*NEWS*U.S.TRADE DEAL,DMCA…..DOWN UNDER/2004-08-19

Toner News Mobile Forums Latest Industry News *NEWS*U.S.TRADE DEAL,DMCA…..DOWN UNDER/2004-08-19

Date: Friday June 21, 2013 10:25:50 am
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    Trade deal exports DMCA down under              

    Australia will be required to adopt U.S. intellectual-property rules, including laws covering the "circumvention" of copy protection, and software patents that have alarmed advocates of open-source software, according to a trade agreement that President Bush signed on Tuesday.

    Bush and Australian Prime Minister color=#0000ffJohn Howard touted the agreement at a ceremony in the White House's Rose Garden, saying it will eliminate many tariffs on manufactured goods and agricultural products between the two countries, which exchange $28 billion each year in goods and services.

    color=#0000ffless-noticed section of the free-trade agreement deals with copyright.

    "The agreement strengthens protections for intellectual property and promotes electronic commerce," Bush said, before signing a color=#0000ffbill committing the United States to the arrangement. "Our two nations are committed to the reduction of trade barriers and other restrictions that are keeping too much of the world from the kind of prosperity and opportunity that the developed world takes for granted."

    The agreement requires Australia to recognize software patents, to extend the duration of copyrighted works and to essentially adopt key portions of the color=#0000ffDigital Millennium Copyright Act. That 1998 law has been attacked by computer scientists and open-source programmers in the United States as stifling innovation and outlawing legitimate activities like making a back-up copy of a legally purchased DVD.

    Australia will be required to enact laws punishing anyone who "circumvents without authority any effective technological measure that controls access" to copyrighted work or who distributes hardware or software that is designed for circumvention or is marketed that way. As in the DMCA, some limited exceptions permit such activity by authorized researchers and government employees for "the sole purpose of preventing the access of minors to inappropriate online content."

    One section goes further than existing U.S. law and commits both nations to enacting bans on tinkering with "rights management information." A color=#0000ffrelated bill is pending, butcolor=#0000ffhas not been approved, in the U.S. Senate.

    Australia has already enacted a related law called the color=#0000ffDigital Agenda Act of 2000 that is not as sweeping the DMCA and does not permit software patents. Its government is currentlycolor=#0000ffconducting a review of the law that's expected to be completed this year.

    Because the free-trade agreement effectively short-circuits that review and commits Australia to extending its copyright and patent laws, the Australian Linux community has color=#0000ffcriticized the deal.

    It "will limit the ability of Australian software developers, companies and users to benefit from and contribute to the open-source software industry," Linux Australia says in a color=#0000ffposition paper. "Taking on the American system of software patents will stifle open-source software initiatives and force Australian users and businesses into using costly and potentially inferior software, without the ability to alter it to suit their needs."

    The trade agreement has run into trouble in Australia, which has not yet ratified it. Some members of its parliament have threatened to scuttle the deal unless it includes more regulations targeting drug companies, along with Australian TV and radio content.

    * Post was edited: 2004-08-19 16:08:00

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