IP = Internet Protocol

IP = Intellectual Property

Integrity = a quality we would like to see in politics



Iptegrity.com is released under a Creative Commons licence.

Please attribute the author when quoting or using it as a reference source.

The correct citation is shown on each article.

Don't miss iptegrity

Use Live Bookmarks in your browser to keep up to date with iptegrity.com (RSS feed)

Login / Comment

You will need to log in to make a comment on any of the Policy Matters articles.
Username

Password

Remember me
Password Reminder
No account yet? Create one
It is free to create an account. When you have created it, you will get an email, telling you how to activate it.

 Support IPTEGRITY

Iptegrity.com provides comment and news on EU Internet policy that is independent of all commercial and political interests. 


Your donation will help to keep it that way.

 

Home arrow Policy Matters arrow European Union arrow ACTA: questions in the European Parliament
ACTA: questions in the European Parliament
Written by Monica Horten   
Feb 23, 2009 at 10:42 AM

Questions are being asked in the European Parliament over scrutiny of ACTA. Leaked parts of the ACTA text indicate ISP liability is on the agenda.

 

Whether the European Parliament will be able to scrutinise ACTA - Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement -  is the topic of an oral question tabled for the March session of the European Parliament.  The question, from Swedish MEP Jens Holm , asks whether the final draft of  of any forthcoming agreement will be published by the Council before final agreement and whether the  European and national Parliaments will be able to scrutinise the text. A third question asks that the Council should not agree and rubber stamp the ACTA during the Parliament's recess for the elections.

 

The issue that Holm is trying to address is the secrecy that surrounds the ACTA negotiations. ACTA threatens to alter the law concerning enforcement of copyright and intellectual property by means of an multi-lateral  agreement that is outside the conventional international legal framework. The nature of the proposals, as far as is known, will have implications for

fundamemental rights of EU citizens. Attempts to ask for the draft ACTA documents to be made public, have so far been rejected.

 

The question comes amid reports that Internet downloading is  on the ACTA hit list. Canadian lawyer Michael Geist reports that privacy and peer-to-peer  are the main targets  of ACTA. KEI reports what is apparently the text of the secrect ACTA, including the following paragraph:

 

Article 2.7: Injunctions
Each Party shall ensure that, where a judicial decision is taken finding an infringement of an intellectual property right, the judicial authorities may issue against the infringer an injunction aimed at prohibiting the continuation of the infringement. Where provided for by domestic law, non-compliance with an injunction shall, where appropriate, be subject to a recurring penalty payment, with a view to ensuring compliance. The Parties shall also ensure that right holders are in a position to apply for an injunction against intermediaries whose services are used by a third party to infringe an intellectual property right.

 

The first two sentences would need to be looked at in the context of EU law. 

 

The last sentence has been lifted from the EU Copyright directive, almost word for word. It concerns  liability of ISPs and network operators for copyright infringement and supplying users' personal details to rights-holders.  Its inclusion in ACTA relates to  the same issue as an amendment to the Medina report, tabled by IMCO committee chair Arlene McCarthy, and  which I have previously reported on - namely strengthening the implementation of enforcement measures.  IMCO, of course, is the committee in charge of the directive dealing with users rights in the Telecoms Package.


User Comments
Please login or register to add comments

Last Updated ( Feb 23, 2009 at 10:48 AM )
<Previous   Next>

 "We who love the Internet

say that user rights are

defined by what we use our

Internet subscriptions for.

We do not want to be

reduced to consumers so

that our rights are only 

what is in the subscription

agreement. "

Eva-Britt Svensson, MEP


Your Freedom to

 repeal the DE Act

 


La Quadrature du Net

La Quadrature du Net

Don't disconnect us!  

European Commission Creative Content Online consultation

AK Zensur

AK Vorrat

Open Rights Group

open rights group

Exgae

  Code

GetUp Action for Australia

 Campaign against Internet filtering in Australia

...AK Vorrat - against data retention

  AK vorrat