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Copyrighting the air: WIPO roundup.


IN NOVEMBER the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO WIPO World Intellectual Property Organization
WIPO World Intellectual Piracy Organization (satire website)
WIPO Write in Poll Option
WIPO Wing Information Protection Office (USAF) 
) met in Geneva Geneva, canton and city, Switzerland
Geneva (jənē`və), Fr. Genève, canton (1990 pop. 373,019), 109 sq mi (282 sq km), SW Switzerland, surrounding the southwest tip of the Lake of Geneva.
 to negotiate a new broadcasting treaty. The old agreement, known as the Rome Convention, had been around since 1961; there had been a lot of technological changes in the ensuing four decades, so there was plenty to incorporate into the new accords. Most participating countries wanted the document to address the issue of "signal piracy"--the illicit interception of coded transmissions, a practice that often crosses borders. But Europe and America had a larger agenda.

Under their pressure, WIPO proposed a treaty that would award broadcasters a copyright in the signals they transmit, even when the transmission's contents are in the public domain.

In fact, the new rules would give the broadcasters more rights over the content than its creators have. They would also require countries to pass laws Pass laws in South Africa were designed to segregate the population and were one of the dominant features of the country's apartheid system. Introduced in South Africa in 1923, they were designed to regulate movement of black Africans into urban areas.  similar to America's Digital Millennium Copyright Act The Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) is a United States copyright law which implements two 1996 WIPO treaties. It criminalizes production and dissemination of technology, devices, or services that are used to measures that control access to copyrighted works (commonly , which bans "circumvention" of technological barriers to copying. One portion of the proposal, called Alternative V, would extend such anti-circumvention restrictions to encrypted broadcast signals, effectively outlawing decryption (cryptography) decryption - Any procedure used in cryptography to convert ciphertext (encrypted data) into plaintext.  of all kinds.

Several countries objected to these measures, with Brazil and India leading a movement to restrict the treaty to signal piracy. Their one significant victory was to defeat an American proposal that would extend the agreement to cover webcasting. The rest will survive until the next round of negotiations in mid-2005.

Opponents of the accords have alleged a number of petty dirty tricks dirty tricks
pl.n. Informal
1. Covert intelligence operations designed to disrupt the economy or upset the political situation in another country.

2.
. Blogging from the negotiations at the Electronic Frontier Foundation's site, author Cory Doctorow noted that handouts critical of the proposals "were repeatedly stolen and pitched into the trashcans in the bathrooms." Needless to say, the treaty contains no penalties for this sort of piracy.
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Title Annotation:Citings; World Intellectual Property Organization
Author:Walker, Jesse
Publication:Reason
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Mar 1, 2005
Words:284
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