Day December 6, 2018

Secondary Liability and Safe Harbors for Internet Service Providers

This is the second in a series of blogs comparing copyright and technology provisions in eight trade agreements: TPP, CPTPP, USMCA, CETA, RCEP, EU-Mercosur FTA, EU-Japan FTA and the China-Korea FTA. The previous post discussed provisions calling for copyright ‘balance’ and addressing the circumvention of technological protection measures. This one looks at the provisions requiring secondary liability for internet service providers (ISPs) and allowing-or-requiring safe harbors from such liability.

NEW ANALYSIS: NAFTA 2.0 (U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement) Pharmaceutical Related Patent Provisions

The revised North American Free trade Agreement (NAFTA 2.0), rebranded by the Trump Administration as the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement or USMCA, was signed last Friday during the G20 summit in Argentina. NAFTA 2.0 is an updated version of the nearly 25-year-old NAFTA, with significant and harmful changes to the intellectual property (IP) provisions, which build on the harmful TRIPS-plus standards in other U.S. free trade agreements since NAFTA 1.0.

Drama in South Africa Leads to Passing Fair Use

It was a day of copyright drama in the South African Parliament on the anniversary of Nelson Mandela’s passing. The National Assembly was considering the Copyright Amendment Bill in the full chamber.  ...When the votes were taken, parties representing an overwhelming majority of the MPs had endorsed the bill, but it came up 12 votes short of what was needed to pass it on to the Council of the Provinces (the second house). The battle for copyright reform in South Africa appeared lost until the new year. But hours later the drama continued. After passing a new performers protection bill, more MPs from the ANC were whipped to join the chamber and the Copyright Amendment Bill was passed on a second vote.