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IP
JUSTICE:
Top 10 Reasons to Reject the WIPO Basic Draft Proposal for a
Broadcasting Treaty
May 2006
1. Eliminates the public
domain for audio and video programming.
The WIPO copyright committee’s Basic Draft Proposal for a Broadcasting
Treaty endangers the public domain for copyrighted materials. It
permits broadcasting corporations to “copyright” and control the
public’s use of programming that is already in the public domain (i.e.,
legally belongs to the public). This creates a devastating effect
on education and development, particularly in countries that can afford
it the least.
2. Creates obligations for countries that drastically exceed
current international standards.
The Basic Draft Proposal requires nations to amend their domestic laws
to create greater restrictions over broadcast media than current
international treaty obligations require of countries. For
example, the Rome Convention permits countries to grant rights to
broadcasting organizations -- but only for 20 years. Article 13
of the Basic Draft Proposal would require all countries to create such
rights for broadcasting companies for a minimum of 50 years, more than
double the current international standard, and outliving the economic
life span of a broadcast and the time required to recoup any economic
investment in the programming.
3. Chills freedom of expression by outlawing the circumvention
of technological restrictions similarly to U.S. Digital Millennium
Copyright Act (DMCA).
Article 14 of the Basic Draft Proposal would forbid the decryption of
broadcast signals, even if the programming is in the public domain or
when its creator does not wish to suppress its distribution.
Alternative V outlaws a broad range of devices (including personal
computers), software, and other technical information that could help a
consumer to decrypt a broadcast signal. Similar prohibitions in
the US DMCA have been invoked to prevent the publication of scientific
papers, prosecute reputable cryptographers, censor journalists, limit
fair use rights, and prevent competition in markets unrelated to
copyright. Creating new anti-circumvention rights for
broadcasters makes no sense.
4. Threatens to regulate webcasting and most Internet
transmissions of broadcast media.
Article 6 and Article 9 broadly forbid the transmission and
retransmission of broadcast programming by any means, including over
the Internet. The US proposal to extend the Broadcasting Treaty
to include webcasting activities via an appendix, dramatically widens
the scope of the treaty beyond traditional broadcasting. By
including Internet transmissions within its scope, the treaty goes
beyond its stated objective and proposes to regulate an enormous
breadth of consumer activity, chilling innovation and freedom of
expression on the Internet.
5. Grants copyright protection over “signals”, something that
is neither creative nor original and thus outside the scope of
copyright protection.
The Basic Draft Proposal departs from the Satellites Convention’s
“signal centric” approach and attempts to set a dangerous precedent by
granting copyright protection for things that do not qualify as
creative works, such as broadcast signals. Under both US
Copyright law and the US Constitution, only creative works that are
original are eligible for copyright protection. The WIPO
Broadcasting Treaty could create new rights that US courts could later
find to be unconstitutional.
6. Freezes fair use and other limitations and exceptions to
rightsholders’ rights.
Article 12 confines any limitations and exceptions to the new rights of
broadcasting companies to only special cases that do not conflict with
the broadcasters’ exploitation of the broadcasts. This
treaty would freeze fair use and render illegal all future innovations
of broadcast media. Alternative T would only allow countries to
maintain their national law limitations and exceptions concerning
noncommercial broadcasts if they were in force by the date of the
treaty’s diplomatic conference.
7. Provides advantage to entrenched broadcasting industry at
expense of future innovators and non-traditional broadcasters.
Article 6 grants existing broadcasting companies a new right of
retransmission over broadcasts “by any means” including over the
Internet. This provides the traditional broadcasting industry
with a competitive advantage over webcasters and other “new-media”
re-transmitters who discover new and innovative ways of providing
entertainment to consumers, but will be prevented from doing so because
this broad grant forecloses all future means of redistribution that is
yet to be discovered.
8. Gives broadcasting companies greater rights than artists are
granted over their own performances.
Article 6’s right of retransmission provides broadcasting companies
with higher levels of protection over broadcasts than the law gives to
the actual creators of the program. Canada proposed a reservation
to it out of concern that it creates “a situation where the level of
protection of broadcasts would exceed the rights of the rightholders of
the content being broadcast.” Also, Article 10’s right to make
available allows broadcasting companies to prevent other rightholders
(such the performers of the underlying program) from making their own
performances available for viewing.
9. Experiments with global law-making by creating new rights
that exist no where.
Rather than harmonize existing legal norms, as international treaties
are supposed to do, the proposed WIPO Broadcasting Treaty creates
entirely new rights, that currently do not exist in any national law
(such as webcasting rights and anti-circumvention rights for
broadcasters). WIPO is not an elected body authorized to create
new legal rights that no national parliament or legislature has ever
voted to create.
10. Draft Basic Proposal Ignores Concerns of Member States in
Previous Discussions.
The Draft Basic Proposal for a WIPO Broadcasting Treaty is a poor
reflection of the concerns expressed by Member States in previous
discussions on the treaty’s provisions. The vast majority
of Member States expressed a lack of support for including any form of
webcasting and for anti-circumvention provisions in the treaty, yet
these provisions remain glued to the text of the treaty. The
Draft Basic Proposal is a distortion of the SCCR’s discussions and
“consensus” reached at WIPO.
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Read the
Principles of
IP Justice
and Sign-on!
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1.
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We reserve the right to control our individual experience of intellectual property.
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2.
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Creators deserve to be compensated.
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3.
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We reserve our right to make private copies of lawfully acquired intellectual property.
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4.
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Technology and information that enable the exercise of rights should be lawful.
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5.
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"Copy Rights" come with "Copy Responsibilities."
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