|
Tom Dearden |
This blog has devoted a number of (concerned) posts [here] to the Trans-Pacific Partnership, also known as TPP and
possibly on account of its aura of secrecy.
A couple of days ago New Zealand issued the full text of the final version of the TPP.
Katfriend and tech law enthusiast Tom Dearden has read it for us, and we
are delighted to host his lively analysis.
Here's what Tom writes:
"The leak of
details of what was believed to be the final version of the
TPP by Wikileaks a few weeks ago has sparked heated debate, and attracted
criticism from free speech and transparency groups arguing that the agreement
would sound the death knell for an open internet, and also for those without
the means to afford expensive pharmaceutical products.
Well, the full text
of the agreement which has been negotiated in secret has now been released by
the New Zealand Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade, and is decidedly
unchanged from last month’s leak.
While this is an
incredibly dense document (around 6000 pages), I shall touch on a few of the
glaring issues that struck me.
First:
Article 18.58: Right
of Reproduction
Each Party shall
provide to authors, performers and producers of phonograms the exclusive right
to authorise or prohibit all reproduction of their works, performances or
phonograms in any manner or form, including in electronic form.
This looks like the basis
of copyright itself. What is concerning however is that it would appear to
leave no room for limitations or exceptions. It strikes me as a step backwards
in terms of technology and media in general. This seems to undermine the US
doctrine of ‘fair use’, by allowing rightholders to permit or
prohibit (at their discretion) the reproduction of their work. There is no
reason this would not extend to, for example, the transfer of audio files from
a CD to an iPod. It might also cause issues with creating a backup of a
computer’s hard drive if that drive includes protected works. While this would
be nigh on impossible to enforce in any practical manner, it ensures that
‘Average Joe’ will, at any given moment, likely be infringing copyright, and
may therefore be subject to financial penalties. Those who drafted the
agreement either have no idea how technology
works, or are willfully ignoring reality and instead focusing on the desires of
their greatest contributors (large multinational companies).
Article 18.59: Right
of Communication to the Public
Without prejudice to
Article 11(1)(ii), Article 11bis(1)(i) and (ii), Article 11ter(1)(ii), Article
14(1)(ii), and Article 14bis(1) of the Berne
Convention, each Party shall provide to authors the exclusive right
to authorise or prohibit the communication to the public of their works, by
wire or wireless means, including the making available to the public of their
works in such a way that members of the public may access these works from a
place and at a time individually chosen by them.
This has some merit,
in that it helps to protect rightholders in the event of an infringement. However
it will likely cause more harm than good. It will hit content hosts such as
YouTube, and unless they hire an army of moderators whose sole purpose is to
scour the staggering 300 hours of content uploaded every minute, then they will
certainly fall foul of this provision. Thankfully there is no mention of
holding viewers accountable, as there is often no way for them to know whether
the work was uploaded by, or with the permission of, the owner.
Thirdly:
Article 18.62:
Related Rights
2.(a) the broadcasting
and communication to the public of their unfixed performances, unless the
performance is already a broadcast performance; and (b) the fixation of their
unfixed performances.
While there is
currently nothing preventing a person from snapping a picture or a video in
public, this article ensures that a shutter-happy person might find themselves
in hot water if the subject of their photograph or video can be construed as a
‘performance’, for which there seems to be no definition affixed.
|
Possibly less worrisome than the TPP? |
Lastly:
Article 18.68:
Technological Protection Measures (TPMs)
1. In order to
provide adequate legal protection and effective legal remedies against the
circumvention of effective technological measures that authors, performers, and
producers of phonograms use in connection with the exercise of their rights and
that restrict unauthorised acts in respect of their works, performances, and
phonograms, each Party shall provide that any person that: (a) knowingly, or
having reasonable grounds to know, circumvents without authority any effective
technological measure that controls access to a protected work, performance, or
phonogram;
In general this is
fair, as it helps to protect works in a manner that is not prejudicial to
consumers… mostly. In the mid 2000’s, some publishers of software,
predominantly PC games, used a method of copy protection called Starforce which
proved problematic, as it caused instability issues within the OS, caused
physical degradation of optical drives, and for many users, rendered the game they
had legitimately purchased worthless without cracking the copy protection.
Granted, this article refers only to phonograms, however it is entirely
foreseeable that similar issues could rear their ugly heads in future.
On the plus side,
Articles 14 seem to strengthen the rights of consumers by increasing
transparency, disallowing corporations from participating in the regulatory
process, creating a standard definition by which practices may be classed as
anti-competitive, and reducing the misrepresentation of material facts (e.g.
receiving lower internet speeds than were advertised).
As I mentioned, this
is an incredibly dense document, and a cursory glance will not be sufficient to
generate an informed opinion on the agreement as a whole. However, the
Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership Agreement is currently being
negotiated, and if it looks anything like the TPP, it will require some very
careful scrutiny before it is ship shape."
Thanks Tom,
ReplyDeleteJust a quick comment on your first issue in relation to the right of reproduction and the availability of limitations and exceptions. Note that Article 18.65 of the TPP explicitly addresses the availability of limitations and exceptions, requiring any exceptions to comply with a trips-style three-step test as follows:
1. With respect to this Section, each Party shall confine limitations or exceptions to exclusive rights to certain special cases that do not conflict with a normal exploitation of the work, performance, or phonogram, and do not unreasonably prejudice the legitimate interests of the right holder.
2. This Article does not reduce or extend the scope of applicability of the
limitations and exceptions permitted by the TRIPS Agreement, the Berne Convention, the WCT or the WPPT.
On limitations and exceptions it is also worth taking a look at Article 18.4: ('Understandings in Respect of this Chapter'), which provides as follows (with emphasis added in bold):
ReplyDeleteHaving regard to the underlying public policy objectives of national systems, the Parties recognise the need to :
(a) promote innovation and creativity;
(b) facilitate the diffusion of information, knowledge, technology, culture and the arts; and
(c) foster competition and open and efficient markets,
through their respective intellectual property systems, while respecting the principles of transparency and due process, and taking into account the interests of relevant stakeholders, including right holders, service providers, users and the public.
This is the difference between a tech law enthusiast and a lawyer
ReplyDelete