By using this site, you agree to our Privacy Policy and our Terms of Use. Close

Forums - General - ACTA passed by EU?

EU and UK sign the ACTA agreement

27 January 2012

The EU and 22 of its member states, including the UK but excluding Germany, the Netherlands, Estonia, Cyprus and Slovakia, have signed the ACTA agreement. Digital rights groups are urging a SOPA-like campaign in protest.

The Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement is a hugely controversial international treaty aimed at preventing piracy on the internet. Proponents claim that its purpose is to provide a common international framework for the protection of intellectual property rights. Opponents claim it is a secretive deal done behind closed doors, by-passing ‘due democratic purpose’ that will lead to internet censorship. ISPs fear that it will force internet providers to become an unofficial copyright police force.

Following considerable pressure after much of its content was leaked by Wikileaks, the current text has been watered down from the original. Negotiators are now claiming that it will not change any of the national laws of the signatories. "It simply does not change EU law," trade commission spokesman John Clancy told ZDNet UK yesterday.

This is true in the UK which has the Digital Economy Act (an equally controversial law enacted but not yet active), and might explain why five of the EU countries have not yet signed. It might also explain why the USA has been trying to pass the SOPA and PIPA bills. The USA has already signed the ACTA agreement but as a ‘sole executive agreement’ not requiring Congressional consent. If SOPA is passed in the USA, then Clancy’s claim would be accurate, and Obama (a supporter of ACTA) would be confident that he could put the deal to a democratic vote.

Kader Arif, rapporteur for ACTA in the European Parliament, immediately quit his role as rapporteur (an EU legal term for an official appointed by a deliberative body to investigate a specific issue). He denounced the signing of the agreement, quoted by French digital rights organization La Quadrature, in some of the strongest political terms ever heard. “I want to denounce in the strongest possible manner the entire process that led to the signature of this agreement: no inclusion of civil society organisations, a lack of transparency from the start of the negotiations, repeated postponing of the signature of the text without an explanation being ever given, exclusion of the EU Parliament's demands that were expressed on several occasions in our assembly.” He went on to conclude, “This agreement might have major consequences on citizens' lives, and still, everything is being done to prevent the European Parliament from having its say in this matter. That is why today, as I release this report for which I was in charge, I want to send a strong signal and alert the public opinion about this unacceptable situation. I will not take part in this mascarade.”

Although the EU has signed the agreement, it still has to be ratified by the European Parliament. This is expected to happen in June, and will almost certainly happen since the Parliament has already accepted the text. European digital rights groups are calling for an anti-ACTA campaign along the lines of the anti-SOPA campaign.

Source: http://www.infosecurity-us.com/view/23505/eu-and-uk-sign-the-acta-agreement/

 

Will this be SOPA all over again, or will this one actually go into action? What do you think will be the consequences of this?



Click this button, you know you want to!  [Subscribe]

Watch me on YouTube!

http://www.youtube.com/user/TheRadishBros

~~~~ Mario Kart 8 drove far past my expectations! Never again will I doubt the wheels of a Monster Franchise! :0 ~~~~

Around the Network

I'm going to hate my governent and especially the leading party so much for signing this.



No, SOPA and PIPA are what is required in order to get the US to sign on to the ACTA international plan.

Another reason why US >> EU. We have some say in law creation.



Acctually as far as I know Austria is planning to sign it next tuesday, it only passed internal ratification last thursday and then still needs to be confirmed by the national council, then probably gets debunked as unconstitutional and ends up in the trash bin... then a few months later the EU forces us to enact it...



What's with the world lately?! D:



Around the Network
miz1q2w3e said:
What's with the world lately?! D:

The greedy and corrupt run it.  I mean copyrite laws in general are corrupt.  What's the point of something being copyrite 70 years after the creator dies?  That's absolute bullshit.  And to make it worse, these content corporations made their money from expired copyrited material that's in public domain and if these ridiculas laws were in place back then there wouldn't be these greedy corporations.



Oh hell.

I've already read up a bit on SOPA, can't be bothered to read up on this.... is it basically a similar thing? (ie has it been made deliberately vague enough to allow websites to be pulled for minor copyright infringements)



I must ask, didn't some judges in the EU recently declare SOPA-style DNS filtering to be unconstitutional? It seems like this is a non-starter

the Swedish Church of Kopimism is going to have a holy war, however.



Monster Hunter: pissing me off since 2010.

Mr Khan said:
the Swedish Church of Kopimism is going to have a holy war, however.

Good point, good point. LMAO.