Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement

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The Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) is a global effort to improve and create international standards for the enforcement of Intellectual Property Rights laws against large scale IP Rights (IPR) infringements. The primary components of ACTA include (1) international cooperation (2) enforcement practices and (3)legal framework to enforce IPR.[1] On October 1, 2011, United States, Australia, Canada, Korea, Japan, New Zealand, Morocco, and Singapore signed ACTA during a ceremony in Tokyo, Japan. On January 26, 2012, the members of the EU signed the agreement despite street protests in France and Poland and international oppositions. [2] [3]

Background

In 2006, Japan and the United States introduced the idea of a new plurilateral treaty to combat counterfeiting and piracy which was called the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) to bring together interested all governments worldwide that are willing to cooperate to improve the international standards to enforce the protection of Intellectual Property Rights. The European Union was mandated to lead the negotiation which started on June 2008.[4] Any member of the World Trade Organization (WTO) supporting ACTA will be able to sign the agreement until May 2013.[5] The ACTA participants conducted series of negotiations discussing the content of the agreement. On April 16, 2010, a unanimous agreement was developed after the 8th round of egotiation which was held in Wellington, New Zealand.[6] The text of the negotiated ACTA was reviewed by legal experts of each negotiating countries on December 2010 which was held in Sysdney Australia.[7] On November 15, 2010, the negotiating parties announced that they were able to finalized the content of ACTA. [8] The final text of the agreement is available here

Structure

ACTA is built under the structure of existing international rules on Intellectual Property particularly the Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) Agreement, a comprehensive multilateral agreement established to protect all forms of intellectual property rights in 1995.[9] [10] The legal framework in enforcing IPR protection under the agreements respects civil liberties and the rights of consumers and it has provisions on border measures, civil and criminal enforcement as well as Intellectual Property Rights Enforcement in the Digital Environment.[11]

Supporters

The supporters of ACTA recognize the importance of an international treaty in protecting intellectual property rights and they will be able to regain their lost revenues if counterfeit and pirated goods will be stopped. Supporters of ACTA are major brand owners, copyright holders, movie studios, pharmaceutical companies which include:[12] [13]

Oppositions

ACTA also receives criticisms and oppositions from different sectors particularly companies within the internet industry, digital rights groups such asElectronic Frontier Foundation, Public Knowledge, the Pirate Party, Reporters Without Borders, Oxfam, Sakharov Laureates, Hactivist Group Anynymous and Members of the European Parliament and EU parliamentary Rapporteur for ACTA, Kader Arif.[14] [15]

EFF Says ACTA is Undemocratic

Critics of ACTA argue that the treaty is undemocratic. According to EFF, ACTA was "negotiated in secret and it bypassed checks and balances of existing international IP norm-setting bodies, without any meaningful input from national parliaments, policymakers, or their citizens." In addition, EFF said that the worst part of the treaty is the creation of an "ACTA Committee" which will serve as a new global institution with a mandate to implement the treaty without legal obligation to be transparent in its proceedings. EFF pointed out that ACT is undemocratic in substance and in process.[16]

Law Professors Say ACTA is Unconstitutional

Thirty Professors including US Constitution Scholars Jack Goldsmith and Lawrence Lessig said that the Obama administration's decision to sign ACTA without submitting the final text of the treaty to the Senate or to the Congress for approval is unconstitutional. According to them, "The president has no independent constitutional authority over intellectual property or communications policy, and there is no long historical practice of making sole executive agreements in this area. According to the professors, Article 1 Section 8 of the Constitution clearly states that the power is given to the congress on matters related to foreign commerce and intellectual property. According to them, the administration needs to comply with the constitution and should make it clear that "the United States does not consider itself to be bound until the agreement is consented to by Congress or domestic legislation implementing the agreement is passed" to avoid binding the U.S. to an international treaty that is domestically unconstitutional. [17] [18]

References