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Full ACTA Leak Online

An anonymous reader writes "Following months of small Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement leaks, the full consolidated ACTA text has now been posted online. The consolidated text provides a clear indication of how the negotiations have altered earlier proposals (see this post for links to the early leaks) as well as the first look at several other ACTA elements. For example, last spring it was revealed that several countries had proposed including a de minimus provision to counter fears that the border measures chapter would lead to iPod searching border guards. The leak shows there are four proposals on the table."

8 of 201 comments (clear)

  1. Capable? by symes · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It is the idea that all border guards will be able to easily discriminate the legality of content even if they were allowed access. Seriously, would I have to carry receipts, license docs, original packaging and so forth?

  2. Re:http://en.swpat.org/wiki/201001_acta.pdf_as_tex by Paul+server+guy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    http://en.swpat.org/wiki/201001_acta.pdf_as_text

    I'm typing up the whole thing, for easier reading, searching, copying

    Cool, Thank you. - And yes, please keep all of the original errors and typos, Law droids have all sorts of fun with those. "For lack of a comma the land was lost" and all of that..

    --
    Your Moon, Your Mission, Get involved! http://www.openluna.org
  3. One Small Leap by sonicmerlin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm just happy *someone*, *somewhere* had enough moral integrity to defy their corporate-led masters.

  4. Re:Canada by Ironhandx · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Modded off topic, too bad theres not a -1 Wrong moderation.

    Back on topic: There are SOME decent provisions in the ACTA, however on the whole the entire thing needs to be torn up and burned. Start over with something reasonable and above board rather than having all this secrecy surrounding it. Even with leaks we can't trust our governments to continue in this despicable fashion.

  5. Re:Short summary of the treaty by oldspewey · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The choice is third world junk or nothing.

    I've found that in some cases, the "nothing" is actually the better alternative here. Rather than buying a cheap piece of crap that I can barely afford right now, I make a conscious decision to hold off and simply do without for a few months or maybe even forever. It's not always easy, but it brings a remarkable sense of peace when you figure out a way to be okay with less.

    --
    If libertarians are so opposed to effective government, why don't they all move to Somalia?
  6. Trust your government by Tokolosh · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ... Even with leaks we can't trust our governments to continue in this despicable fashion.

    On the contrary, I believe that we can put our full trust in the government to continue in a despicable fashion.

    --
    Prove anything by multiplying Huge Number times Tiny Number
  7. Re:Short summary of the treaty by Opportunist · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Actually, the US will be the ones that lose the most when ACTA gets enacted.

    Let's look at how copyright is enforced (or not). You will notice that in countries like the USA, the EU countries, Australia, Japan, in short, every country that doesn't really have any real problems, you have pretty good copyright and IP enforcement (good from the IP holders perspective). You don't really have a lot of power to get your IP enforced in countries that either have real problems (like, say, most countries ending in -stan) or countries that actually benefit from pretty much ignoring IP laws altogether (like, say, China).

    Do you think that will change when ACTA gets ratified?

    The US will have to enforce the IP of those countries. And they will, because these countries can and of course will prod them to. Can you imagine getting a DMCA takedown notice from China because they claim the rights to all film shot by a chinese citizen, and that dissident happens to be one? Think that's impossible?

    In return you get zip, nada, rien from China. Yes, they'll sign it and yes, they'll even pay lip service to it. Copying is still sky high? Boo hoo. We are really sorry. We will even stage a token sting. And even punish the guy(s) we catch to the utmost extent. Want him hanged? No problem, think we care or what? Satisfied? Ok, now buzz off.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  8. Global Fascism Acid Test by inKubus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This has the hallmarks of an acid test. Global law negotiations done in secret, under the guise of treaty...exactly the way we don't want it to go. From here there will be more laws in secret and the only way you'll find out you've violated them is that you don't have the required permit on your passport and you're accosted at the border. This is exactly how the global fascists (corpratists) want it. Without control over global travel, they cannot control the flow of goods and information. Each intersection of borders is a profit gradient. If goods are allowed to pass by osmosis, they lose all the leverage they could use to pump wealth back and forth between countries while taking a cut off the top. Sooner or later, they have it all.

    There are basically two forks in this road: one, where there is a single world democracy with the corporations below that rule of law and the other where there are separate country laws (like there are now) and the corporations flit above them BUT prohibit the individual. That's where we're headed now.

    --
    Cool! Amazing Toys.