Australia to Vote on Extending IP Laws 12
femto writes "This coming week, the Australian parliament will be voting on whether to introduce software patents, a version of the DMCA and extensions to copyright. This is all part of chapter 17 of the US-AU Free Trade Agreement. The effects of the DMCA act will be worse than in the U.S., as Australia has narrower fair use provisions than the U.S. It is not too late to urgently write to your Member of Parliament or Senators to oppose the legislation."
Rolling Downhill (Score:4, Insightful)
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Ok, that was a very disjointed post. But you know what I mean.
Fair Trade? (Score:5, Insightful)
This reminds me when President Bush went to Canada to protest the use of medical marijuana. It would increase drug use! Pure propaganda.
I'm sure they are saying if they don't extend copyright issues, it will increase Piracy, also...
Amazing, I bet Australia passes every law written by American corporate interests. For Free Trades Sake (wink, wink, nudge, nudge)
Re:Fair Trade? (Score:3, Informative)
Oh, and by the way, Ukraine got slapped with 100% punative duties on US imports. And why exactly did the US impose huge 100% punative duties? Because Ukraine declined to pass a law we demanded. And what law was that? A law making it criminal (jail-time) to manufacture ordinary blank CD's and DVD's u
Gotta Love it.... (Score:2, Informative)
Patent arguments? (Score:1)
Maybe I should (Score:2)
Telling people that they are breaking the law to make something that can make a copy of a cd is pointless, since no matter what laws are made, we can always get files off of p2p networks, and even if they are shut down, then what can the government ddo? Ban CD Duplicators, which people mostly use to make legitimite cds, just so we can stop those few people who use them to make w4r3z?
This is bringing Australia one step closer to b
No, you should not (Score:2)
BTW, I want out.
well, (Score:1)
Reports on the A-US FTA - 'Fair Use' amdts? (Score:2, Informative)
The Oz House of Reps (think Congress) passed enabling laws yesterday (not the agrement itself, which unlike the US will not face a vote in Oz). The Australian Senate will now vote on these enabling laws in mid-August, based on their final report which will come down around then.
Several recent reports from parliamentary reviews which in part cover the Chapter 17 issues about intellectual property: