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Please find below a sign-on letter for intellectual property academics and experts to Colombian legislative leaders regarding the recently released bill to amend Colombia’s law to implement the US-Colombia FTA.
The core message of this letter is to alert officials and civil society that “upon review of Bill No. 201 of 2012 we find that many of the changes that upgrade protection for copyright go beyond what the FTA requires and are, in fact, more restrictive than U.S. law itself.”
Colombian civil society report that the bill is being fast tracked — it was passed out of committee a day after it was publicly released last week and is slated for full debate in the parliament on Tuesday April 14.
A link to the full letter and the bill it reviews and other referenced legal documents (e.g. English versions of Columbian law) is provided below.
Since the legislature is moving very rapidly on this, we hope to solicit endorsements in a short time period. Please sign on by emailing your name and contact information to pijip@wcl.american.edu by C.O.B. Thursday April 5.
Original Legal Sources:
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Honorable Presidents of the Senate and House of Representatives:
We write as a group of international intellectual property academics and experts in response to what we perceive as a hurried process to implement the provisions of the U.S.-Colombia Free Trade Agreement through amendments to Colombian law that may not fully take into account the importance of balance in a healthy copyright system.
It is universally accepted by copyright scholars and experts that intellectual property regimes can only serve a society’s public interest in fostering creation, innovation, and access to cultural production by establishing a careful balance between the interests of rights holders, on the one hand, and those of the civil society at large, on the other. Laws that offer rewards to proprietors through market exclusivity must be carefully qualified with limitations and exceptions that serve the needs and interests of follow-on creators and innovators, market competitors, and the ultimate consumers of market products – including teachers, students and scholars. Empirical research and economic modeling show that this is particularly important in developing countries with high income inequality, where the rational profit-maximizing behavior of many monopolists will be to price exclusive products to reach only the most prosperous sliver of the market.
Upon review of Bill No. 201 of 2012,[1] we find that many of the changes that upgrade protection for copyright go beyond what the FTA requires and are, in fact, more restrictive than U.S. law itself. Moreover, we note that Colombia’s legislators do not appear to be using this opportunity to recalibrate the balance between rights holders and other citizens by introducing flexible limitations and exceptions into national law, along with stronger safeguards for ownership.
Implementing unbalanced legal reform may reduce public access to important information and, by stifling legitimate innovation, put Colombia and its people at a cultural and competitive disadvantage. We note that Colombian civil society has asked the legislature to slow down this process and use the time gained to consider a fuller and more balanced range of reforms, in consultation with a wide range of interested parties and groups.
We are not experts in Colombian law, nor have we fully reviewed the relevant local and regional regimes; but, it is our conclusion that the Bill provides for significantly less balance than do the laws of many other countries, including the United States, which is also bound by the terms of the FTA. We note, generally, that there exist a number of areas in which the Bill fails to link the enhancement of proprietor rights with a correlative limiting principle, or to make a new right subject to generally applicable limitations and exceptions.
The remainder of this letter is designed to note some specific areas of choice to which a renewed deliberative process might devote attention. In particular, we focus on provisions that implement proprietors’ rights beyond the requirements of the FTA, as well as aspects of the Bill that could be altered to implement the more robust limitations and exceptions as permitted by the FTA. For example:
Choices about issues of this kind should not be taken without careful analysis, wide consultation, and broad consideration of the available options. The balance struck in the existing laws of other countries certainly is not perfect, but it may be instructive. Of course, U.S. law is not necessarily the model that other countries should follow in modernizing copyright laws, but in legislation designed to implement an agreement with the U.S., some of its features may be worthy of consideration. As copyright experts, we also are aware that flexible limitations and exceptions to copyright are an important part of the success story of the U.S. creative sector, copyright industries, and educational system, a fact that U.S. negotiators do not always choose emphasize. We also are aware that U.S. FTAs are notoriously unbalanced documents – they seek to harmonize proprietors’ rights and remedies to U.S. levels but do not seek harmonization with U.S. limitations and exceptions. Instead, these are left as optional choices for national legislation. However, national choices about such restrictions on copyright are neither prohibited, nor closely regulated by FTAs.
Colombia now has an opportunity to secure balance in copyright for years to come. As part of that exercise, it may be appropriate to give some general consideration to the possibility of emulating one aspect of the U.S. law: the flexibility embodied in the doctrine of “fair use.” In the context of unprecedented shifts in the nature of communication and growth in information technologies, a key issue for any copyright reform is how best to implement the flexibility in limitations and exceptions that is needed to respond to change. In the U.S., some limitations and exceptions are expressed in connection with the particular exclusive rights that they modify (as discussed above). Fair use, on the other hand, is a dynamic standard that applies to a wide array of exclusive rights, allowing courts to update the law of limitations and exceptions continuously, by applying general statutory principles. We note that as part of its implementation of the Korea-U.S. FTA, the Republic of Korea recently adopted a fair use-based, open-ended standard for limitations and exceptions in Article 35-3 of its copyright law.
We recognize that the precise contours of fair use itself may or may not be appropriate for Colombia’s legal system. Another way to achieve the goal of flexibility through legislation might be to adopt a principle favoring “transformative use” of copyrighted works; yet another would be through a balancing test that specifically weighs the interest of the proprietor alongside the interest in free expression and technological innovation of users and the greater society.
We do not have sufficient knowledge or experience to know how best to achieve the goal of balance in revising Colombian copyright law. However, there are many possibilities that deserve serious consideration. Our experience leads us to suggest that the issue is one of real and long-lasting importance. We hope you will take the full range of options into account as you create a process of discussion in which all domestic interests are fully engaged.
Respectfully,
[list]
CC:
Sen. Antonio del Cristo Guerra de la Espriella
Sen. Alexander López Maya
Sen. Carlos Ramiro Chávarro Cuéllar
Rep. Albeiro Vanegas Osorio
Rep. Bayardo Gilberto Betancourt Pérez
Rep. Augusto Posada Sánchez
[1] An official Spanish text of Bill 201 of 2012 and an unofficial English version are available at http://tinyurl.com/colomcopyrightbill. We welcome comments on the English language version.
[2] Colombia Free Trade Agreement, U.S.-Colom. art. 16.5(2), Oct. 21, 2011, available at http://www.ustr.gov/trade-agreements/free-trade-agreements/colombia-fta/final-text.
[3] The Cartoon Network v. CSC Holdings, 536 F.3d 121, 127-30 (2d Cir. 2008) (cert. denied June 2009).
[4] Press Release from Computer Commc’n Industry & Association, Internet Indus., Proposals for TPP (Feb. 28, 2012). Available at: http://infojustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/CCIA-positive-proposal.pdf
[5] 17 USC 1201(a)(1); Colombia-U.S. Free Trade Agreement, Art. 16.7(4).
[6] The same presumably would be true of efforts to avoid “region coding” on commercial DVDs under US law.
[7] Colombia-U.S. Free Trade Agreement, Art. 16.11(26)
[8] 18 USC 2319(c)(1)
Mike Palmedo is the admin for infojustice.org, and he manages interdisciplinary research on copyright exceptions at American University College of Law's Program on Information Justice and Intellectual Property. He has Masters degrees Economics and in International Affairs, and is an economics PhD candidate.

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