As reported earlier, WIPO is currently considering a broadcasting and webcasting treaty that would give rights to those disseminating intellectual property for 50 years.
Note: This is an article I wrote that was published elsewhere first. It has been republished here for archival purposes
The treaty has caused a lot of discontent and a number of US based companies and organizations are stepping forward to express their opposition.
The EFF posted an unofficial transcript of a couple of meetings that discussed, among other things, the webcasting treaty.
When the webcasting treaty was first proposed, it was almost unanimously rejected and was effectively tossed out. This didn’t kill the webcasting treaty as it came back in to other provisions set forth by WIPO. This caused a stir and discontent as one can see in the meeting’s unofficial transcript. The unofficial transcript eventually shows that the matter of webcasting was seemingly deferred to a later time.
Now that news travelled around on what WIPO was up to, a number of US based companies have passed along a letter opposing the broadcasting treaty: “If the treaty moves forward in any form, we believe that the current rights-based approach of the treaty must be abandoned. Creating broad new intellectual property rights in order to protect broadcast signals is misguided and unnecessary, and risks serious unintended negative consequences.”
What may be of interest to many is the complete list of those signing this letter. The list of companies and organizations signing this letter are the following:
American Association of Law Libraries
Association of Research Libraries
Broadband Service Providers Association
Center for Democracy & Technology
Computer and Communications Industry Association
Consumer Electronics Association
Consumer Project on Technology
CTIA – The Wireless Association
Electronic Frontier Foundation
Home Recording Rights Coalition
International Music Managers Forum
National Association of State PIRGs
Panasonic Corporation of North America
Sony Electronics Incorporated
U.S. Internet Industry Association
U.S. Music Managers Forum
U.S. Public Interest Research Group
Yale Information Society Project
Considering the broadcast treaty was even rejected by the US representative, the issues surrounding this treaty seem to go deeper than a judicial showdown.
Drew Wilson on Twitter: @icecube85 and Google+.