CAFTA Treaty Exports DMCA 377
PingXao writes "The BSA, RIAA and MPAA successfully lobbied the U.S. Congress to include DMCA-like provisions in the recently approved CAFTA treaty, according to CNet. Among other provisions, Chapter 15 of the treaty requires treaty signatories to allow software patents, extend Copyright protections to 70 years after the author's death, and make it illegal to produce 'circumvention devices' for protected works."
Cue angry rants. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Cue angry rants. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Cue angry rants. (Score:2)
-- Benjamin Franklin
Seems like they knew what they were talking about. Politicians just don't say things like that now days.
~Security - ~Freedom (Score:2)
-- Benjamin Franklin"
Liberty cannot exist without security. Therefore, this statement makes no sense. Threat of physical harm while performing an activity that one should be free to do, dissuades someone from performing that activity. Therefore, liberty is lost.
Re:~Security - ~Freedom (Score:3, Insightful)
These things, these adjectives, they actually mean something and serve the purpose of specificity. Try not to ignore them, will you?
His point was that you must endure the threat of physical harm while engaging in those activites required to promote and emphasize those principles which are essential to our spirit and freedom (actual freedom, not how the word is used today).
Re:~Security - ~Freedom (Score:2)
This seems to be a new meme that without security freedom cannot exist. I'm not sure what spawned it most likely the ongoing "global struggle against extremism". I guess it depends on your definition of freedom. If you believe freedom is a space that you're allowed to ro
Re:~Security - ~Freedom (Score:3, Funny)
1) shear them
2) skin them
3) eat them
With more laws favourising businesses over people, people get treated increasingly more like sheep.
Well, this lack of long-term vision will eventually backfire and cause damage far worse than they may be imagining now. The digital age was supposed to mean convergence... but with all the proprietary DRM, media formats and incompatible platforms, it looks more like an age of divergence.
Liberty cannot exist without security. (Score:2)
Secure from whom, government? It's government that threatens liberty by force of arms at the bidding of the corporate aristocracy.
Falcon
"The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants"
Thomas Jefferson
Re:~Security - ~Freedom (Score:3, Insightful)
The key words in the phrase are essential liberty.
It does not appear to me that CAFTA deals with any issue that Franklin would have considered an essential liberty. Franklin was talking about freedom of speech and due process of law.
On the other hand Franklin woul
Re:~Security - ~Freedom (Score:2)
Re:~Security - ~Freedom (Score:2)
Many people are upset that people want to change their way of life. I am sorry but that is simply YOUR way of life, not a garunteed way to live. The constit
Re:~Security - ~Freedom (Score:2)
In the case of CAFTA, the liberty we're trading, is freedom of speech (by acquiescing to software patents, dmca, and copyright fascism) for the security of hoping that by giving away our rights to corporations, they'll be nice and keep innovating and hiring us. The events of the past 12 or so years of NAFTA seem to indicate that no matter what welfare
Re:Cue angry rants. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Cue angry rants. (Score:2)
Wait no I'm not. That's always funny as hell.
2 minute error bug = Slashdot stopping anon posts? (Score:2)
- Thomas Jefferson
Can someone PLEASE un-break the 2 minute gap check?
Its been broken for a while, and it seems to ALWAYS hit me if I post anonymously.
I think it might be intentionally broken, to make anonymous posting less possible. Not eliminate it or put in an obvious restriction - just reject the post with an error that makes it seem like there is buggy code in the system.
Taking away the freedom to post anon effectively and make it so no one will protest since
Re:Cue angry rants. (Score:2)
Re:Cue angry rants. (Score:2)
But I'm starting to suffer from 'outrage fatigue'.
I agree -- but it isn't leading me to stop. Rather I'm getting to the point where I'm going to go and kick some ass. I'm really sick and tired of these greedy companies and these greedy Congressmen stripping me of my rights for the sake of the all mighty dollar.
Unfortunately our politicians are SO CORRUPT that they've sold their own soul as well as the souls of their constituents to these FAT ASS companies. I'm already planning to take several weeks out
Waste of time (Score:3, Insightful)
'Odd,' said Arthur, 'I thought you said it was a democracy.'
'I did,' said Ford, 'It is.'
'So,' said Arthur, hoping he wasn't sounding ridiculously obtuse, 'why don't the people get rid of the lizards?'
'It honestly doesn't occur to them,' said Ford. 'They've all got the vote, so they all pretty much assume that the government they've voted in more or less approximates to the government they want.'
'You mean they ac
Run with this. (Score:3, Interesting)
How about we all get together and write an application which makes tracking bills and resolutions easy for the layman. You can pick and choose the ones you agree with and the app will create a report during election season sumarizing who to vote for based on your picks?
Instead of the crap the politicians are spewing.
Then it won't matter who belongs to what party.
Re:Run with this. (Score:2)
Re:Run with this. (Score:2)
Do it the way Yoda does things.
Seriously.
I'll help because the US corporations are exporting this shit now. They've tried software patents in Europe which was blocked but they did get some sort of DMCA into the EU.
What kind of intellectual sewage are they feeding you down there? Voting behaviour in the USA is astounding to me.
Re:Cue angry rants. (Score:2)
[2] I agree -- but it isn't leading me to stop. Rather I'm getting to the point where I'm going to go and kick some ass.
If you really want to help, devote yourself to helping these guys [sourceforge.net] or these guys [sourceforge.net], or you can start your own project. No offense to anyone here, but if I was a betting man I'd put my money on the average Slashdotter's Technical skills, not his/her ability to win hearts and minds...or affect social opinion.
The demographic that voted us
Re:Cue angry rants. (Score:2)
Say that again when you're in your thirties. In college I used to call into radio talk shows and argue my libertarian views. I also argued my athiest views with fundamentalist Christians. It all seemed so important to me at the time. Philosophy. Truth. The way things should be. Now it makes me yawn just thinking about it. God. Who cares? Theres nothing you can do about it. If someone really do
Re:Cue angry rants. (Score:2)
Say that again when you're in your thirties.
Already there!
I went through my angry phase in my early twenties. Settled down a bit and am revving back up. The corruption is just growing too much, too fast. Our politicians aren't just for sale, they're advertising that they're for sale. They don't even care that it's immoral.
Re:Cue angry rants. (Score:2)
FWIW, as a fromer member of the armed forces I can say if it comes down to large scale civil insurrection where sending the [FBI|BATF|DEA] isn't enough, you'll likely find yourself standing next to a lot of the US military rather than in front of it.
Re:Cue angry rants. (Score:2)
That's actually one of the GOOD things about having a military which is drawn primarily from the general population. It doesn't go over too well when a tyrant wanna-be tells them to mow down their friends & family.
I think it's a pretty typical tactic for t
Re:Cue angry rants. (Score:2, Insightful)
Then the Emperor has already won (Score:2)
If the people all get sick of hearing about this stuff and sink into apathy, they are much easier to control.
Don't give up, dude.
Thank you! (Score:2)
Re:Cue angry rants. (Score:2)
Yeah. I know this is a bad thing. But I'm starting to suffer from 'outrage fatigue'. It's getting damn tiring hearing about our rights being eroded and getting angry about it. So I have decided it's time to give my blood pressure a rest. I think I'll make a cup of tea instead.
Instead of a cup of tea perhaps a cup of traiters' blood? Well I guess we could have another Boston Tea Party.
FalconRe:Cue angry rants. (Score:2)
Re:Cue angry rants. (Score:2)
How do you f
Re:Cue angry rants. (Score:2)
Re:Cue angry rants. (Score:2)
Yeah. I know this is a bad thing. But I'm starting to suffer from 'outrage fatigue'. It's getting damn tiring hearing about our rights being eroded and getting angry about it.
Anger's function is to enable us to do something about the situation. Frustration and fatigue build up when we can't. If you do a few things to act against the erosion of rights, whatever, you may find that your anger discharges in a positive way, rather than burning you out. Doesn't mean overthrowing your Government, or anything -
Today I realized exactly how stupid this is (Score:2)
extend Copyright protections to 70 years after the author's death
Today in class, the professor handed out some copies that came out of IEEE Computer from January 1982. Under current copyright law, the copyrights on those articles will not expire until well after I do. But to what end?
Really, how commercially valuable is a 23 year old article about parallel computing? It makes me shake my head. If you can't extract the majority of the commercial benefit of your creation in the first couple of decade
Re:Today I realized exactly how stupid this is (Score:2)
Re:Today I realized exactly how stupid this is (Score:2)
Exactly.
The lawyers are playing both sides of the fence, and they are reaping all the rewards.
Re:Today I realized exactly how stupid this is (Score:2)
How did you manage to afford the PTO and lawyer fees, if you don't mind me asking? I've wanted to patent some ideas for a long time but the cost always seemed prohibitive. Not to mention the fact that a patent is just a license to sue, so if you can't come up with some hundreds of thousands of dollars for litigation you just have to count on the kindness not just of strangers, but of corporations.
It's da Mouse! (Score:2)
It's all about entertainment and keeping those few songs, movies and such securely locked up for as long as the corps can turn a profit.
Look inwards? (Score:2)
Today in class, the professor handed out some copies that came out of IEEE Computer... ... how commercially valuable is a 23 year old article about parallel computing?
Sounds like your school found a viable purpose for such an article, and as part of your education I assume you (or someone else) is paying for, it is being commercially used. Did you professor violate copyright in handing it out, or did he actually pay for the rights to use it?
Re:Look inwards? (Score:2)
Should my grade 3 math teacher have paid somebody for teaching us long division? Its been useful, but hardly more useful to very specifuc private companies than to the public.
If you think using a patent in an undergrad university class constitutes commercial use, please stop using your car or computer, because they simply wouldn't be affordable to you if the kind of bullshit you spewed were taken verbatim as justification f
CAFTA means (Score:2)
Captain Obvious (?)
Superpowers flex their wings (Score:2)
Re:Superpowers flex their wings (Score:2)
Instead of removing stupid laws that limit things at home the solution is to export them to reduce the ability of others to compete as well?
People should realise that this sort of thing will only be relevant so long as the USA is considered a more important trade partner than China.
Australia is already showing which side they would back after getting screwed on a trade deal with the USA - eventu
Good thing.... (Score:2)
Capitalism Cocktail (Score:2)
Move along because their's truly nothing to see here.
It never ceases to amaze me that the savvy
-Capitalism is about owning things so you can capture the wealth making capacities of that thing. Variations of capitalism that conflict with the american version are not welcome.
-The U.S. gov't wants IP/whatever to remain in total control of the current
right! this was predicted! (Score:2)
Listen to this MPAA speech from a couple of years ago!
http://be.back.l8r.net:8000/mpaa_speech.ogg [l8r.net]
Gunboat diplomacy rewritten (Score:2)
But last time, at least the country that was underwriting the gunboats got some of the money. This time it's a rip-off of everyone. This one is targeted at unions, workers, the environment, environmentalists, fair trade, truth
Let's stop this now (Score:2, Insightful)
Your tax dollars at work (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Let's stop this now (Score:3, Insightful)
The legislative districts are so gerrymandered in some parts of the country you could literally prop up a cadaver in a wheelchair and he/she would handily beat the opposition (alluding to Strom Thurmond). In many parts of the country people would rather have no representative than a [pinko democrat/jesus-freak republican].
Of course, we all know independant candidates aren't going to win, so basically you're stuck with the guy you have now until redistricting in 2010.
WTF (Score:2)
What the fuck is congress doing making laws that benefit massive coroprations at the expense of the fucking citizens? And then trying to inflict them on other countries?!
I think we're fast approaching the time to switch to the jury box, if not the ammo box.*
*"There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now." - Ed Howdershelt
Re:WTF (Score:2)
Too late for the jury box. The courts are totally sewn up with pro-corporate, anti-individual extremists.
O'Conner was one of the last dominos to fall.
This is EXACTLY why you've been hearing so much rabble about "activist judges" and "legislating from
the bench" and "nuclear options" lately. The corporations needed to lock the door of the courts to
keep people like you and me out, and now they've done so.
When this kind of crap goes down (Score:2)
It Ain't Gettin' Paid Back. EVER.
The idea is to loot the treasury while they can, and then move on to greener pastures elsewhere. 70 years on copyright? Who cares? Once the economy implodes, the USA will crumble like the CCCP did in the early 1990s. The debt will disappear because the USgov disappeared. Oil will be largely
Re:When this kind of crap goes down (Score:2)
I didn't vote for it. In fact, I didn't even vote for Kerry, like what's the point? I have no way of checking that yes, my vote was counted correctly after I cast it. Trust the gov't approved officials who are out to get themselves reelected? Why don't we just let the Supreme Court decide it all from the start, instead of wasting hundred millions of people's precious time? And let's have the president elected by the Supreme Court nominate people for the Supreme Court. Yeah, foxe
Re:When this kind of crap goes down (Score:2)
The second amendment thing is a red herring. The right wing militia types like to get all worked up thinking it will save them from pure fascism. Even an M16 isn't much help against a remote control drone loaded with high explosives flying at night, and certainly won't stop a stand-off bomb. And in terms of actual fighting, you can take an M16 with fulltilt rock and roll and you're going to have a real hard time against a Cobra gunship.
The only even marginally
We are going to.. (Score:2)
You watch, in 20 years we will be second to China or Russia in the grand scheme of things.
And maybe that's for the best, with the kind of people we have in this country.
Central America: You're not alone (Score:2)
As an Australian IT professional, I'm well aware of the USA's tactics; it's political suicide for a foreign government to knock back a free trade agreement with such an august country as the US. So, the really nasty DMCA/IP laws get inserted into the country's laws as a predicate to signing the agreement.
It has already happened in Australia [efa.org.au], and I believe it also occurred when the Singaporeans signed their FTA.
Now, I don't begrudge the USA for trying this; hey, each country is out for all it can get, righ
It Sucks, But ... (Score:2)
To the point! (Score:2)
Lets get to the point, the above just gave a huge chunk of cash to congress in order to make it happen.
Circumvention Devices (Score:2)
1) pencils
2) paper
3) calculators
4) finite state machines of any sort
5) eyes/ears memory and voice/hands
- an individual may have eyes/ears and memory, or voice/hands and memory. But any combination eyes/ears and voice/hands clearly consititues a circumvention device.
Thanks, Republicans (and many sell-out Dems) (Score:2)
Knew we could count on you. And you know you can always count on us to ignore your abuse of power. Yes, you do as you please--we'll just wave our little flags and get bent out of shape every time some gay wants to marry or somebody doesn't want their kid turned into a Jesusbot at school.
As Mencken memorably wrote, "Democracy is also a form of worship: it's the worship of Jackals b
Blame Gutless Democrats like Feinstein (Score:2)
Feinstein Voted Yes.
Per her website:
CAFTA Implementation (S. 1307)
169 6-29 Y Frist motion to proceed to the bill. (61-34)
170 6-30 Y Passage. (54-45)
Here's the record of Democrats who voted FOR the bill:
Bingaman (D-NM), Yea
Cantwell (D-WA), Yea
Carper (D-DE), Yea
Cornyn (R-TX), Yea
Feinstein (D-CA), Yea
Lieberman (D-CT), Not Voting (GUTLESS FUCKER)
Lincoln (D-AR), Yea
Murray (D-WA), Yea
Nelson (D-FL), Yea
Nelson (D-NE), Yea
Pryor (D-AR), Yea
Wyden (D-OR), Yea
now, of c
Re:Blame Gutless Democrats like Feinstein (Score:2)
shocked (Score:2)
I've seen this debate hundreds of times. Usually, slanted towards the libertarian philosophy - and when I logged in to read this discussion, I expected a balance, or slant towards that direction. After all, this is a debate on free trade. But the character of these discussions has changed in the past several months. Fewer pro-lassez faire opinions. Fewer sustained discu
software patents? (Score:2)
There is still time to fight it! (Score:3, Insightful)
But it will be a difficult fight, tough. The American market and is very important for the economy of these countries, and not approving the agreement could hurt it badly.
In Costa Rica, there is a huge PR and marketing campaign promoting the "TLC" (as the treaty is known here), the benefits it's supposed to bring and how thousands of jobs will be gone if it doesn't get approved. Mainstream media is also pro-CAFTA. As a result, most people are not aware or are misinformed of all of its implications.
We see this posted on /. because of the issue with Software patents/DMCA, but that's just a sample of what DR-CAFTA really is: a bill that gives more power to U.S. corporations in the region. Thanks to this treaty, Big Pharma will extend their drug patents +5 years. Governments will have to compensate corporations if they get in the way of their right to make profits.
It's a shame we are so dependent on the U.S. that we have to accept crap like this.
Anarchy is not freedom (Score:2)
The US has a history of negotiating treaties and then abandoning them and resorting to force to retain control they should have sacrificed when they left the treaty - but that doesn't negate the inherent value in a treaty so long as all parties play by the rules.
Re:Anarchy is not freedom (Score:2)
Sounds good to me: it would lower the price of the goods.
Re:Anarchy is not freedom (Score:2)
Re:Anarchy is not freedom (Score:2)
PS. Do not take this as if I agree with slipping retarded copyright law into a trade agreement, that is just as bad in my book. But extremes in either direction are usually bad.
Re:Anarchy is not freedom (Score:2)
It's been a few years since high school economics, but I thought that free trade raises the amount of available luxuries due to the advantages in efficiencies of different countries.
Sure suddenly removing all tariffs and trade rules would cause chaos, but eventually the market should settle out.
I don't quite see how this would cause workers to get paid nothing and get no benefits...You could be trying to make the same sort of outsourcing argument I see occasionally about "those foreigners taking our
Re:Anarchy is not freedom (Score:2)
Re:Anarchy is not freedom (Score:2)
That's pretty worthless if you have no job to buy anything. You'll end up like the poorest Russians just after the Soviet Union collapsed looking at the nice loaves of bread on the shelves & wishing you could afford one.
How do you figure that? I haven't heard of any inherent economic
Re:Anarchy is not freedom (Score:2)
Re:Anarchy is not freedom (Score:2)
Nor for that matter, and for the same reasons, does America ally with anyone. America has lots of allies that will and do help it out, but the US is totally unreliable when the boot's on the other foot. American treaties, of all kinds, aren't worth the paper they're written on.
TWW
Future now (Score:2)
You want universal internet access? Then you need to get joe mechanic to understand why it's important to him so he will join your battle cry. Right now the internet is
Re:The key word is TRADE (Score:2)
free trade: no such animal (Score:2)
sum.zero
Re:free trade: no such animal (Score:2)
As a Canuck, we've had so-called free-trade with the US for some years now.
We see a lot of protectionistic measures (eg softwood tarrifs, steel) which when appealed to the NAFTA tribunal and the WTO still don't get repealed.
We see water treaties (eg Devil's Lake drainage project) and the like being ignored when it suits them.
As far
Re:Circumvention devices? (Score:2)
"That wording sounds dangerously ambiguous."
"circumvention devices" is shorthand for what Chapter 15 covers for at least three pages. You're right to be worried -- but your first step should be to read the actual treaty, rather than extrapolating off of a two-word phrase.
The summary contains a handy link to the chapter.
Airholes? (Score:2)
Depends on if you put airholes in the jar. Jar...
Re:There is no future, only the now. (Score:2)
15, "United States" means
(a) a Federal corporation
I shall never feed this troll again. I promise.
Read the context of the statute you cite. Treat it like a #define statement.
#define UNITED_STATES a federal corporation an agency, department, commission, board, or other entity of the United States; or an instrumentality of the United States.
So, where ever you see "UNITED_STATES" in a sentence, you replace it with what follows in the
Re:Do lawmakers really think (Score:2)
I call horseshit to the whole thing, as "intellectual property" was meant to eventually be turned over to the public domain anyw
Re:Do lawmakers really think (Score:2)
How the hell else do you think they would regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, pinky swears?
Yeah I mean that might cover, I don't know, maybe my children who will live at least 75 years after I die hopefully.
Re:Do lawmakers really think (Score:2)
But that defeats the purpose of the Copyright Clause - the idea is to encourage authors to create works by giving them a *temporary* monopoly on their works. Life + 70 gives the author a permanent monopoly from his perspective, and giving the copyright to the author's children when he dies cannot possibly encourage the creation of further works by said author, thus I believe the current s
Re:Do lawmakers really think (Score:2)
I'm wondering when the last time was they made money from Steamboat Willy?
Pox on Samuel Clemmens and his advocacy for extended copyrights. All for his two daughters who were apparently too ugly to get married.
Re:Do lawmakers really think (Score:2)
They would lose exclusive rights to the character, as the trademark is no substitute for the copyright, and cannot be used to stand in the way of people making copies and derivative works of public domain works. There is a similar doctrine in the patent field. What happens in fact is that the relevant trademarks die along with the copyright.
Some marks might still be viable. Peter Pan is a valid mark i
Re:Do lawmakers really think (Score:3, Informative)
The issue is whether the expiration of a copyright (or patent) can cause certain associated trademarks to expire. And the answer is that they can.
A trademark has to indicate that a marked good or service originates from a specific source which maintains a given level of quality (regardless of whether the quality is good or bad). The 'Coke' trademark, for example, must indicate that one entity (the Coke company) makes all the g
Re:We continue to stay the course. (Score:2)
Meanwhile, the average American is getting fucked in the ass, while the upperclass American politican is pulling down a cool hundred grand or two doing nothing more than arguing why their company should get a tax break.
I'm so sick to death of American politics, but there's nothing,
Re:We continue to stay the course. (Score:2)
This is so true. An interesting byproduct of having such an advanced military. How long before half the soldiers will be armor plated robots with rotary machine guns who cannot be killed and can easily be repaired if
Re:We continue to stay the course. (Score:2)
For example:
"protect Intellectual Property Rights" (from ch 15)
Digital Rights Management
Digital Millenium Copyright Act
Patriot Act
All of these sound positive based on the names. A purposeful shortage of rights should not be called "rights", it should be called "restrictions". For example, "Digital Restrictions Management". Or "copyrestriction" laws. Though it is a bit cowardly, they use tricky names becau
Let's Define "circumvention" (Score:2)
If I buy an good-quality book, the data is "protected" reasonably well for several hundred years, provided I don't seriously abuse it like throwing into a fireplace. But if I buy a good-quality CD or DVD, somehow it always picks up scratches that eventually makes the data lost. Where is the "protection" of the data???
Dare we say that the companies making those discs have deliberately CIRCUMVENTED the ability of the discs to pr
Re:Slightly better (Score:2)
Re:What about if i'm a terrorist (Score:2)
Just as a friendly fyi, I'd suggest checking out this article on American citizens in Guantanamo [cageprisoners.com].
PS: Very interesting question!
Re:What about if i'm a terrorist (Score:2)
You won't get to appear in an american court - there's a new legal system that has been in the process of being invented for people held as terrorist suspects for the last four years, which in it's current form is set up to ignore a lot of evidence for the defence. No trials have been run yet, so it remains to be seen what it's final form will be. The reason for setting up a completely new justice system appe
Re:Only one thing to say.... (Score:2)
Of course it does. Especially if you remember that the Sonny Bono term extension act was mostly passed to "get the US in line" with the EU and the Berne Convention. Creating a new agreement and passing it back the other direction with increased requirements is a perfect way to create an un-ending copyright term extension loop.
(50 years after creation + 70 years after publication is longer than anything I've heard of before, though it is only applicable under
Re:Exporting the DMCA is a good idea. (Score:2)
Careful what you wish for... (Score:2)
you just might get it. According to what I've read, the income tax was supposed to 'soak the rich' [ottoskinner.com] but look at it now. [cbpp.org] If you taxed IP, who do you think has the pull to lobby congress to ensure they pay the least of it? And just like the income tax pretty much obliterated your right to financial privacy, an IP tax would obliterate your right to intellectual privacy. Every written work you create is automatically copyrighted under US law. Now, if the
Re:AAAAA (Score:2)
BSA: Bull Shit of America,
RIAA: the same, really, just makes money off people who have their own tastes for music,
DMCA: Da Millenium's Crap of America, basically another way of saying BSA.
MPAA: Maximized Profit Association of America. Full of people that enter the BSA category.
CAFTA: Colossal Anti Freedom Terrorists of America
So indeed, we're very screwed. Someone please help America? God is obviously on vacation or something...