The upcoming G8 summit has many important issues to discuss - climate change, world poverty, and file-sharing. That’s about it. Everything else is fixed.
On topic for the G8 is the secret (yes, secret) Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) that only became public knowledge after details were posted on WikiLeaks. The ACTA is a new treaty being written completely in secret for the purpose of restricting international piracy, allegedly allowing border security to check your iPod for illegal downloads, bring criminal charges against file-sharers, and require ISPs to police their networks. While the public and consumer groups have not been privy to the treaty negotiations, a RIAA got a chance to submit its wishlist.
Aside from the improprieties of privately writing legislation, why is the G8 taking the time to prop up one industry’s unwillingness to adapt to the internet. As I’ve written before, the entertainment industry does not have a right to revenue. It’s their job to find business models that work, not the government’s.
The entertainment industry has pushed many copyright requirements into trade agreements with other countries (often falsely referred to as free trade). The argument is these laws are needed to encourage innovation and content creation when in reality, these laws only help current copyright holders, hampering development in other countries who now have to spend money policing their citizens.
While several countries around the world waste time spoon feeding copyright holders, I’d have hoped the G8 wanted to at least pretend it cared about helping solve the world’s important crisis, of which their are many. It’s even listed first on the official website, “protection of intellectual property rights.” Piracy is not a world issue, even if the revenue losses the entertainment industry makes up were true. That’s because it’s not the government’s job make you money - that’s your job through innovation and competition. The G8 should try dealing with the food crisis, climate control, oil prices, genocide, poverty, human rights, and terrorism to name a few. Of course, the U.S. attorney general says piracy funds terrorism. Yeah, that’s convincing.
[Via CustomPC]












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