforcement Cooperation and Practices Info

Wikileaks has posted additional original ACTA documents, including draft language for several sections of the treaty.  The leaked documents are consistent with earlier reports on the Enforcement of Intellectual Property Rights Chapter.  The leak package also includes the Canadian non-paper on institutional arrangements for ACTA (Canada has since supplied draft treaty language that has not been leaked).

The one document this is completely new is the release of the non-paper on International Enforcement Cooperation and Enforcement Practices, which would form Chapters 3 and 4 of ACTA.  The basis for discussion for the International Enforcement Cooperation (Chapter 3) are:

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April 12, 2009 7 comments News