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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe White House Responds to petition to back out of ACTA.
"The Role of the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA)
By Ambassador Miriam Sapiro, Deputy U.S. Trade Representative
Thank you for you for taking the time to participate in We the People, and for sharing your opinion about the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) and the importance of privacy on the Internet.
The Administration has recognized previously the importance of protecting an open and innovative Internet in the context of our response to other petitions regarding the proposed Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) and the Protect IP Act (PIPA). Since ACTA is quite different than SOPA and PIPA, we've decided to provide an ACTA-specific response.
ACTA is an international trade agreement that establishes high standards for intellectual property enforcement. The Agreement provides for: (1) enhanced international cooperation; (2) the promotion of sound enforcement practices; and (3) a legal framework for better enforcement.
As you may know, the proliferation of counterfeit and pirated goods poses considerable challenges for legitimate trade and economic development. Protecting intellectual property rights helps to further public policies that are designed to protect the public. ACTA will help authorities, for example, protect against the threat posed by potentially unsafe counterfeit goods that can pose a significant risk to public health, such as toothpaste with dangerous amounts of diethylene glycol (a chemical used in brake fluid), auto parts of unknown quality or suspect semiconductors used in life-saving defibrillators.
ACTA specifically recognizes the importance of free expression, due process, and privacy. It is the first -- and only -- international intellectual property rights agreement to provide explicitly that enforcement of intellectual property rights in the context of the Internet "shall be implemented in a manner that
preserves fundamental principles such as freedom of expression, fair process, and privacy." No provision in ACTA requires parties to disclose information "contrary to
laws protecting privacy rights." This includes the protections already in place in U.S. law.
In addition to the United States, approximately thirty countries have signed the Agreement, including Australia, Canada, Korea, Japan, New Zealand, Morocco, Singapore, and a majority of European Union member states, as well as the EU itself.
We believe that ACTA will help protect the intellectual property that is essential to American jobs in innovative and creative industries. At the same time, ACTA recognizes the importance of online privacy, freedom of expression and due process, and calls on signatories to protect these values in the course of complying with the Agreement.
Thank you again for taking the time to write and share your views."
Total BS if you ask me. They know full well it attacks the structure of the internet. Good thing it's going down in flames in Europe.
Egalitarian Thug
(12,448 posts)I especially like the whole "this corporate power grab is different than the other corporate power grabs" part. I know they believe that we're really that stupid, but do you suppose it's true?
ZM90
(706 posts)The internet has become the most powerful communication and political force the world has ever known. The corporate powers cannot defeat the internet though as it has it's own immune system. Whatever they do the internet will reroute around it or stop it from occuring in the first place (examples: SOPA,PIPA, ACTA.).