EU's Secret Plan to Imprison Filesharers, Ban Free Speech About Piracy Leaks

From DailyTech: A UK Intellectual Property Office representative made an important revelation to online publication ComputerActive, commenting, "ACTA should not introduce new intellectual property laws or offences. Instead, it should provide a framework to better enforce existing law."

That stance is very significant as the EU and U.S. governments, at the behest of copyright holders in the music and video industry, are pushing a treaty called ACTA which allows its member states to adopt not only fines, but prison time for those who fileshare.

Details of the plan to criminalize filesharing just leaked thanks to a citizen advocacy group La Quadrature du Net. The document, found here [PDF], is entitled "ACTA Chapter 2 Criminal Provisions".

The new proposal would criminalize "infringements that have no direct or indirect motivation of financial gain" -- which currently would be considered a petty civil offense in most countries. The language about criminalization states "each party shall provide for effective proportionate and dissuasive penalties" to include "imprisonment and monetary fines".

Britain's decision to back down from supporting the most-extreme U.S. and EU proposed copyright enforcement measures is a blow to these governments and the corporate lobbyists that support them. Under the Obama and George W. Bush administrations, the U.S. secretly brokered the ACTA treaty without informing the general public. The EU similarly cooperated in secret negotiations.

Only recently were the some of the terms revealed, in preparation for the measure to go before the U.S. House and Senate and EU Parliament to become law. And as this most recent leak, shows, there may be more than a few surprises in store, in the form of still undisclosed proposals.

Britain has also indicated that it would also likely decline to enforce the provision against language "inciting and aiding" piracy. That provision could impose criminal or civil fines for those who write supportively about piracy, essentially silencing their free speech. The U.S. is allegedly one of the nations considering the measure.

View: Article @ Source Site