US's 'Naughty List' Of Countries Whose Intellectual Property Rules We Don't Like Is A Joke That's No
US's 'Naughty List' Of Countries Whose Intellectual Property Rules We Don't Like Is A Joke That's No Longer Funny
from the what's-so-'special'-about-the-special-301-report dept
by Mike Masnick
Wed, Feb 11th 2015 3:37pm
Mocking the ridiculous "Special 301 report" from the US Trade Representative has become something of an annual sport around these parts. As we've explained, the whole concept of the report is something of a joke: copyright, patent and trademark maximalists send in reports to the USTR, claiming which countries don't do enough to respect US intellectual property, and the USTR -- via no systematic or objective process -- rewrites those complaints into a report that declares certain countries "naughty" for their practices. The whole thing is such a joke that even those in the government will openly mock it. As I've said in the past, I once saw the head of the US Copyright Office openly joke about the purely arbitrary nature of the 301 report at a conference. Countries like Canada -- which are regularly named to the report, despite having copyright laws that are, in many areas, more stringent than the US's -- have openly declared that they do not find the Special 301 process to be legitimate, and thus do not pay any attention to it. A couple of years ago, Chile also made it clear that it felt the 301 process was illegitimate.
However, other countries which rely on good relationships with the US often aren't so lucky. Spain and Sweden, for example, have been openly bullied by US diplomats because of their placement on the list, leading both countries to pass draconian and anti-innovation updates to their copyright laws. The diplomats in various countries often assume, incorrectly, that the Special 301 report has some sort of real analysis behind it -- and they feel the need to put pressure on countries to change their laws in a way that makes the US happy.
The clearest example of what a joke the 301 process is came two years ago, when CCIA tried to use the "process" behind the list to get Germany put on the list for attacking fair use. That actually seemed like a perfectly good use of the list, as Germany was trying to force search engines (mainly Google) to pay up for posting snippets of news and linking to them (a plan that it has continued to push). Here was a clear case of abusing copyright law to harm an American company. And the USTR totally ignored it. Because the Special 301 process is not about saner intellectual property laws. It's about making intellectual property maximalists happy. That's why some of those maximalists have even used the process to get countries declared naughty for merely using open source software. '
Mocking the ridiculous "Special 301 report" from the US Trade Representative has become something of an annual sport around these parts. As we've explained, the whole concept of the report is something of a joke: copyright, patent and trademark maximalists send in reports to the USTR, claiming which countries don't do enough to respect US intellectual property, and the USTR -- via no systematic or objective process -- rewrites those complaints into a report that declares certain countries "naughty" for their practices. The whole thing is such a joke that even those in the government will openly mock it. As I've said in the past, I once saw the head of the US Copyright Office openly joke about the purely arbitrary nature of the 301 report at a conference. Countries like Canada -- which are regularly named to the report, despite having copyright laws that are, in many areas, more stringent than the US's -- have openly declared that they do not find the Special 301 process to be legitimate, and thus do not pay any attention to it. A couple of years ago, Chile also made it clear that it felt the 301 process was illegitimate.
- However, other countries which rely on good relationships with the US often aren't so lucky. Spain and Sweden, for example, have been openly bullied by US diplomats because of their placement on the list, leading both countries to pass draconian and anti-innovation updates to their copyright laws. The diplomats in various countries often assume, incorrectly, that the Special 301 report has some sort of real analysis behind it -- and they feel the need to put pressure on countries to change their laws in a way that makes the US happy.
- The clearest example of what a joke the 301 process is came two years ago, when CCIA tried to use the "process" behind the list to get Germany put on the list for attacking fair use. That actually seemed like a perfectly good use of the list, as Germany was trying to force search engines (mainly Google) to pay up for posting snippets of news and linking to them (a plan that it has continued to push). Here was a clear case of abusing copyright law to harm an American company. And the USTR totally ignored it. Because the Special 301 process is not about saner intellectual property laws. It's about making intellectual property maximalists happy. That's why some of those maximalists have even used the process to get countries declared naughty for merely using open source software.
- The U.S. government's tentacles have extended into Paraguay's domestic policy making through a USAID-funded anti-piracy program of the sinister-sounding Millennium Challenge Corporation. This intervention, under the guise of offering development assistance, actually amounts to an interference in that country's sovereign right to determine its own intellectual property policies.
https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20150209/17454529973/uss-naughty-list-countries-whose-intellectual-property-rules-we-dont-like-is-joke-thats-no-longer-funny.shtml
ThoughtCriminal
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