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European Parliament Takes Step Toward Burying ACTA

An anonymous reader writes "The European Parliament's INTA Committee yesterday soundly rejected a proposal to refer the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement to the European Court of Justice for review. ACTA critics viewed the proposal as a delay tactic designed with the hope that public opposition to the agreement would subside in the year or two it would take for a court review. The 21-5 vote against the motion means that the INTA committee will conclude its ACTA review later this spring with a full European Parliament vote expected in June or July. The lack of support for ACTA within the European Parliament is now out in the open with multiple parties indicating they are ready to bury it."

4 of 53 comments (clear)

  1. if only the parliament had a binding say by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Hell, if only there was a way of barring the proposal of "similar legislation" within some timeframe, so it isn't repeatedly proposed in slightly different versions until eventually it passes.

    This is the problem with lobbying under democracy - or, in the EU's case, appointment. Like Wikipedia, it's not what's best that remains, nor even what people want - it's whatever is proposed by those with the most resources to push it through.

    1. Re:if only the parliament had a binding say by cpu6502 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Like how Congress removed SOPA from the table due to opposition, but then immediately proposed a new bill with a new name, but same effects.

      And ACTA is still floating around. It's already signed by our lovely president Obama. All it needs now is ratification or rejection by the Senators, but the White House has tabled it. Maybe they plan to enforce it through executive order, instead of through legal means.

      --
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  2. Re:Encouraging by ThatsNotPudding · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The Content Lords' new business plan is to become one with major ISPs, so the content creators are also the content providers. A key to this is the effective destruction of the FCC by their 'kept women', the GOP. Then, with universal data caps (with exemptions for in-network services such as Comcast's TV on XBox play), the Open Internet will be murdered and replaced with glorified cable TV networks.

  3. Re:paying more attention by TaoPhoenix · · Score: 4, Interesting

    You tell me. As an honest quiz question, do you know the fate of PC-FIPA HR1981?

    Remember the run up to busting SOPA? PC-FIPA is *worse* yet I have barely seen any articles on it.

    And we also almost missed the boat on ACTA too. I think we finally woke up barely in time to stop that one too, but it got a lot farther.

    --
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