
QUT Professor Endorses UK Push To Create Smokefree Generations
QUT Media4th November 2025 The United Kingdom Parliament is considering a bill aimed at making smoking obsolete, which has been
As negotiators at WIPO prepare for a June 17-22 diplomatic conference in Marrakesh to create a new international instrument/treaty for the benefit of the visually impaired. The treaty is intended, by its proponents, to make copyright works more accessible to the visually impaired. It is currently estimated that only 5% of works are available in a accessible format. Stevie Wonder and other key activists have been proponents of the treaty.
Negotiations have, according to reports, hit stumbling blocks that could foil the agreement. WIPO held an “Informal and Special Session” to discuss the instrument in April that concluded by posting a draft text (of April 20) of the instrument/treaty, available here. Media conglomerates, copyright lobby groups, the Obama administration, and the European Commission have sought to weaken or derail the treaty. The draft text has been filled with brackets and alternatives that will make a final agreed text more difficult to come to. It is now feared that the conference will end in a deadlock, or in a treaty that contains so much red tape it will be utterly useless. I have observed in my book that this has been the result of many efforts to create copyright exceptions, including the provisions of the 1971 Berne Convention, which was intended, but failed utterly, to create copyright exceptions for developing countries.
Knowledge Ecology International held a discussion on the instrument/treaty. Video clips are available here.

QUT Media4th November 2025 The United Kingdom Parliament is considering a bill aimed at making smoking obsolete, which has been
Speaking at the Global Expert Network on Copyright User Rights Symposium on 16 June 2025, Professor Christophe Geiger argues for
On 25 September 2025, Professor Wend Wendland, delivered the 14th Peter Jaszi Distinguished Lecture at American University in Washington D.C..
On September 18, 2025, the Italian Senate definitively approved the country’s first comprehensive framework law on artificial intelligence (AI). The
Por Andrés Izquierdo Durante la segunda semana de agosto, fui invitado a hablar en la Feria Internacional del Libro de
By Andrés Izquierdo AI, Copyright, and the Future of Creativity: Notes from the Panama International Book FairDuring the second week
