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The New York Times on Hypocrisy of US IP Policies 335

jwinterboy writes " The New York Times has an article (free blah di blah) criticizing the intellectual property framework that the U.S. places on developing countries, given that it was a large pirate of intellectual property during it's own industrialization. "
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The New York Times on Hypocrisy of US IP Policies

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  • Developing nations (Score:5, Insightful)

    by panurge ( 573432 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @04:53AM (#4467763)
    Indeed. British authors used to get very upset over the way their books were pirated in the US, and the practice didn't really stop until the US publishing industry was sufficiently large and international to want protection of their own. But then developing nations, like entrepreneurs, always need a bit of help up the ladder. Who was it said "I never ask a man how he made his first million dollars?"
    • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday October 17, 2002 @05:45AM (#4467874)
      Just to add a little bit to the "happened elsewhere theme":
      AFAIK in the 2nd half of 19th century Germany was widely seen as the rip-off nation building machinery, chemical and pharmaceutical industries on violating patents, only switching to international patent system after they had something to lose.

      For general amusement: among my fellow german countrymen it is widely unknown, that the mark "made in germany" (which they hold in a kind of national pride) was originally forced on german goods by the British to mark them as cheap crap (anybody to remember first japanese cars?).
      • by JThaddeus ( 531998 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @07:10AM (#4468122)
        So the Germans stole from the Brits but the Yanks stole from the Germans. I recall that the Germans invented the Mauser bolt-action rifle mechanism, considered the finest in the world at the that time. After the First World War, the US Springfield arsenal was sued for failing to pay royalties on their wartime production of the 1903 Springfield rifle, the standard US Army rifle for WWI. Of course, this was heard in a US court that was not sympathetic to a German claim.
      • Have a look at was the US did to Enercon.
        This is one of the few english language [landfield.com]
        articles I found:

    • by FyRE666 ( 263011 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @06:39AM (#4468006) Homepage
      Yep, yet another example of the US policy of telling everyone else "don't do as we do, do as we say". It's not enough they seem to want to police the entire planet, whilst taking no notice of anyone elses laws, seek to destroy net-radio by allowing the RIAA to dictate terms, continue to protect a criminal organisation (MSFT) which pays half it's politicians. No, now the US is preaching the word of IP, patents and general stifling of inovation to 3rd World countries.

      These are the same countries US (and EU to a lesser extent) corporations dump out-of-date food and medical supplies on to claim tax breaks - use for slave labour to make "designer" trainers and generally exploit however they can.

      The sad thing is, the US govt can't see why the rest of the World (except our pathetic lapdog PM) takes offence at this...

      Mod me down if you like, it needed saying...
      • by sql*kitten ( 1359 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @08:03AM (#4468418)
        continue to protect a criminal organisation (MSFT) which pays half it's politicians. No, now the US is preaching the word of IP, patents and general stifling of inovation to 3rd World countries.

        It's telling that the Slashbots are so upset by RIAA and MS. These things are utterly trivial. The real problems are in steel tarriffs and agricultural subsidies, that a nation that touts free trade (and the EU is just as bad here) resorts to protectionism and barely-disguised mercantilism at the first sign of trouble. Trouble's when you need your principles the most, not the least.

        The developing world doesn't give a stuff what word processor you prefer or how you think it's unfair that you should have to pay, what, $15 for a CD, so you steal it instead. Look at the big picture, people.
        • by Oscar26 ( 126520 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @08:57AM (#4468784)
          THANK YOU! Someone else here has some understandings on how free trade works. Yes, the president stands up there, claims he is for "free trade" then the next day signs a $180B farm subsidy, or a few months later imposes a 30% tarrif on foreign steal. All in an effort to get votes come November. You can't beat buying votes with American tax dollars. The government takes your $$$, then gives it back to you and say "look what I did! Vote for me!"

          The EU is just as bad as the US. So much for free trade. NAFTA the only true free trade agreement that coveres all goods and labor. Of course we undermine it with subsidies, but it is a step in the right direction.
        • Farm subsidies (Score:5, Interesting)

          by zenyu ( 248067 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @09:04AM (#4468836)
          I used to be one of those people who thought those anti-globalization protesters were just treehugging tenderhearts looking for something to do. Mostly because I'm for free trade on principle. But then I realized how our farm subsidies caused starvation in poorer countries by destroying local food production industries. But our attack on those countries industrial sector with IP laws is part of the same picture.

          The IMF orders those same third world countries we dump our subsidized food into on good years to stop helping local farmers buy chickens with something as simple as insurance that if the chick they buy doesn't become a 1 year old chicken it will be replaced. Then the free trade negotiators show up and tell them they can get rid of that 33% tariff on the president's widgets if he will just get rid of that tariff that protects his countries maize production and well prevents his family's competitors from coming out with better widgets by making those patent laws stronger, err in line with American standards.

          What does it mean when we complain about a 55 year copyright in Taiwan, which hasn't even been around that long, much less democratic in that time? They are in line with international standards, and have trouble policing such an overlong copyright already, much less the kind of permanent monopoly the US wants them to establish on words.

          PS As I understand it the farm subsidies are even worse in the EU, esp France, and this is causing problems with Eastern European countries who wouldn't get the subsidies if they joined the EU. This is from the economist which isn't an unbiased source; is it true?
          • Re:Farm subsidies (Score:5, Interesting)

            by sql*kitten ( 1359 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @09:12AM (#4468881)
            I used to be one of those people who thought those anti-globalization protesters were just treehugging tenderhearts looking for something to do. Mostly because I'm for free trade on principle. But then I realized how our farm subsidies caused starvation in poorer countries by destroying local food production industries.

            Ironically, by campaigning against agricultural subsidies and for "fair prices" for the developing world, the anti-globalization movement is agitating in favor of more globalization! That would homogenize prices across the market.

            Actually, the whole movement is like that. They are anti-profit, but pro-tax. Anti-monopoly, but pro-government. Anti-capitalist, but pro-freedom.

            Really, the corporate CEO and the tree-hugger want the same things, neither of which are in the interests of the government, which does its best to set them against each other.

            As I understand it the farm subsidies are even worse in the EU, esp France, and this is causing problems with Eastern European countries who wouldn't get the subsidies if they joined the EU. This is from the economist which isn't an unbiased source; is it true?

            Yup, google for "Common Agricultural Policy". You can get the raw figures from the EU website itself, then do the analysis yourself (compare, say, the CAP to the value of the agricultural sector in one of the aspiring members). I won't post a link, I want you to look for yourself so you know that I'm not biased the other way.

            • Re:Farm subsidies (Score:3, Insightful)

              by Lemmy Caution ( 8378 )
              Really, the corporate CEO and the tree-hugger want the same things

              That is not true. The corporate CEO wants profits, and will be selective about their globalism as long as it protects profits. They will gladly accept subsidies to save their asses - in steel, the airline industry, agribusiness - while providing lip service to an open market. They are happy to enjoy all the benefits of government intervention to ensure their immediate profitability. And, since corporate money bankrolls the political process, what is in the interests of the government is usually what is in the interests of the CEO. The tree-hugger wants the prosperity of the 3rd world (and may not always be clear how to do that).

        • by wurp ( 51446 )
          I agree that in the short term, tariffs and subsidies are much more important than IP laws. However, in the longer term, as nanotechnology matures, absurd IP laws like the ones we have now will make the difference between a world in which everyone has plenty, and a world in which we all work for media companies so we can pay twice the development costs to get the rights to have something we developed ourselves.
        • by Iguanaphobic ( 31670 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @09:45AM (#4469189)
          The real problems are in steel tarriffs and agricultural subsidies, that a nation that touts free trade (and the EU is just as bad here) resorts to protectionism and barely-disguised mercantilism at the first sign of trouble. Trouble's when you need your principles the most, not the least.

          Sigh...

          This has been going on for too long in the USA and the reason is simple. Most voters in the US don't give a rats ass. Two recent situations come to mind.

          The whole genetically modified foodstuff debacle. The problem is that the US has granted patents on GM strains of common foodstuffs. Then when GM strains pollute natural crops with [commondreams.org] patented genes, farmers [percyschmeiser.com] get sued into oblivion. Then, when third world countries turn down "donations" of GM food [bbc.co.uk] , US aid officials criticize them. What everyone seemed to miss (unsurprisingly) is that if Zimbabwe accepted the GM maize and then their local crops "somehow" became polluted with patented GM strains, they would soon be in a position where they would have to pay IP lawyers and US corporations to enable their people to eat locally produced food.

          The other issue is protectionism. I won't even touch the steel issue. It reeks too badly. Instead, let's consider the current softwood lumber dispute with Canada. (if you say "What dispute?" my point is made) The protectionism in this dispute is almost as rampant as the corruption. The bottom line being that a select group of southern lumber barons profit while average Americans pay $3000 more for new housing. Oh, don't forget the 50,000 Canadians who were put out of work. The fact that the WTO will eventually overturn this does not negate the impact it has on profits, costs and jobs in the short term. If this is how we treat our closest ally, it's no wonder our enemies hate us.

          Look at the big picture, people.

          Sorry, looking at the big picture is simply too difficult for most Americans. It requires critical thinking and the ability to look at our own behaviour objectively. Point being, as long as Joe Sixpack has a job and Monday Night Football, most Americans just don't care.

      • by 0x0d0a ( 568518 )
        The whole "free enterprise" and whatnot that's supposed to encourage entrepreneurship is nothing more than national propoganda.

        the US govt can't see why the rest of the World...takes offense at this

        You really think that the US govt can't see? It's the normal US citizenry that can't see, because they get fed piles upon piles of propoganda.

        Let's take a look: ::IRAQ::

        Gov't line: We need to bomb them to protect the freedoms of the Kuwaiti people

        Reality: we have big oil ties with the whole area, and any one country becoming dominant enough to be able to set oil prices or do anything but lie their passively while we import their national resources at dirt-cheap prices would be an economic unpleasantness. Much better to keep them afraid (at least for fifty years, until their oil runs out, at which point we couldn't care less what happens, just like we don't care what happens in places like Africa). ::PANAMA (oldie but goodie)::

        Gov't line: We need to suppress rebels and ensure stability, so we're moving in troops.

        Reality: We want to build a canal at some really awful terms for Panama. Panama doesn't bite. We fund rebel groups, stir up a bit of unrest, move in troops to "maintain Western Hemisphere stability", and build the canal in the middle of their country, letting Panama know that they can have it back in a hundred years. Quite profitable for us. ::VIETNAM::

        Government line: we want to protect democratic rights in Vietnam, so we're helping fund a fair government

        Reality: we want a lapdog government on the borders of communist nations to stop the spread of communism. ::BOMBING AFGHANISTAN::

        Government line: We're bombing terrorist camps, protecting the human rights of women and others who the Taliban is suppressing.

        Reality: There's no big signs on people saying "I am a terrorist." There are a shitload of warlords and private groups and villages. Basically, any faction that doesn't buy into the lapdog government that we're in the process of setting up is portrayed on CNN as a "terrorist group" that we're bombing. Of course, this kills lots of women and children and people that have never had the slightest to do with bombing things in the United States, but we can make up for it by finding the occasional poster person in Afghanistan who is now "freed from the bonds of the veil" and can partake of Western products. ::ISRAEL/PALESTINE::

        Government line: we're "facilitating the peace process" because we're concerned about the parties involved. Palestine keeps breaking the peace agreements.

        Reality: We didn't care in the least about Israel back in the Six Day War, when Israel was about to get invaded by five or so armies. Why? Because we were convinced that Israel was about to get toasted, and we don't really have any interest in pulling anyone's feet out of the fire. After Israel pulled off the most stunning military feat in the last century and won, we decided that Israel was the person to buddy up to. Both Palestine and Israel have regularly violated the rights of each other's people, and both hate each other's guts -- Palestine is no worse here than Israel -- but because Israel is currently the top dog, we villify Palestine.

        It goes on and on. US World War II propoganda is particularly amusing, if you ever look back at it, because it's so ridiculous. Speaking of which: ::WORLD WAR II:

        Government line: we need to go after Germany because they're evil and empire-building (in modern times, there is a perception that we got involved to "save the Jews").

        Reality: Most people in the US were entirely uninterested in helping any Jews out, which were pretty much seen as job-taking immigrants. Germany's building an empire...but we didn't care when France was doing the same. No, we just happened to have significantly more economic ties to England and France. ::REVOLUTIONARY WAR::

        Modern propoganda spin: Our Founding Fathers were noble idealists who were throwing off the shackles of an unjust government.

        Reality: Our Founding Fathers were vandals (sorry, that's just what the Boston Tea Party was) who didn't want to pay taxes to pay for the military protection that they had had from Indians for decades. ::CIVIL WAR::

        Modern spin: fought to save the country from slavery

        Reality: Slavery not primary issue to the majority of people fighting, Union or Confederacy. Union cared mostly about not allowing any states to leave the United States (which would weaken the states as a whole), and the Confederacy was mostly interested in being able to have much more power at a state level. ::THE ENVIRONMENT::

        Government line: the US is the most environmentally conscious of nations, putting out extreme efforts to product emissions-free cars, and using as much clout as it can to require developing nations to be clean.

        Reality: The US is quite interested in countries being environmentally conscious -- as long as it isn't us. It's in our interests to drive up their costs and down ours. We've been the single major holdout against international antipollution agreements over the past few years. We *do* care about polution that immediately impacts US citizens (dumping chemicals in rivers that go to reseviours), but as for conservation of international resources...we use so many times our share of energy that it's ridiculous. ::BIOLOGICAL WARFARE (this is reaching into speculation, mind you)::

        Government line: We stopped offensive germ warfare efforts about twenty years ago. We focus only on defense now.

        Reality: Not sure one way or another, but if you remember, when we were proposing the (very sweet for us economically) "food for oil" trade agreement after we arranged for an international embarge of Iraq, and Iraq was holding out, claiming that they had plenty of food resources, there was a very unusual sudden mass outbreak of hoof-and-mouth disease throughout Iraq's cattle. Go figure. ::NUCLEAR WEAPONS::

        Government line: The US government wants to keep nuclear weapons out of the hands of "rogue states" and terrorists to keep the world safe for everyone.

        Reality: The US wants to keep nuclear weapons away from *anyone else*. Our current nuclear weapon reductions are meaningless -- both Russia and us have easily enough to destroy the other, even enough to overwhelm antimissile defenses. We just ignore allies that have nukes. Yet a nuclear weapon is just about the only meaningful resistance a country can put up in case of a US attack -- the US doesn't want any resistance to be possible. We have overwhelming conventional force, and we want things to stay that way. ::MILITARY STRUCTURE::

        Government line: "Defense spending". Our military is for "defense".

        Reality: And yet, over the last fourty years, almost all our military spending has gone into making our military faster, lighter, and easier to move around the world via ships in battle groups. Why? Not cost effective at all for defense -- we can defend our shores just fine traditional approaches -- but amazingly good at bombardment and intimidation of countries that we aren't getting along with. ::AL QAEDA::

        Government line: Al Queda is a bunch of cowards who can't take an honest fight who went after innocent people.

        Reality: Assuming bin Laden himself was behind Sept. 11, he's one of the most successful military tacticians in the last hundred years. Think about it. He has a force that is outgunned, and outmanned. The people he's working with, Afghanis, have been used by the US governent as disposable tools against US enemies and then dropped when they were no longer useful (much like the Kurds, the Cuban revolutionaries at the Bay of Pigs). The understandably feel some resentment. Their religion (at least the political side of said religion) has been rather oppressed and attacked by Western culture that seems quite evil to them (loss of emphasis on the family, sexual promiscuity, etc). Most of the eastern countries being exploited for their oil are Islamic, and the US has had quite a hand in dirty work in the region. So what does he do, with no tanks, airplanes, or anything else? He uses our own airplanes against us. Who does he attack? Not the US soldiers, the grunts who are being paid to attack other countries, but against the people who are directly responsible for the decisions that caused so much damage to his country and people -- US politicians (the White House), the overbearing US military (the Pentagon), and the powerful corporations that have been encouraging said oil exploitation (rich suits in the World Trade Center).

        The US government is just as guilty as the Soviets, the Chinese, and anyone else in putting out bogus propoganda. It's more successful because people are happy and rich. If you think that people that bought into Soviet or North Korean propoganda must have been incredibly stupid ...well, look no further than right here at home.

        Now, that doesn't mean that US propoganda is *bad* for us. US citizens enjoy an extremely high standard of living, rights (even in other countries) to ignore local laws that are simply unheard of (Clinton can get a vandal off in Singapore from being punished for his crimes, but if Taiwan tried to get someone off for copyright infringement, I doubt they'd have any success). Most of this comes, counter to said propoganda, not from "rights" or the long-dead "American self-sufficiency" or anything along those lines. It's because we're happy to use our military power to whack people if it gives us an economic benefit. You get to live the good life because there are people in our government who are willing to do the dirty, unethical work that keeps you enjoying your life.

        What let most of our modern economy be built? Roads and fuel. Centralization of manufacturing and specialization came directly from those. Why do we get our oil so much cheaper than people in any other countries? Because we club the crap out of anyone that opposes us exporting their oil at dirt-cheap prices. We happily put tariffs up against countries importing, but use every last bit of our clout to prevent countries from taxing US imports. And it's been enormously successful over the past two centuries, making us the dominant economic power, and making us extremely successful.

        No, I'm not arguing that this should stop. I'd just like to see that people be aware of what we're doing, and make a conscious decision to do what they're doing. Being the bully on the block can be pretty pleasant, but something feels vaguely wrong about being the bully on the block and thinking that you're the saint.
        • by 0x0d0a ( 568518 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @01:46PM (#4471670) Journal
          Well, that last post seemed to go over unexpectedly well, so lets see how Slashdotters react to an expose of *Slashdot* propoganda. :-)

          ::MUSIC PROPOGANDA::



          The Slashdot line: We want to protect starving artists who are being exploited by the RIAA.



          Reality: Almost everyone on Slashdot pushing this has vague notions of "unlimited free music" available, without them having to put any resources into production of future music. As for people that claim (and frequently have rationalized their behavior to the point of believing it) that their goals really *are* to defend the artist rather than get free music...I ask, how many of you were crusading against the recording industry's exploitation of the artist *before Napster was around*?

          ::WINDOWS SECURITY::



          The Slashdot line: Windows is highly insecure. Anyone using it is asking to get broken in to. Linux/Unix is much better.



          Reality: Windows and other Microsoft products have had security holes, the same as Unix/Linux has. For every egregious MS bug (active content), there's an equally egregious Unix/Linux bug (massive numbers of buffer overflows in ssh, which is frequently deployed at secure sites and is relied upon to be solid). For every MS program with a miserable security history that runs with administrative permissions (IIS), there's a Unix program that does the same (sendmail).

          ::H1B WORK VISAS::



          Slashdot line: H1Bs exploit foreign workers by bringing them to come to the United States and then work at lower wages than other US workers. H1Bs produce workers that produce code of abysmal quality. H1Bs should be eliminated to protect the workers that are being exploited. The US economy would be better (by employing more US workers) if we got rid of the H1Bs.



          Reality: H1Bs let people get into the country. Workers coming to the US are quite happy to work at lower wages for a period of time if it means they get their foot in the door and can get permanent residency. People aren't being forced to take H1Bs -- they want them! They work at lower wages than US workers because US tech wages are astronomical compared to the amount of effort required to gain the skillset necessary to do the job. Many H1B workers are *very* skilled, more so than their US counterparts. If a company is going to go all the way over to another country *and* sponsor a worker, it is damn well going to do an even more stringent examination of the worker's competence than it would a domestic worker. Eliminating H1Bs wouldn't make any H1B-users happy at all -- they *choose* to come to the United States and work at 90% the normal US wage because it beats the snot out of working at 10% the normal US wage in a foreign country. As for the US economy being better by helping domestic workers...that's simply not true. What US workers want is guaranteed jobs (or at least jobs with a heavy edge given them in hiring). Costs of paying US workers more is then passed down to the consumer. So people in favor of labor protectionism are asking the entire United States to subsidize their highly-paid lifestyle when there's a more efficient alternative. Plus, it's easy to move software development to another country -- everyone speaks C++, work is fairly independent, and collaboration (and tools for collaboration) are pretty good and easy. If the US does labor protection, in the long term, companies will either move to other countries or go out of business, beaten by companies in countries with cheaper workers. That's *bad* for the economy.

          ::SWEATSHOPS::



          Slashdot line: Sweatshops are evil. They exploit the foreign worker. They should be eliminated.



          Reality: This is mostly AFL/CIO-initiated propoganda. Sweatshops are hiring foreign workers at low prices because that's the only way they can be competitive. If you want to pay $50 more for your hard drive, go for it...but competition on price is what has driven down wages. Eliminating sweatshops, as some have proposed, wouldn't do anything to help the foreign worker -- they're willing to work at inhumanly low rates because that's the only way they can get enough for food. Wipe the sweatshops out, and they simply starve. The only people to benefit are US unskilled labor, which gets a short term boost in hiring. This is much the same as the H1B item mentioned above.

          ::DRUG LEGALIZATION::



          Slashdot line: Drug legalization is good because I'm concerned about the human rights of the nonviolent offenders that are put in jail. The Constitution doesn't give the federal government the right to ban drugs.



          Reality: Most people taking this view are interested in smoking up, not primarily concerned about potential constitutional violations. Why? I don't see complaints of constitutional violations (libertarian types aside), despite the fact that most of the Bill of Rights is pretty much ignored by the federal government (I remember doing a breakdown at one point of how many are actually strictly followed...something like two of the amendments.)

  • Uh-huh (Score:5, Informative)

    by AntiFreeze ( 31247 ) <antifreeze42@g[ ]l.com ['mai' in gap]> on Thursday October 17, 2002 @04:57AM (#4467768) Homepage Journal
    I hate to sound like a schmuck, or worse, a troll, but when has this country (or more realistically, any particular Congress) paid attention to historical precedents or created a foreign policy which wasn't chock full o' double standards?

    Of course, if one follows the money, it is obvious why the framework is being followed:

    The United States does stand to gain the most from stronger intellectual property protections, most of which must be in effect by 2005, under Trips. A World Bank study estimates that American companies would pocket an additional $19 billion a year in royalties, while developing nations like China, Mexico, Brazil and India -- net importers of intellectual property -- would pay more to the patent holders.
    I don't think there's much more for me to say.
    </rant>
    • Re:Uh-huh (Score:5, Insightful)

      by baldass_newbie ( 136609 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @05:06AM (#4467794) Homepage Journal
      while developing nations like China, Mexico, Brazil and India -- net importers of intellectual property -- would pay more to the patent holders.

      Of course, they'd be paying with dollars loaned to them from the rich countries (like the U.S.) at low or no interest rate, in the hope that they too would develop economically.
      I think the royalty thing is a sham. Ever see how quickly copycat products come out in the U.S.? Typically inferior/cheaper/lamer?
      And, FWIW, governments, not just the U.S., ALWAYS try to create double standards. That's the idea, protect your own. Fairness and bargaining only happen when there are equal positions of negotiating. There are only a handful of countries that would qualify and yet the U.S. tries to treat all countries like players.
      Just look at how much money was going to Afghanistan under the Taliban pre 9/11.
      • Re:Uh-huh (Score:5, Insightful)

        by AntiFreeze ( 31247 ) <antifreeze42@g[ ]l.com ['mai' in gap]> on Thursday October 17, 2002 @05:19AM (#4467825) Homepage Journal
        Nothing you said is wrong. I've just been pissed off at the US government for some time. I'm probably too much of an idealist. I understand exactly why they do the things that they do (if your country stood to benefit 19 billion from the proper international IP law, and your businesses [re: authors/inventors] would suffer from a looser law, you've really only got one choice); I just don't agree with that choice.

        I think what really sickens me about American politics is the driving need to get reelected. I think so many things in this country would get fixed if there weren't career politicians, if politicians had the guts to do what they thought was right over what would get the reelected.

        So I take a deeper stab at the US government than others (plus, I have a right to criticize my government, and I know more about it than any other) but that doesn't mean other government don't act in the same manner. Governments, in general, act in their own self-interest. That has to lead double standards and certain people getting the raw end of the deal.

        And on a side note about your Taliban comment (agrreing with you), remember which country provided Saddam with chemical weapons and looked the other way while he gassed his own people?

        In other words, take my political rants with a grain of salt =]

        • Re:Uh-huh (Score:5, Insightful)

          by javilon ( 99157 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @05:54AM (#4467900) Homepage
          The real problem is not the USA, they do whatever is best for them. The problem is the rest of the countries accepting it.
          If the European Union had a proper foreign policy, this (and a number of other things happening in the middle east) wouldn't be happening.
          The European Union is bigger in size and wealth but it still hasn't got a unified voice. When this happens there will be some balance on international politics.
          • Re:Uh-huh (Score:5, Interesting)

            by pubjames ( 468013 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @06:42AM (#4468014)
            The European Union is bigger in size and wealth but it still hasn't got a unified voice.

            When you've got so many very diverse countries it's really hard to speak with a unified voice. I certainly don't think it is something the USA would necessarily be good at. Imagine if USA unified with Canada - I imagine it would be very difficult to, for instance, come up with international policies that would satisfy both the Canadians and North Americans. I imagine that the the USA would just try to force it's way of doing things on Canada, which isn't what "speaking with a unified voice" is about.

            But Europe's getting there, and actually in the grand scheme of things it's getting there very quickly. It was only two years ago that a unified currency was introduced. And now it seems that there is unity on the idea of a single president representing the whole of the Union.
            • Re:Uh-huh (Score:2, Informative)

              by Anonymous Coward
              It was only two years ago that a unified currency was introduced.

              Little nitpick to an otherwise insightful post: the euro was introduced in the beginning 2002.
              • Little nitpick to an otherwise insightful post: the euro was introduced in the beginning 2002.

                Jeepers you're right. It's amazing how quickly you get used to it...
              • Re:Uh-huh (Score:3, Informative)

                by jeremyp ( 130771 )
                Actually, the notes and coins were introduced this year, but the currency has existed since Jan 2000. All the currencies of the Euro-zone member states were fixed wrt the euro at that point and you could have a euro bank account and a euro credit card, just not euros in your pocket.
            • Re:Uh-huh (Score:2, Informative)

              by pafrusurewa ( 524731 )

              It was only two years ago that a unified currency was introduced.

              The exchange rates between the participating countries' currencies and the Euro were fixed on Dec 31, 1998 and I for one started paying in Euros on Jan 1st, 2002 so I don't really know where your "two years" figure is coming from.

            • Not every country in Europe is in the European Union. Not every country in the European Union is in the euro-zone (i.e. uses the so called "unified" currency).

              There will be no unified voice of Europe almost certainly in my lifetime (what language would it use for starters?). Having said that where the member states interests coincide, the EU could be a powerful influence although unfortunately but not surprisingly our interests don't coincide very often.
            • Re:Uh-huh (Score:3, Interesting)

              The term "Unified Voice" is very vague...I mean really, if you think about it, the US is as diverse as Europe, if not more so. Do we speak with "one voice" here? You say that if USA unified with Canada, the US would just try to force its views and customs on the Canadians, but a vast number of rural/semi-rural Americans might convincingly argue that that's exactly what New York and California have been doing to them for most of this century.

              For all the current rhetoric about "America speaks with One voice", we sure do seem to argue a lot here about what exactly that voice should be. That constant conflict and arguing is part of what makes this country an exciting and fun place to live, and part of what makes it unbearably frustrating at the same time. For every argument you win, you lose 3 or 4 others, and a lot of people have a hard time accepting that. Not every American agrees with the "One Voice" we're all supposedly speaking with. Of course, plenty of us buy right into it as well.

              And whatever your feelings for or against various aspects of the global situation right now, you have to at least admit: it's a very interesting time to be alive, isn't it?
          • Re:Uh-huh (Score:3, Insightful)

            by hey! ( 33014 )
            If the European Union had a proper foreign policy, this (and a number of other things happening in the middle east) wouldn't be happening.

            And they'd better get a move on quick, especially on defense.

            As much as I sympathize with the European position on guns vs. butter, a situation where America spends more on defense than the next ten nations combined is very dangerous, especially once the neoconservatives currently in power here get a taste of imperial power.
        • Re:Uh-huh (Score:2, Insightful)

          by ScottForbes ( 528679 )
          I think what really sickens me about American politics is the driving need to get reelected. I think so many things in this country would get fixed if there weren't career politicians, if politicians had the guts to do what they thought was right over what would get the reelected.

          You say this as if you were powerless to change it.

          • Re:Uh-huh (Score:2, Insightful)

            by RallyNick ( 577728 )
            Yes, he is powerless to change it. For every intelligent man who can think on his feet and tell right from wrong there are 10 others who are totally clueless and vote whatever the mass manipu^H^H^H^H^H^Hmedia tells them.
      • Re:Uh-huh (Score:3, Interesting)

        by shilly ( 142940 )
        When you say that developing countries get loans from rich countries at low or no interest rate, where is your evidence? There are many developing nations who have to spend more on debt repayments (particularly interest payments) than health or transport infrastructure. A large number of countries are classified by the World Bank and IMF as HIPCs (heavily indebted poor countries), with unsustainable debt burdens, beyond available debt relief mechanisms -- i.e., they'll never pay off their debts. Although capital repayments are part of the problem, interest charges account for the lion's share of the debt of these countries. And the nasty arseholes who signed up the miserable poor of these countries for the debt are not just their government leaders but the
        W(estern b)ankers who lent them the money in the first place.
      • Of course, they'd be paying with dollars loaned to them from the rich countries (like the U.S.) at low or no interest rate, in the hope that they too would develop economically.

        And with the impression of helping other countries develop they do everything they can so that all that money is going straight back into the US economy. A system that seemingly helps only US, while keeping even badly needed medication at "international" prices forever out of reach from a country with their own produced funds.

        The catch with the system is that the vast amount of US dollars on loan to developing countries would tip the worlds economy on end if it became worthless. Hence US has to pump in dollars to make those countries go around at all, in the same time ensuring that their own economies never will catch up.

      • Re:Uh-huh (Score:3, Informative)

        by notfancy ( 113542 )

        Of course, they'd be paying with dollars loaned to them from the rich countries (like the U.S.) at low or no interest rate, in the hope that they too would develop economically.

        No no no. Inform yourself. Argentina, for instance, is paying a rate of like 60% annually. In the last 20 years, Argentina has payed interests in excess of the principal due to this date.

        Everything's well and peachy and I respect your country and way of life, but please don't be unfair.

        • Re:Uh-huh (Score:2, Informative)

          Wouldn't have anything to do with Argentina artificially tying their peso to the dollar with no way to sustain the value, could it? Because in Econ they showed that this is a sure road to inflaction.
          Seeing the debt balloon from 16.5 million pesos to over a billion in a year might have opened some eyes, up, eh?
          BTW, some good stuff here on Argentina: http://pages.stern.nyu.edu/~nroubini/asia/countrie s/argentina.html
      • Re:Uh-huh (Score:2, Insightful)

        by nutshell42 ( 557890 )
        Of course, they'd be paying with dollars loaned to them from the rich countries (like the U.S.) at low or no interest rate, in the hope that they too would develop economically.

        As with your friendly loan-shark around the corner the idea isn't that the debtor prospers but that he's able to earn just enough money to pay the interests.

        Of course you can't loan 3rd world countries money with interest rates of 50%, the media would crucify you, therefore you take lower rates but make sure the debtor needs more money.

        ingenious system; it has been around - in different incarnations - for thousands of years and still works just fine

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday October 17, 2002 @05:02AM (#4467780)

    Debate on Intellectual Property

    By STEVE LOHR

    In the 19th century, the United States was both a rapidly industrializing nation and -- as Charles Dickens, among others, knew all too well -- a bold pirate of intellectual property.

    But these days, when it comes to dealing with developing nations around the world, the United States seems to be ignoring its own swashbuckling heritage. Or at least that's the implication of a recent report by the international Commission on Intellectual Property Rights. The report recommends that the World Trade Organization's treaty on intellectual property rights be made much more flexible so that developing nations, from Brazil to Bangladesh, can adopt rules more at their own pace.

    The global debate over intellectual property rights -- patents, copyrights and trademarks -- is focused mainly on forward-looking industries like computer software, pharmaceuticals and biotechnology. But Americans can look back to this nation's 19th-century experience in book publishing, for example, to understand the developing world's viewpoint.

    Back then, American law offered copyright protection -- but only to citizens and residents of the United States. The works of English authors were copied with abandon and sold cheap to an American public hungry for books. This so irritated Mr. Dickens -- whose "Christmas Carol" sold for 6 cents a copy in America, versus $2.50 in England -- that he toured the United States in 1842, urging the adoption of international copyright protection as being in the long-term interest of American authors and publishers.

    Such appeals proved unpersuasive until 1891, when the United States had a thriving literary culture and a book industry that wanted its own intellectual property protection abroad. So Congress passed a copyright act extending protection to foreign works in return for similar treatment for American authors overseas.

    Indeed, the economies that were shining success stories of development, from the United States in the 19th century to Japan and its East Asian neighbors like Taiwan and South Korea in the 20th, took off under systems of weak intellectual property protection. Technology transfer came easily and inexpensively until domestic skills and local industries were advanced enough that stronger intellectual property protections became a matter of self-interest.

    But according to the recent report, this kind of economic-development tactic -- copying to jump-start an industry -- is endangered by the United States-led push for stronger intellectual property rights worldwide.

    As part of a sweeping trade deal reached in 1994, the member nations of the World Trade Organization must adhere to a global agreement known as Trips, for Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights. Trips stemmed partly from the prevailing belief during the 1990's that the "American model" -- free trade, wide-open capital markets and strong intellectual property protection -- was the sure way to global prosperity.

    But just as the prescriptions of the International Monetary Fund are now being questioned, as prosperity has proved elusive for countries like Brazil and Argentina, so are the W.T.O.'s intellectual property rules.

    "If we cut off imitation strategies for developing countries, we are drastically narrowing the options they have to reach an economic takeoff," said John H. Barton, a professor at Stanford law school who led the commission on intellectual property rights.

    Many economists regard the 1994 agreement as a triumph for a few industries -- pharmaceuticals, software and Hollywood -- that stand to gain a lot from the protections and whose interests were championed by the United States government. "Trips was a matter of powerful companies with intellectual property concerns essentially dictating trade policy," said Keith E. Maskus, a trade expert at the University of Colorado.

    The United States does stand to gain the most from stronger intellectual property protections, most of which must be in effect by 2005, under Trips. A World Bank study estimates that American companies would pocket an additional $19 billion a year in royalties, while developing nations like China, Mexico, Brazil and India -- net importers of intellectual property -- would pay more to the patent holders.

    Intellectual property rights are temporary grants of monopoly intended to give economic incentives for innovative activity. Why toil for months or years to develop a new drug or think up a clever software program, the thinking goes, unless there is the potential for a big payoff? The intended result is that consumers will pay somewhat higher prices for an individual drug or software program but will benefit from all the additional innovation in the economy.

    That is the theory. Within the United States, there is criticism that the corporate frenzy to patent any technical advance, even business methods, undermines innovation by unnecessarily restricting the flow of ideas. And just last week, the United States Supreme Court heard a challenge to a 1998 law that extended copyrights in this country by 20 years; the law's opponents contend that the extension inhibits public creativity by making it harder for other people to obtain and build upon existing works. But in general, the theory behind intellectual property rights tends to work in rich nations.

    The concern about Trips is that it is too much of a one-size-fits-all approach that works to the detriment of developing nations. "It would be fine if we lived in a world of all rich people," said Jeffrey D. Sachs, a development economist at Columbia University. "The danger with Trips is that it will mostly hurt the developing countries' access to ideas."

    The report of the intellectual property rights commission, which was sponsored by the British government, includes a long list of recommendations, some of which would be anathema to American companies:

    Encourage developing nations to make greater use of compulsory licensing of drugs.

    Allow more "reverse engineering" of software programs -- that is, copying a product by studying and making educated assumptions about the underlying code.

    Permit "cracking" of software used to protect copyrighted digital media, if the country determines that the copy-protection technology limits the fair use of digital text, video or music.

    The commission's report comes amid a growing backlash in developing countries against the imposition of a strong global system of intellectual property rights. The lightning-rod issue has been the AIDS epidemic, and the resulting confrontation between developing nations and the pharmaceutical industry.

    Facing a public outcry and the threat of compulsory licensing in countries like South Africa, Brazil and India, the pharmaceutical companies began cutting prices by 80 percent or more on drugs for use in treating AIDS-related ailments in developing nations two years ago.

    The World Trade Organization, at its meeting last November in Doha, Qatar, issued a declaration that public health matters must be weighed equally with intellectual property rights. As part of the Doha declaration, the trade organization allowed the world's least developed nations, mostly in Africa, to exempt pharmaceuticals from patent protection until 2016. (The intellectual property rights commission recommends that exemption for the poorest nations be extended to all fields of technology.)

    Whether the AIDS episode was a single, isolated case or a sign of a changing relationship between the developing counties and the pharmaceutical industry is uncertain. But emboldened developing countries could invoke the public health argument for diseases like heart disease and diabetes -- and the increasing sophistication of generic drug makers in India and China could give them alternate sources of supply.

    "H.I.V.-AIDS is what made everybody think about this," said Dr. Jim Yong Kim, a professor at the Harvard Medical School and an expert on health projects in poor countries. "But I think access to medicine will be on the table much more broadly in the developing world."

    The pharmaceutical makers insist that they responded quickly to the AIDS crisis, working cooperatively with the United Nations and other international agencies. But the industry says focusing on low-cost drugs alone ignores the more significant chronic hurdles to treating diseases of all kinds in developing nations -- lack of public health infrastructure, education, financing and political will. There are 35,000 people in Africa being treated under the international program begun two years ago, while an estimated 30 million people have H.I.V. in Africa.

    "There is plenty of supply," said Harvey E. Bale Jr., director general of the International Federation of Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Associations in Geneva. "Access is not the issue."

    Those who defend the Trips global standards for intellectual property protection say that a strong patent system not only fuels innovation but provides the best way for developing nations to attract investment and encourage a rapid transfer of technology. China, for example, has steadily given foreign companies a greater measure of protection for intellectual property and last year signed on to Trips, when the nation joined the World Trade Organization.

    "There is no doubt that has played an important role in attracting R. & D. investment in China," said Brad Smith, the general counsel of Microsoft. In June, Microsoft announced that it would spend $700 million over the next three years in China in education, training and research, and in investments in local companies.

    In the end, the debate over intellectual property rights, like the controversy over I.M.F. policies in developing nations, may be more a dispute about speed than direction. Free trade, open financial markets and intellectual property rights are economic goals worth pursuing. But that is not to say that the preferred path is necessarily the straight line of ideological purity.

    Trips, as it stands, reflects "a mentality borne of the American triumphalism of the 1990's," said Mr. Sachs of Columbia. "There is a widespread sense that that approach to development policy has to be recalibrated."
  • Registration (Score:4, Insightful)

    by e8johan ( 605347 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @05:04AM (#4467784) Homepage Journal
    Is the free registration a part of this protection of IP?

    I think that /. should ban links to sites that require registration, no matter how free it is.

    Some sites offering free registration forbidd certain entries, for example the first name Saddam is not allowed on Hotmail. I don't think that there is only one guy with that name...
    • Use /.'s own account (Score:4, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward on Thursday October 17, 2002 @05:12AM (#4467806)

      Username: goatse.cx
      Password: goatse.cx

      Btw Chris, I hear you're leaving us soon [dibona.com]. Well, all the best from us and hope to hear more from you.
    • /. has refused all stories requiring registration for some time now. But they CONTINUE to support the New York Times, even they are one of the sites that started this goddamned trend. How is this not hypocritical?

      I personally refuse to visit any NYT articles as long as they keep up with the foolishness. I just wait for someone to post the text.

    • by sholton ( 85051 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @05:46AM (#4467880)
      I think that /. should ban links to sites that require registration, no matter how free it is.

      That's going a little bit too far. It's bad enough that /. bans hypertext links to any site which doesn't support HTTP.

    • by Anonymous Coward
      I think that /. should ban links to sites that require registration, no matter how free it is.


      How can you say that???

      Just look:

      As a member, you'll enjoy:

      In-depth coverage and analysis of news events from The New York Times FREE
      Up-to-the-minute breaking news and developing stories FREE
      Exclusive Web-only features, classifieds, tools, multimedia and much, much more FREE

      You're willing to turn this much down on something as cheap as morals??
    • If free registration is part of IP protection, then this is the copyright circumvention mechanism:

      http://www.majcher.com/nytview.html

      Does this mean that the author of nytview could be prosecuted under the DMCA?
  • by LittleBigScript ( 618162 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @05:06AM (#4467790) Homepage Journal
    Does this mean in the 19th Century the "Christmas Carol Special DVD Collectors' Edition" by Charles Dickens cost $0.06 as oposed to $2.50 dollars in England? (Who uses dollars in England, anyway?)
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday October 17, 2002 @05:07AM (#4467796)
    ... for most countries to have intellectual property systems. Practically every country is a nett importer of intellectual property from the US (in the form of movies, music, pharmaceuticals, software etc). (Germany's big on pharmaceuticals too.) It's an oft-repeated pattern: the US uses IP rights systems as a bargaining chip in trade negotiations, country X caves in exchange for something else, country X starts exporting $$ to the US in exchange for pharmaceuticals that they could otherwise have produced themselves inexpensively.

    India didn't want a patent system. Now they have one and they're sending $$ back to (mostly) US pharmaceutical companies. Look at South Africa's near-revolt on AIDS drugs too.

    Anyway, i suppose i should read the article now.

  • Hypocrisy? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Isle ( 95215 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @05:08AM (#4467798) Homepage
    As much as I dispise american (and western) IP laws and attitude. How can you hold people accountable for something someoneelse did 200 years ago, and how can it possibly be hypocrisy?
    • Re:Hypocrisy? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Drahca ( 410495 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @06:10AM (#4467939)
      What you mean to say here is times have changed? This is only true for our part of the world. We are considered developed countries, as apposed to the developing countries we are blaming. I for one can see the relevance in examining the way we got to being "developed" and how other countries, which may be some years behind, are trying to get developed now.

      You could even say we are forcing a lot of countries to get developed, thanks to our globalisation efforts. It's not fair we are measuring them with standards that are based on our thinking now, apposed to our way of thinking 200 years ago. That is measuring with two different scales, and that is hypocrisy.
    • Re:Hypocrisy? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by ArcSecond ( 534786 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @06:38AM (#4468004)
      Listen, when Americans can stop blathering on and on about the merits of their founding fathers, the revolution, the fight for the Union, etc. etc. then I will accept the "leave the past in the past" argument. So don't be a hypocrite and say that you accept the "good" parts of your past and reject the bad parts. History may not be objective, but it sure as hell shouldn't be forgotten.

      Or maybe you would prefer to pretend that all the groups/societies in the world that are priveleged should be seen as being inherently "worthy" of that privelege, and that no historical analysis of how they got there is required? (ie: the "never ask a man how he made his first million" quote).
      • Re:Hypocrisy? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by back_pages ( 600753 ) <back_pages&cox,net> on Thursday October 17, 2002 @06:56AM (#4468064) Journal
        Hi, You seem to not be aware that the United States is hardly monolithic. Our commander in chief was barely elected, in fact. Many of us disagree with the intentions of the Bush administration, and many of us would be just as critical of the IP regulation as the NYT. Some of us want the federal government to compensate Native Americans for the genocide that was comitted during the American expansion west.

        Will we ever "quit blathering" about our founding fathers? Only when we've all conceded that we're going to Hell in a handbasket. Until then, we'll argue, disagree, and some of us will try to preserve the noble grounds on which the nation was founded. Just don't expect an immediate about face from one of the most ethnically, philosophically, religiously, and politically diverse nations on the planet. We tend to disagree like it's going out of style, a trait that seems to be missed by the rest of the world.

        Thanks for your time.

        • Our commander in chief was barely elected, in fact.
          And some of us would disagree with even that statement. I'll concede the 'barely', but not the 'elected'.
      • Re:Hypocrisy? (Score:4, Insightful)

        by milo_Gwalthny ( 203233 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @09:42AM (#4469153)
        Americans talk about our collosal historical screwups all the time. Maybe just not to the rest of the world. Try mentioning slavery, native americans, manifest destiny or a dozen other historical topics on any college campus in the country and you'll immediately be mobbed by young people demanding justice and chaining themselves to building. Unless the interpretation of our history you are referring to is that of the 1950s or before, you don't understand the US. Take a look at some more recent scholarship, including the work of Zinn, Foner and Forrest McDonald. The only people still pushing the saccharine sweet George Washington is Hollywood. We justly celebrate his strong points (but for his forbearance, the US would have become a monarchy) but are well aware of his weaknesses (slave owner.) You've got to stop watching TV/movies and read some books.

        That said, if you understand how modern democratic governments work, you know that the US can't give lip service to ignoring IP protection. But, in fact, it doesn't do a heck of a lot to enforce it in the developing world. Look at Microsoft in China. Go to India and see how easy it is to buy pirated software. Look at the response of the American government to efforts by countries around the world (including Canada :) ) to reduce drug costs by buying generics (a policy approved by the Clinton administration for Africa.) Brazil threatened to ignore US IP and, I believe, will get substantial concessions not to ditch the whole IP framework.

        You forget that, as sovereigns, countries choose which laws to enforce within their own boundaries. If Brazil were to turn a blind eye to domestic companies violating US IP to manufacture affordable AIDS medication, you would hardly hear a squawk from the US. It's only when Brazil makes a big deal about nullifying the IP laws that the US feels it has to respond -- it's just a negotiating tactic on Brazil's part anyway: why else would they draw attention to it?

        In short, I believe that developing countries can do to the US exactly what the US did to the developed countries of 100 years ago: ignore their IP protection, and get the exact same response as the US did: annoyance.
  • Companies and IP (Score:5, Insightful)

    by a_borowski ( 602428 ) <a,borowski&student,qut,edu,au> on Thursday October 17, 2002 @05:09AM (#4467800) Homepage
    When IP law was first passed, the spirit was basically "Let the guy why invented something cool have a monopoly for a while. After a decade or so, give other people a chance." The problem is now copywrite is valid for such an insane length of time that there's little competition. End result: citizen loses (I hate the word 'consumer'). When did companies earn the priviledge to own copywrite?
    • by Anonymous Coward
      copyright, dammit, as in: The right to copy.
    • Re:Companies and IP (Score:5, Informative)

      by RobotRunAmok ( 595286 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @07:09AM (#4468114)
      When did companies earn the priviledge to own copywrite?

      At the point when the artist signs it over to them, in exchange for an advance and/or global distribution and promotion facilities. Or at the point when he signs a "work-for-hire" agreement, and gets a steady paycheck in exchange for a little less pressure.

      When the fifes stop tweeting, the drums stop rum-tumming, and all the clenched fists make their collective way out of the air and back into blue-jeaned pockets, small children still need new shoes, and the writers, artists, and musicians who are their moms and dads have to buy them.
  • by Titusdot Groan ( 468949 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @05:27AM (#4467837) Journal
    I'm not happy with where the US is going with their copyright and patent legislation, I'm even more unhappy about the fact that Canada seems to just follow the US in these matters.

    but ...

    My dad used to drive drunk occasionally when he was young. He's in AA now and thinks that drunk drivers should lose their licenses and go to jail.

    Hypocrisy? Perhaps. But maybe he just wised up in his old age.

    • Hypocrisy? Perhaps. But maybe he just wised up in his old age.

      It would only hypocrisy if he got where he is now because of drunk driving.

      The argument is that the US only devloped as rapidly, and successfully, as it has because of weak IP control in its early years. And it's now protecting that position, and denying that route for development to others, by advocating strong IP protection. That's the hypocrisy.
      • Hypocrisy? Perhaps. But maybe he just wised up in his old age.
        It would only hypocrisy if he got where he is now because of drunk driving.

        No it would only be hypocrisy if he called for harsh treatment of drunk drivers while concealling his own conviction.

        Countries are not hypocritical, the individual politicians running the country are.

        For example the idiot in the Whitehouse is a hypocrite because he lectures on corporate ethics desite having received millions in campaign contributions from Kenny boy Lay and Enron, including the loan of a cororate jet and made his money in Harken through the same kind of corporate accounting scams.

        George W's does at least have the courage of his conviction for DUI. I have not heard him call for stiffer sentences there. So he gets off on the narrow charge of hypocrisy. However the former coke addict has led the introduction of stiffer penalties for use Texas had he been caught snorting coke and his father had not been able to get him off the way he got him out of serving in Vietnam.

        Oh and it goes without saying that the 'chickenhawks' who want to start Vietnam mk II to distract attention from the aforementioned corruption at Harken and Haliburton are hypocrites since none of the ring-leaders served in Vietnam unless you count being a deserter from the Texas national guard.


    • Hypocrisy? Perhaps. But maybe he just wised up in his old age.



      Hypocrisy, NOT AT ALL. It would only be hypocrisy if he continued to drive drunk. A change of policy isn't hypocrisy ;)

  • by shoppa ( 464619 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @05:30AM (#4467840)
    Just like how the US clearcut vast forests for the lumber and turned millions of square miles of diverse swampland into flat farmland, but we're now trying to stop Brazil from doing the same for their individual economic gains.
    • shoppa wrote:

      > Just like how the US clearcut vast forests for the
      > lumber and turned millions of square miles of
      > diverse swampland into flat farmland, but we're
      > now trying to stop Brazil from doing the same for
      > their individual economic gains.

      Make that clearcuts and turns. It is still going on today. Didn't you hear that our fearless President's excellent plan to prevent forest fires is to let the logging companies into the national forests to give them a "trim" (cut them all down)? As for the wetlands, I don't see them surviving the West Nile virus hysteria.

      But that's nothing to worry about. Our glorious president (being fitted for his halo even as we speak) has championed the great Yucca Mountain Project. Basically, we take a bigger amount of nuclear waste than the largest Godzilla (77,000 tons vs. 66,000 tons), and stuff it all into a sacred mountain we don't even own, a hundred miles from a major city, in an unstable, earthquake prone area. And we hope nothing bad happens in the next 10,000 years (worse case scenario has the thing making life on this planet impossible). I just hope the gods to whom the mountain is sacred and Godzilla, a Shinto deity in a rubber suit, shake that mountain until they shake some sense into somebody.

      If you want an example of a country that wisely manages its resources and takes good care of the environment, the USA under the Bush administration is not the place to look, I am very sad to say. :(

      Sonora:"New Godzilla reading. He's moving inward toward Tokai."
      Shinoda: "The nuclear plants, I knew it.
      Sonora: "Afraid so."
      Yuki: "Well, that's just lovely. Another Chernobyl."
      "Godzilla 2000" (US version dialog)

      Search google for 'Tokai criticality 1999'.
    • That really gets on my nerves too. Take that whole Save the Whales thing. It is easy to be an enviromentalist when you are just trying to forbid a bunch of Scandinavian Rednecks from killing some whales or shooting a few sealinos because they are so cute. It is even easyer to jump all over African or Pakistani tribesmen for shooting mountain sheep. But when it comes to the Germans, French English or Americans paying 3% more for the Kg of meat so an animal can be kept in a pen that is not full of filth and so narrow the animal can not even lie down with the result that it gnaws the skin off its neighbors shoulders crazed with the monotony of its existance that is an outrage. In the idealism of most enviromentalists ends at the point where they have to pay for their ideals in hard or $$$.
    • by TheOneEyedMan ( 151703 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @08:20AM (#4468540)
      I this Shoppa is mistaken. Brazil clear-cuts most (approximately 95%) of the forests it cuts down for domestic wood consumption (mostly cooking wood and to farm the land in non-intensive modern farming. They use very little for paper exports.
      Sure, we chopped down a huge amount of US forests for paper, furniture, cooking and ship building purposes. But then we got rich. Then this happened:

      <i>Today, the volume of wood in U.S. forests is about 25 percent greater than it was 40 years ago. The United States has about the same amount of land covered by trees today as it did 80 years ago. In Vermont, for example, forest cover has more than doubled - from 37 percent in 1850 to 77 percent forest today. In New Hampshire, forest cover was 50 percent in 1850 compared to 87 percent today.
      Each year, there are 1.5 billion tree seedlings planted in the United States - that's more than five new trees for each American, and nearly 2,000 for every bear. Forest planting in the United States currently averages about 2.4 million acres per year. </I>

      http://www.timberhunt.com/country_report/country _r eport_america/resources.html
  • Dear STEVE (Score:3, Insightful)

    by smittyoneeach ( 243267 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @05:33AM (#4467845) Homepage Journal
    You know, some of those people behaving so hypocritically are descended from Goths who sacked Rome. Should the be equally ashamed over atrocities committed by their great^17th grandfather as by their grandfather?
    This is not to say that we should blow off injustice. It really sucks to be on the receiving end, and knowledge of that suction should temper our dealings with those who claim to be feeling the vacuum.
    But let's not wear the hair shirt too excessively...
  • Through this NY Times article, one could only hope that it would open some poeple's eyes enough to see the problems with copyright law in this country and have a positive effect on Eldred v. Ashcroft.
  • On/Off (Score:4, Insightful)

    by jukal ( 523582 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @05:35AM (#4467849) Journal
    This is probably another very uneducated opinion, but IMHO the patent system is traditional On/Off system. When on, it should enforce equal rights and limitations to everyone - otherwise people will just find ways to exploit it. When off, it should be off for everyone.
  • by vonWoland ( 615992 ) <dmitri@nOSpAM.momus.net> on Thursday October 17, 2002 @05:43AM (#4467869)
    It is not just IP that the US is trying to clamp down on, the whole U. S. policy towards emerging countries is hypocritical: but there has always been a good historical president for it:

    Just to take one example: the U. S. is pushing for all sorts of free trade agreements. Why? Well, for the first hundred years of our existence, the main form of revenue for our government had been tariffs (taxes on imports---taxes on exports are actually prohibited by the constitution.) At the time of the Revolutionary War, the main U.S. exports were cotton, tobacco, from the South and lumber from New England. You may notice that these are either raw materials or agricultural goods. But the money is in the value added, as readers of /. know so well: silicon is litteraly dirt cheep, ic chips made from silicon are perhaps the most expensive substance by weight.
    It is no secret that the U.S. used protective tariffs to protect early manufacturer's (who otherwise could not compete with England). It is also no secret that the U. S. really did not like it when others tried to do the same. Now we are doing it with GATT. Throughout the last century we were not so sublte: Marines were sent throughout this hemesphere to make sure that bananas were grown and local governments were not too concerned about the welafare of the common man at the exoence of U. S. buisness interests.
    The tragic thing is, just as with development of manufacture, this colonial IP policiy hurts both the developin countries and the people in developed nations. They can't form a manufacturing base, we can't get real, honest, labor unions. And of course, by keeping so many people in the unmechanized fields and unsecured mineshafts, we are really missing out on the increadible behefits that a well educated _global_ populace could bring.
    • by back_pages ( 600753 ) <back_pages&cox,net> on Thursday October 17, 2002 @07:05AM (#4468093) Journal
      Good post. I think a very pressing issue in the future will be whether future administrations follow Bush's tendency to view the entire planet as the Holy American Empire or not. Being the last remaining superpower implies many things, but I don't believe it requires ruling over every other government. It does necessitate a certain amount of cooperation and benevolence, both of which seem to be completely absent from Bush's agenda.

      While we can obliterate training camps and oust dictators, we're never going to subject every man who hates us to such abject poverty that he can't buy a box cutter and a plane ticket. Fighting the signs and symptoms of terrorism may even be more damaging than taking no action at all in the long run. Who will be left? The most hardened and determined? Do we really want to galvanize the will of our enemies and force them further into desperation?

      It cannot be to America's future benefit to regard the nations of the world as its subjects. Sadly, I doubt Bush even has the wit to realize that he is doing so. I sincerely hope our future President will be some sort of diplomat rather than a caricature of a Texan cowboy.

      • I think a very pressing issue in the future will be whether future administrations follow Bush's tendency to view the entire planet as the Holy American Empire or not.

        Were the presidents before Bush really that different. Except that with no effective opposition Bush feels able to come out and say it.

        While we can obliterate training camps and oust dictators,

        Very often these turn out to be traning camps which the US people paid for and dictators installed by the US.

        we're never going to subject every man who hates us to such abject poverty that he can't buy a box cutter and a plane ticket.

        That's probably easier than asking why they should hate you in the first place. Since the answers are probably not what most Americans would want to hear.

        I sincerely hope our future President will be some sort of diplomat rather than a caricature of a Texan cowboy.

        Actually her or she would probably not have to be too much of a diplomat. They would just need to be radical enough to cease all economic and military aid to all other countries. All too often this ends up keeping undemocratic governments in office. especially where there is an interest for big business involved. Effectivly what would be needed would be a US president who would put the interests of the US people before a few big corporates, before some little country in the easten mediterranian. has no interest in being an emporor and wouldn't be afraid to tell fruit companies "if you want to grow fruit in Nicaragua talk to the Nicaraguan government, don't like their terms, tough" or to tell oil companies "if you want to extract oil in Iran, talk to the Iranian government..."
        • Yes, many previous Presidents were quite different. For most of the 20th century, there was an imminent threat from a nation representing a polar opposite of the principles on which America stood. When the US made an imperialistic move, understandably extending our sphere of influence, there was a global superpower willing to stand up and fight back. This is no more. When the Bush dictates his plans to smaller countries without veto power in the UN or representation in other global venues, he very effectively turns them into quasi-American colonies. They are ruled from Washington without representation. They must submit their sovereignty or be mowed over by force.

          In the past, this would have been opposed by the nuclear force of the Soviet Union. Today, we live in American hegemony over the world. Some would say that global stability with two superpowers is far easier to achieve than with one, and I think we will see this proven true if the attitude of the Bush administration persists after he is out of office.

          You are perfectly right that there is far too much corporate influence on our international politics. This should have the citizens outrage, but it isn't so. Why? Which mass media corporation is going to take the fall for getting the word out that our government has sold the safety of its citizens for the lobbying dollars of some corporations? In a sense, your logic makes the same move that mine has. I say, "Don't fight the symptoms of anti-American hatred, but rather the international policies that spawn such hatred." You say, "Don't fight the international policies, but rather the lobbying corporations that fuel those policies." Part and parcel of the same solution, I hope.

          Ultimately, I will be voting for a President who views America's role in the world as the judge rather than the jury. It is unreasonable to deny our role as the executor of force and therefore justice (however it may be defined today), but we cannot afford to also convict whomever we like. Those whom we disenfranchise will be attacking with pipebombs and knives rather than aircraft carriers and warplanes. This nation is probably the most susceptible to covert terrorist attacks as a result of our liberty loving and largely anonymous society. This should necessitate that we use our might in accordance with international approval and remain sensitive to the fact that we have become The Empire to our enemies. Instead, we have policies that change the identity of America while perpetuating and in some sense justifying anti-American rage around the world. We must reflect upon our condition and ask ourselves, "For whom has this been a victory?"

    • It is no secret that the U.S. used protective tariffs to protect early manufacturer's (who otherwise could not compete with England). It is also no secret that the U. S. really did not like it when others tried to do the same. Now we are doing it with GATT. Throughout the last century we were not so sublte: Marines were sent throughout this hemesphere to make sure that bananas were grown and local governments were not too concerned about the welafare of the common man at the exoence of U. S. buisness interests.

      Hardly past tense, since the US hasn't actually stopped doing this sort of thing. Let alone make even token attempts at rectifying the problems this covert colonialism created.
    • we are really missing out on the increadible behefits that a well educated _global_ populace could bring.

      Smog?
  • by fortinbras47 ( 457756 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @05:48AM (#4467883)
    jwinterboy writes " The New York Times has an article (free blah di blah) criticizing the intellectual property framework that the U.S. places on developing countries, given that it was a large pirate of intellectual property during it's own industrialization. "

    The article is about a report which criticizes the intellectual property framework which the U.S. places on developing countries. The article itself is not criticizing the framework.

    The NY Times can be a bit biased at times, but let's at least give them a little credit...

  • Typefaces and IP (Score:5, Interesting)

    by munro ( 265830 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @06:10AM (#4467938)
    Typefaces/fonts are an interesting area. American companies apparently used typefaces (which tradionally all came from European type design houses) without paying any royalties or licences, but are now starting to try to get protection.

    http://nwalsh.com/comp.fonts/FAQ/cf_14.htm

    "The reluctance of Americans to press for typeface copyright may have been influenced by a feeling that typeface plagiarism was good for U.S. high-tech businesses who were inventing new technologies for printing, and plagiarizing types of foreign origin (Europe and England). If the situation becomes reversed, and foreign competition (from Japan, Taiwan, and Korea) threatens to overcome American technological superiority in the laser printer industry, then American firms may do an about-face and seek the protection of typeface copyright to help protect the domestic printer industry. Such a trend may already be seen in the licensing of typeface trademarks by Adobe, Hewlett-Packard, IBM, Imagen, and Xerox in the U.S. laser printer industry."
  • by NZheretic ( 23872 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @06:11AM (#4467943) Homepage Journal
    From The Relevance of Adam Smith [frb.org] by Robert L. Hetzel.
    With added commentary by yours truly...
    MONOPOLY AND GOVERNMENT SUBSIDIES: The principal theme set forth in The Wealth of Nations is that a country most effectively promotes its own wealth by providing a framework of laws that leaves individuals free to pursue the interest they have in their own economic betterment. This self-interest motivates individuals? propensity to truck, barter, and exchange one thing for another and thereby leads them to meet the needs of others through voluntary cooperation in the market place:

    ...man has almost constant occasion for the help of his brethren, and it is in vain for him to expect it from their benevolence only. He will be more likely to prevail if he can interest their self-love in his favour, and shew them that it is for their own advantage to do for him what he requires of them. Whoever offers to another a bargain of any kind, proposes to do this. Give me that which I want, and you shall have this which you want, is the meaning of every such offer; and it is in this manner that we obtain from one another the far greater part of those good offices which we stand in need of. It is not from the benevolence of the butcher, the brewer, or the baker, that we expect our dinner, but from their regard to their own interest. We address ourselves, not to their humanity but to their self-love, and never talk to them of our own necessities but of their advantages. (p. 14)

    Everyone realises and acknowledges that Microsoft is a business, there to make a profit to share with it's marjor stakeholders, from it's shareholders to it's employees. However ...
    Smith also argues that the harmony between private goals and larger socially desirable goals promoted by voluntary cooperation between individuals in the market place is interfered with by monopoly and government subsidies. In contrast to competition, monopoly and government subsidies cause individuals to devote either too few or too many resources to particular markets:



    ....the private interests and passions of individuals naturally dispose them to turn their stock towards the employments which in ordinary cases are most advantageous to the society. But if from this natural preference they should turn too much of it towards those employments, the fall of profit in them and the rise of it in all others immediately dispose them to alter this faulty distribution. Without any intervention of law, therefore, the private interests and passions of men naturally lead to divide and distribute the stock of every society, among all the different employments carried on in it, as nearly as possible in the proportion which is most agreeable to the interest of the whole society.

    All the different regulations of the mercantile system, necessarily derange more or less this natural and most advantageous distribution of stock.
    (pp. 594-5)
    Every derangement of the natural distribution of stock is necessarily hurtful to the society in which it takes place; whether it be by repelling from a particular trade the stock which would otherwise go to it, or by attracting towards a particular trade that which would not otherwise come to it. (p. 597)

    .... sometimes, because of the overiding profit motive, the end consumer can be put at a disadvantage, and the natural model can become unbalanced. This often happens in tha case of several types of monopoly...
    Smith describes the actions of monopolists as follows:


    The monopolists, by keeping the market constantly under-stocked, by never fully supplying the effectual demand, sell their commodities much above the natural price, and raise their emoluments, whether they consist in wages or profit, greatly above their natural rate. (p. 61)

    The natural price is the lowest which the sellers can commonly afford to take, and at the same time continue their business. (p. 61) Today we would use the word competitive for natural. The effectual demand is the demand of those who are willing to pay the natural price of the commodity. (p. 56) Monopoly, as well as a governmentally subsidized activity, contrasts with a competitive market where a commodity is...sold precisely for what it is worth, or for what it really costs the person who brings it to market. (p. 55)
    The Wealth of Nations contains three general kinds of criticism of monopolies. The first is that the higher prices in a monopolized market reduce the welfare of consumers:


    If...capital is divided between two different grocers, their competition will tend to make both of them sell cheaper, than if it were in the hands of one only; and if it were divided among twenty, their competition would be just so much the greater, and the chance of their combining together, in order to raise the price, just so much the less. Their competition might perhaps ruin some of themselves; but to take care of this is the business of the parties concerned, and it may safely be trusted to their discretion. It can never hurt either the consumer, or the producer; on the contrary, it must tend to make the retailers both sell cheaper and buy dearer, than if the whole trade was monopolized by one or two persons.
    (pp. 342-3)
    In every country it always is and must be the interest of the great body of the people to buy whatever they want of those who sell it cheapest. The proposition is so very manifest, that it seems ridiculous to take any pains to prove it; nor could it ever have been called in question, had not the interest sophistry of merchants and manufacturers confounded the common sense of mankind. Their interest is, in this respect, directly opposite to that of the great body of the people. As it is the interest of the freemen of a corporation to hinder the rest of the inhabitants from employing any workmen but themselves, so it is the interest of the merchants and manufacturers of every country to secure to themselves the monopoly of the home market. (p. 461)

    .... like deals made between vendors to set prices, which RAND "reasonable" licensing systems effectively does.
    The second criticism of monopoly is that it engenders inefficient management:


    Monopoly...is a great enemy to good management, which can never be universally established but in consequence of that free and universal competition which forces everybody to have recourse to it for the sake of self-defence. (p. 147)

    For example, Microsoft's Internet Explorer containscurrently 20 unpatched vulnerabilities [pivx.com], a disproportionately high number in comparison to all the other browers on the market today. Also, because of a general disregard for security in the past, many of those same vulnerabilities are exploitable though other Microsoft applications.
    The third criticism of monopoly is that it is inequitable because it increases arbitrarily the inequality in individuals? incomes:


    ...The policy of Europe occasions a very important inequality in the whole of the advantages and disadvantages of the different employments of labour and stock, by restraining the competition in some employments to a smaller number than might otherwise be disposed to enter into them. (pp. 118-19)

    And there is many a CIO discovering that the new Microsoft enterprise licensing agreement is far more expensive than before.

    Monopoly has always been a contentious issue in debates on public policy in the United States. It is interesting to examine the way in which the ideas of Smith appear in current debates over monopoly. In general, proponents of government intervention in the market place argue that monopoly is endemic in capitalism and that its elimination requires significant intervention by the government in the market place. An opposing group argues that free markets effectively restrain monopoly power and that it is in fact government intervention in the market place that is chiefly responsible for monopoly. The first group assumes that large size, fewness of firms, and operation over an extensive geographic area automatically imply monopoly power and thus supports its position by citing the existence of industries dominated by a few large firms and the existence of multinational corporations. The opposing group supports its position by trying to show that where monopoly power exists it is made possible by particular governmental actions, e.g., in the United States by marketing orders that fix the price of milk above what it would be otherwise, or FCC regulations restricting the growth of cable TV, thereby preventing competition with the established networks.

    The view of the world suggested in The Wealth of Nations is that monopoly power cannot persist without the assistance of government. The specific examples of monopoly that Adam Smith attacked required the police power of the state for their maintenance. These monopolies were of three kinds. One kind of monopoly depended upon the mercantilistic system of laws which England used to monopolize trade with its colonies: Monopoly of one kind or another, indeed, seems to be the sole engine of the mercantile system. (p. 595) Another kind arose from the monopoly power granted guilds (referred to by Smith as corporations), which allowed them exclusive rights to produce a given commodity:

    The exclusive privilege of an incorporated trade necessarily restrains the competition, in the town where it is established, to those who are free of the trade. To have served an apprenticeship in the town, under a master properly qualified, is commonly the necessary requisite for obtaining this freedom. The bye-laws of the corporation regulate sometimes the number of apprentices which any master is allowed to have, and almost always the number of years which each apprentice is obliged to serve. The intention of both regulations is to restrain the competition to a much smaller number than might otherwise be disposed to enter into the trade. The limitation of the number of apprentices restrains it directly. A long term of apprenticeship restrains it more indirectly, but as effectually, by increasing the expence of education. (p. 119)
    The government of towns corporate was altogether in the hands of traders and artificers; and it was the manifest interest of every particular class of them, to prevent the market from being overstocked, as they commonly express it, with their own particular species of industry; which is in reality to keep it always understocked. (p. 124)

    A final kind of monopoly depended upon tariffs and quotas that prevented foreign producers from competing with domestic producers:

    The superiority which the industry of the towns has every-where in Europe over that of the country, is not altogether owing to corporations and corporation laws. It is supported by many other regulations. The high duties upon foreign manufactures and upon all goods imported by alien merchants, all tend to the same purpose. Corporation laws enable the inhabitants of towns to raise their prices, without fearing to be under-sold by the free competition of their own countrymen. Those other regulations secure them equally against that of foreigners. (p. 127)

    Competitive markets restrain monopoly because the above-average profits associated with the exercise of monopoly power attract new producers who increase output and thereby lower prices:

    When by an increase in the effectual demand, the market price of some particular commodity happens to rise a good deal above the natural price, those who employ their stocks in supplying that market are generally careful to conceal this change. If it was commonly known, their great profit would tempt so many new rivals to employ their stocks in the same way, that, the effectual demand being fully supplied, the market price would soon be reduced to the natural price.... Secrets of this kind, however, it must be acknowledged, can seldom be long kept; and the extraordinary profit can last very little longer than they are kept. (p. 60)

    The next section is very IMPORTANT.
    Monopolists can preserve their favorable position only if the government prevents potential competitors from entering the monopolized activity:



    The exclusive privileges of corporations, statutes of apprenticeship, and all those laws which restrain, in particular employments, the competition to a smaller number than might otherwise go into them, have the same tendency...They...may frequently, for ages together, and in whole classes of employments, keep up the market price of particular commodities above the natural price, and maintain both the wages of the labour and the profits of the stock employed about them somewhat above their natural rate.

    Such enhancements of the market price may last as long as the regulations of police which give occasion to them.
    (pp. 61-2)

    In fact, the term "intellectual property" is a misnomer, a more correct term would be intellectual monopoly. Patents, Copyrights and even Trademarks are a government granted monopoly, they do not occur naturally. That does not mean that they are a bad thing per-say, but their use should be dictated by the benefit to socitety in general, with approprate limits so their use cannot be abused.
    These statutes give the power that the ol' Mercantile laws gave to those monopolies. There is no true effective choice in the market. Compainies like Microsoft are sustaining it's dominate position in the markerplace by using a state-constructed and granted monopoly, which gives Microsoft the monopoly over it's protocols [microsoft.com], effectively just as restrictive as the East India Trading Company trading zone monopoly of the Orient.

    Free markets make the formation of monopoly difficult because monopoly requires the adherence of all actual and potential sellers in a market. Self-interest makes achievement of such adherence difficult because each seller has an incentive to undercut the monopoly price in order to increase his share of the market. Monopoly power is increased or made possible if enforced by the government. In the following passage Smith refers to the guilds, or corporations, of his day:



    An incorporation...makes the act of the majority binding upon the whole. In a free trade an effectual combination cannot be established but by the unanimous consent of every single trader, and it cannot last longer than every single trader continues of the same mind. The majority of a corporation can enact a bye-law with proper penalties, which will limit the competition more effectually and more durably than any voluntary combination whatever.
    (p. 129)


    Smith?s ideas appear in current public debate over monopoly. Advocates of deregulating the transportation and communications industries by eliminating or reducing the power of Federal regulatory agencies argue that these agencies promote monopoly by limiting the entry of new firms and by fixing prices for all producers. Government regulations enforced upon all firms in an industry have the effect of allowing producers to eliminate competition and to raise prices. At the same time, lack of competition reduces incentives for efficient production.
  • My Solution (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Lonath ( 249354 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @06:13AM (#4467946)
    Compulsory licensing of IP at a rate like this:

    Take the lowest bulk licensing rate in the G8 (if they don't license, then the lowest rate per pill or copy of the software or whatever minus the expected costs of producing each copy).

    Multiply this by the ratio of country Foo's MIN(mean, median) income over the G8's MAX(mean, median) income.

    Then the industrialized nations have a reason to increase their income equality and they have a reason to make poorer nations less poor. And, poorer nations have the chance to make things without being overburdoned by the IP laws of the rich nations.

    And for those of you keeping score at home, YES this is effectively giving away IP to poorer nations, but so what? The richer nations should be paying for their own IP within their own economies and they should look at any money gotten from poorer nations only as gravy.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday October 17, 2002 @06:14AM (#4467950)
    Interesting use of the AIDS drug issue to highlight the possible negative effects of strong IP. The author got one thing on AIDS in Africa wrong when he said: an estimated 30 million people have H.I.V. in Africa. That is just plain wrong and is an indication of the ignorance of the problem. Zambia, Zimbabwe, Botswana, South Africa and Malawi together probably has that amount on their own! And on top of that people are starving right now, so AIDS-deaths are only really starting to impact right now. These people do not have the money to pay IP cost on top of the manufacturing cost of a drug - and usually IP is 95% of that. This huge tragedy prompted the scrapping of IP on those products.

    Now we ask ourselves - WHY does it take something of this scale for people to let go of IP? and then only after lots of lobbying, pressure and pleading. I mean W.T.F.!!!
    • That is just plain wrong and is an indication of the ignorance of the problem. Zambia, Zimbabwe, Botswana, South Africa and Malawi together probably has that amount on their own! And on top of that people are starving right now, so AIDS-deaths are only really starting to impact right now.

      The people of Africa don't need AIDS drugs. What they need is to start using contraception! The AID epidemic will never be solved until the widespread belief there that using a condom makes you less of a man is eradicated. All the medicine in the world is literally treating the symptoms rather than the cure in Africa.

      Of course, what they also need to stop their constant civil wars, and establish democratic governments with universal suffrage. Most African countries like Zimbabwe could easily feed their own people and even be very wealthy from mineral resources, but they can't stop centuries-old tribal conflicts long enough to do it.

      Until Africa sorts itself out, the West should not donate another penny - it'll only get siphoned off into a dictator's Swiss account or get spent on arms.
  • by ProfessorPuke ( 318074 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @06:16AM (#4467955)
    For a specific example of how America's development was spurred by IP violations, run a websearch on "Francis Cabot Lowell spy".

    Tis said that in ~1810 he memorized the schematics to the automated weaving machine to get around the British prohibition on the export of technical schematics.

    Whole cities (some bearing his name) in Massachusetts sprung up around this invention, and it lead to a spread of large scale agriculture in the south and west. Previously textile raw materials had to be exported to England for manufacture into garments, then imported back to the US for sale- and enormous impediment for efficiency and growth.

    The development of American factories also changed the face of urban demographics- large quantities of the lower classes were pulled into dense cities that were previously enclaves of the wealthy (and their abundant domestic help). Since the best (most nimble & most managable) factory workers were girls, unmarried single women finally got the opportunity to support themselves financially while mantaining their virtue.

    The violation of patents lead to progress like this, which had a much greater impact than breaking copyright and reading Dickins on the cheap.

  • by Uri ( 51845 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @06:24AM (#4467975)
    A similar comparison can be made regarding the international principle of "odious debt", introduced by the US after it 'liberated' Cuba in 1898 (in reality conquering it to prevent it liberating itself from Spain). The US argued then, very reasonably, that since the Cuban debt to Spain was essentially imposed on the Cubans by force, it was not valid.

    Though this initiative was later recognized by international law, Western attitudes are somewhat different now. The whole ideological question of who is responsible for a debt has been deemed irrelevant, helping remove the traditional view that lending is a risk-associated venture. Hence there are crippling debts in countless Third World countries that were created by, and only really benifited, the former military dictators of those countries - military dictators whom more often than we supported and helped get into power in the first place.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday October 17, 2002 @06:44AM (#4468017)
    Herbs like turmeric, neem, amla etc. are used as common household medicine in India since hundreds of years. But US companies have been trying to patent their use as a medicine showing that its their discovery.
    (Basmati)http://www.oneworld.org/ips2/ sept00/07_19 _003.html
    (Neem) http://www.ifoam.org/press/win_final_neu.html
    (Tu rmeric) http://www.goodnewsindia.com/Pages/content/traditi ons/turmeric.html
    • That has been going on for years and years now without success. Seems that the pharmacy longs to take away the right to use nutritional and herbal suppliments except by prescription. Shows what greedy uncaring people the AMA - FDA - Pharmaco triangle is made of.

      Here's a good google search [google.com] about this problem.
  • by shut_up_man ( 450725 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @07:09AM (#4468116) Homepage
    Interesting quotes from the book's dystopian future:

    "... the Chinese never liked "intellectual property". We never stopped pressuring them about the issue, and finally a major trade war broke out, and the Chinese just called our bluff. They made all English-language intellectual property freely available on their satellite networks to anybody in the world. They gave away our store for nothing, and it bankrupted us."

    "The Chinese hadn't even needed to leave their own borders to kick the blocks out from under the American economy."

    Rejection of intellectual property goes well beyond a country's local interests, it can be a way to significantly disrupt an IP-dependent country's economy. Of course, there are few countries who could stand up to the sanctions and possible military action of such countries.

    Might be amusing to see the USA invade China over mp3s though.
  • terrorism (Score:4, Insightful)

    by SubtleNuance ( 184325 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @07:15AM (#4468147) Journal
    on that topic, of hypocrisy wrt ones past, it brings up another point... more recent world events...

    Funny, and they are also (because they were victors (those who control the present control the past)) describe their Revolution is a just and honourable war.

    The US Revolution was really a terrorist effort. Disproportional warfare was fought by the Americans, the British, and other power powers of the time had strict rules of engagement. Certain things were "allowed" and "unallowed" during warfare. The Americans, outmatched by the British Forces employed distinctly divergent tactics (raids, ambushes etc) that were -- at the time -- considered barbaric, disgraceful and un-honourable.... Terrorism.

    Today, the US, faced with a rebellion; fought against them by a weaker force -- required to employ techniques that change the rules of engagement -- the Americans are now condemning them as barbaric, disgraceful: terrorists.

    Am i trying to justify recent acts of violence? No. I just find it INCREDIBLY amazing that a country, that has, to be exceeded by no other -- Chosen to live by the sword -- are so self-righteous and smug wrt the barbarians at the gate. My American neighbours: Witness the fruits of Neo-Imperialism. BTW, anyone who harms another is barbarian - you cannot except yourself from the label just because you tell yourselves so on CNN.

    What else do you expect the US to do today wrt IP? We have not progressed beyond State-Politics to the point where international or non-national policies are employed. Presently, the Americans enjoy a great deal of influence in a world's dynamics that they have spent a great deal influencing. "They've made the rules", within the framework of national power (recent history)... America, the present world power is the only one (short of revolution and uprising or a challenge of that power, often bloody - but not absolutely mandatory. The Americans have the opportunity to ADJUST THE SYSTEM OF POWER. To say finally, the present system is broken (look at the war, famine, etc etc) and we will be a part of devising a NEW system.... they shun most all international effort that doesn't serve them explicitly. So, am i surprised that the NYT sees Yankee IP law as hypocrisy? not at all, its more of the same, and not at all unique.

    • Re:terrorism (Score:5, Informative)

      by sql*kitten ( 1359 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @08:27AM (#4468572)
      The US Revolution was really a terrorist effort. Disproportional warfare was fought by the Americans, the British, and other power powers of the time had strict rules of engagement. Certain things were "allowed" and "unallowed" during warfare. The Americans, outmatched by the British Forces employed distinctly divergent tactics (raids, ambushes etc) that were -- at the time -- considered barbaric, disgraceful and un-honourable.... Terrorism.

      As far as I am aware, the American revolutionaries tended to attack military and government targets. Contrast them with modern-day terrorists such as the IRA who focus their attacks primarily on the civilian population. That's the real difference between freedom fighters and terrorists, not their tactics, not their strategy, but their choice of target.

      Note that the Taliban/al-Queda were freedom fighters while they only attacked Soviet military forces, but exactly the same people using exactly the same techniques became terrorists when they turned their attention to noncombatants.
  • by scottme ( 584888 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @07:25AM (#4468186)
    At the Commission on Intellectual Copyright [iprcommission.org] website.

    You can download the whole thing in PDF format, or browse online.

    (btw I submitted a story about this over a month ago)
  • by jcam2 ( 248062 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @08:09AM (#4468458) Homepage
    I'm not sure if developing countries really benefit from not having IP laws in the long run. For example, I know people in Malaysia (a country where almost all software and movies are sold openly by pirates) who tried to produce a home-grown music videotape of songs by local singers.

    Guess what happened - pirated immediately copied it, and the original producers ended up with thousands of unsellable tapes! So maybe the US is actually doing these countrys a favour by encouraging them to enforce IP laws.
  • A scheme where the developing nations were allowed to ignore IP and Copyright law while producing goods to be used only in their own internal markets could be introduced with minimal cost to the IP owners.

    The G8 countries wouldn't make significant loss, because the developing nations are generally unable to afford the licensed products anyway. Piracy would be no worse, because the pirates already ignore Copyright and IP law.
  • by the eric conspiracy ( 20178 ) on Thursday October 17, 2002 @09:22AM (#4468932)

    These developing countries are soveriegn nations, after all. They can adopt any internal IP polices they want, much like the US did in it's past. And the fact is that they do. It's up to these countries to decide what is in their own self-interest,

  • J.R.R. Tolkien... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Storm Damage ( 133732 ) <st0rmdNO@SPAMhotmail.com> on Thursday October 17, 2002 @09:38AM (#4469108)
    ...was rather bothered by American bootleggers, too. But unlike Charles Dickens, he didn't go on a big U.S. tour to lobby for stronger international copyright protection. He and his publisher issued a higher-quality print of his novels, sold them for a reasonable price (a bit higher than the bootlegs, but not much), and made an appeal to his fanbase to boycott the unauthorized version.

    The result was, he made a lot of money, and the unauthorized version didn't sell very well.

    Neat, huh?

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