There
are twelve countries that have been involved in the ultra-secretive process of
negotiating the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP).
Six
hundred corporate advisors have been given access to the text of this so-called
free trade agreement while the public has been deprived of reading what is
being negotiated on behalf of corporations. But that secrecy has been
undermined significantly now that the media organization, WikiLeaks, has
obtained and published a drafted copy of the intellectual property chapter in
the agreement.
It
was obtained after a TPP meeting in Brunei in August, and it shows country’s
positions on the proposed provisions of the agreement.
According
to the draft, the United States has been the most extreme negotiator in the
process. The other eleven countries involved— Australia, Brunei, Canada, Japan,
Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore and Vietnam—have each pushed
back on some of the most aggressive proposals for enforcement of intellectual
property rights laws. However, Australia and New Zealand have often been more
than willing to support the draconian measures proposed by the US.
The
US has proposed “that its judicial authorities have the authority to order the
seizure or forfeiture of assets the value of which corresponds to that of the
assets derived from, or obtained directly or indirectly through, the infringing
activity.” New Zealand is the only other country that supports this section.
The
US has also proposed that each country apply “criminal procedures and
penalties,” even “absent willful trademark counterfeiting or copyright or
related rights privacy, at least in cases of knowing trafficking in” the
following:
labels
or packaging, of any type or nature, to which a counterfeit trademark 238 has
been applied, the use of which is likely to cause confusion, to cause mistake,
or to deceive; and counterfeit or illicit labels239 affixed to, enclosing, or
accompanying, or designed to be affixed to, enclose, or accompany the
following:
a phonogram,
a copy of a computer program or a literary work,
a copy of a motion picture or other audiovisual work,
documentation or packaging for such items; and
counterfeit documentation or packaging for items of the type described in subparagraph (b).]
a phonogram,
a copy of a computer program or a literary work,
a copy of a motion picture or other audiovisual work,
documentation or packaging for such items; and
counterfeit documentation or packaging for items of the type described in subparagraph (b).]
This
is only supported by the US.
“In
civil judicial proceedings concerning patent infringement,” the US would like
countries to be able to have their “judicial authorities” increase any “damages
to an amount that is up to three times the amount of the injury found or
assessed.” All countries involved in the negotiate process oppose this section.
Brunei,
Canada, Chile, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, and Singapore each would like to
be able to “limit the liability of, or the availability of remedies against,
internet service providers” for copyright infringement that takes place on
their communication networks. Both the US and Australia are opposed to this
provision.
All
countries except the US, Australia and Singapore oppose an entire section
proposing a procedure for notifying internet service providers of copyright
infringement.
The
US and Australia want all countries negotiating to “ratify or accede” to the
following agreements once the TPP is in force:
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