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Thread: Corporations, P2P, and Governments together

  1. #1

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    Corporations, P2P, and Governments together

    The below article, in a serious UK paper, indicates why we should all, globally, be worried about growing corporate control. This is a lot deeper than simple P2P, possibly threatening democracy itself and our rights to listen, view and even read what we want (how many of you have downloaded books?), without government interference. Don't forget if these proposals become law it is governments that allow it, so it's not just the corporations that are the threat.

    Perhaps we need to know just who these people are. You never know, one might live near you!

    At 16/06/2004 13:17:53 the text below was copied from the web document
    The Observer | Business | A law unto themselves
    http://observer.guardian.co.uk/busin...237374,00.html


    The Networker


    A law unto themselves

    John Naughton
    Sunday June 13, 2004
    The Observer

    'All that is required for evil to triumph,' wrote Edmund Burke, 'is for good men to do nothing'. His words came to mind last week as I read the daily reports from Geneva about the meeting of the standing committee on copyright and related rights of the (Wipo). The meeting was assembled to discuss a draft treaty to 'protect' broadcasters and broadcasting signals.
    For 'protect' read 'unprecedented, restrictive and anti-social powers'. If enacted, this treaty would require countries to change their laws to grant broadcasters astonishing freedoms. These include: 'the exclusive right to authorise or prohibit the fixation [copying/recording] of their broadcasts'; 'the exclusive right to authorise or prohibit the direct or indirect reproduction, in any manner or form, of fixations of their broadcasts'; 'the exclusive right to authorise or prohibit the retransmission, by wire or wireless means, whether simultaneous or based on fixations, of their broadcasts'; and other rights, including control of exhibition and distribution of recordings of broadcasts.
    In addition, signatories would be required 'to provide adequate legal protection and effective legal remedies against the circumvention of effective technological measures' that are used by broadcasting organisations to secure their new rights. Most scandalous of all, the draft proposes that these new rights should apply for 50 years.
    This treaty would undermine many of the public's rights under the copyright laws of most countries. It would, for example, eliminate my right to record off-air without the permission of a broad caster, or to copy a recording from one medium to another (eg from tape to DVD).
    When I first saw the draft (it was published in April), I assumed it must have been written by executives at Fox, NBC and other US TV networks while high on cocaine, because it read like a wish-list of everything a failing industry could want to protect it from the future.
    It is a control-freak's charter. This is predictable, because an obsession with control has worked its way into the industry's DNA. Broadcasting is a few-to-many medium: a small number of content-providers decide what is to be offered, produce the content, and push it to passive consumers. Central to the broadcasting ethos is a desire to control the viewer, to restrict choice to the menus chosen by the industry - like Skinnerian pigeons pecking at coloured levers to obtain food.
    The problem is that emerging digital technologies undermine control-freakery. Digital TV recorders let viewers create their own schedules - and automatically skip ads. DVD recorders let viewers make perfect copies of broadcast movies in an easily accessible form. And so on. Digital technology empowers consumers, making them less passive. It makes even couch potatoes sit up. And that is bad news for TV.
    Experience over the last decade has shown us how established industries react when they are threatened by new technology. First they go into denial. Then they resort to legal countermeasures - which invariably fail. Finally they nobble legislators, seeking to persuade them to enact laws that will protect the old business models.
    Which is where the draft broadcast treaty comes in. The great thing about Wipo, from the point of corporate lobbyists and their allies in certain national governments, is that it offers more bangs per buck. Instead of having to petition 50 or 100 national legislatures, you persuade Wipo to propose a draft treaty, which is submitted to a diplomatic conference and ratified. Then all the signato ries are obliged to do what you want. This is how the Digital Millennium Copyright Act was globalised - a Wipo agreement signed back in 1996 became the basis for national laws everywhere embodying the same anti-circumvention clause.
    This is clearly the strategy the broadcasting industry is now embarked on. The discussions in Geneva sparked a number of reflections. The first is how compromised Wipo officialdom seems to be: a decision to proceed to a diplomatic conference is supposed to be made only if there is substantial agreement at the standing committee.
    There was no such consensus last week in Geneva, but Wipo is nevertheless proceeding as if there were. Why? Because negotiations in a diplomatic conference will be conducted behind closed doors - away from the NGOs and the public-domain campaigners who raise awkward questions.
    A second observation is how ignorant many national delegates are about these matters. A third is how refreshingly informed, insightful and forthright the Indian delegation was. Reading the reports, one sometimes had the feeling only the Indians understood what is at stake.
    Finally, one began to wonder where our own beloved national broadcaster stands on these issues. The select committee on culture, media and sport is currently inquiring into the renewal of the BBC charter. The committee should ask if the BBC is pushing this pestilential draft treaty. And if so, why?
    [email protected]


    www.briefhistory.com/footnotes/


    Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2004

  2. #2
    method's Avatar

    yeah, whatever...

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    "possibly threatening democracy itself"... well, let's be real about this... Democracy is the preferred disguise of plutocracy. - The US and UK are both controlled by a plutocratic upper class.

    Let's not fool ourselves into thinking we really live in a democracy... that's just what they want us to think.

    If we really lived in a democracy and the majority got what they wanted.... Enron execs would be swinging with ropes round their necks right now... but we live with pro-corporate politics that let criminals who steal unimaginable amounts of money get away with barely a slapped wrist whilst a homeless person get's locked up immediately for stealing a loaf of bread!! - Political favours for fulfilling "agenda" are rife... we live with plutocracy.

    How many of your governments decisions can you honestly say you had involvement with??? - How many referrendums on critical issues were you involved in??? - EXACTLY.. 1% if you are lucky enough to have a government that gives a damn.
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  3. #3

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    Almost agree Method.
    I would suggest there have been serious efforts towards democratization in the recent past. However, what we have now is dictatorship by capital. When an election comes along we simply choose who is going to supply our capitalism, a bit like which brand of bread. Alternatives, of all types, are not allowed to get past the first hurdle.
    The problem is that this situation creates its own autocracy and the little democracy that exists is likely to implode and become its exact opposite. The article just indicates one small aspect of this trend, which is why I say it's far more than simply P2P. Arguably, P2P becomes an excuse to intervene, much the same way as Iraq was, though obviously in a different way, mainly to divert attention from other agendas.
    The problem wih the RIAA, and the rest of the pack, is a little along the lines of what must have been about 100 or so years ago.
    Imagine what it must have been like being the worlds leading gas mantle supplier when the electric light was invented?

  4. #4
    Afn's Avatar

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    Quote Originally Posted by Old Git
    The below article, in a serious UK paper, indicates why we should all, globally, be worried about growing corporate control. This is a lot deeper than simple P2P, possibly threatening democracy itself and our rights to listen, view and even read what we want (how many of you have downloaded books?), without government interference.
    Corporations are people working under a charter for specific goals. It has been suggested that we are in another corrupt cycle of American government. You could reason that government has always had excesses and corruption, but with communications and the ablity to network, we have never seen such open collusion, global meetings, NGO's mandating policy that they create to become law, ect...

    Corporations rule the world. That is fact. We still have the power to make government in democratic republics around the world work. People make government. The easy access to the wealthy and connected was accepted as a benefit to the system to grease the wheels of industry by avoiding stagnating economic cycles is an obsolete and dangerous idea. We need global reform and fast.

    We need to create a socity that works for everyone, on a global scale. Information warriors that use P2P and the new communication tools are leading the charge to a more democratic world order. What we need is control of the process.

    Communication, organization and techological advancement has the power to distroy the few that control the billions in the global world economy.
    Is it not a feat sublime? Intellect hath conquered time.

  5. #5
    Afn's Avatar

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    Quote Originally Posted by Old Git
    Imagine what it must have been like being the worlds leading gas mantle supplier when the electric light was invented?
    A better analogy would be all of the painters restrict the production of photography because, it reduced the value of painted works, made paintings obsolete as a medium for documenting people, places, battles. Reduced that amount of income an individual artist or painter could earn. Why buy a painting of the famous france tower, when you can have a single negative make millions of copies.
    Is it not a feat sublime? Intellect hath conquered time.

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