[WSIS CS-Plenary] IP-Watch: Intellectual Property Issues Kept Off WSIS Agenda
Robin Gross
robin at ipjustice.org
Thu Dec 1 02:14:04 GMT 2005
http://www.ip-watch.org/weblog/index.php?p=158
30/11/2005
Intellectual Property Issues Kept Off WSIS Agenda
By Monika Ermert for Intellectual Property Watch
The issue of intellectual property did not make the headlines during the
concluding session of the five-year-long UN World Summit on the
Information Society (WSIS) in Tunis. And some critics are concerned it
was intentional.
Discussing the future of the information society without talking about
intellectual property seems odd and suggests an intentional omission,
said Robin Gross, executive director of IP Justice. "We got," said
Gross, "three minutes at the Tunis plenary, and that’s it on the topic
of intellectual property."
Symptomatic of this, according to Gross, was what happened to cyberlaw
expert and Creative Commons founder Lawrence Lessig. The Stanford
University professor was told immediately before his talk at a
"Roundtable of Visionaries" organized by the ITU during WSIS
preparations in Geneva in 2002 to not talk about intellectual property
issues, but instead focus on Internet governance.
Lessig revealed this to reporters immediately before the Tunis summit
underlining his scepticism about the possible outcomes of the summit
with regard to the IP rights issue, which he deemed important. Lessig
had said that the issue would be negotiated off the table by those who
want to keep control over IP policy.
The Internet governance debate was the focus of discussions in Tunis,
with the creation of a global Internet governance forum and a compromise
in the end of some enhancements in the net governance organisations to
promote greater governmental participation.
All sides in the Internet governance debate have claimed victory and
will likely continue struggling over the issues, but intellectual
property will not be a topic of the new governance forum. In Tunis,
there was a consensus that work elsewhere should not be touched by the
WSIS process. A mantra was that IP issues had to be dealt with by WIPO.
While the final Tunis documents make ample references to access, they
mainly refer to it in the context of access to infrastructure. Four
points talk cautiously about the "numerous challenges" for "expanding
the scope of useful accessible information content" (paragraph 15);
about "improving access to the world’s health knowledge and telemedicine
services" (paragraph 90.g) and to "agricultural knowledge"(90.i); and,
finally, about "supporting educational, scientific, and cultural
institutions, including libraries, archives and museums, in their role
of developing, providing equitable, open and affordable access to, and
preserving diverse and varied content, including in digital form, to
support informal and formal education, research and innovation (90.k).
Growing Imbalance Toward Rights Holders Cited
But concerns like the one presented by Alex Burne, president of the
International Federation of Libraries Association (IFLA), that
librarians all over the world see a "growing imbalance of IP laws in
favour of rights holders and to the detriment of the users" and about a
"shrinking of the public domain," that in some respects increasingly was
also barring access in developed countries, were a side issue in the
plenary talks.
Burne, like the representatives of the free software community, spoke in
side events organised by NGOs, namely a panel organized by IP Justice on
the World Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO) and a panel
organised by the Free Software Foundation on free and open source software.
IFLA, the Free Software Foundation Europe (FSFE), IP Justice and the
Consumer Project on Technology all support a proposal for a treaty on
access to knowledge proposed by the 14 "Friends of Development"
countries as part of the development agenda under discussion at WIPO.
"We shared," Burne told the participants of the WIPO panel in Tunis with
regard to the development agenda, “the frustration that after nine days
of negotiation [in 2005] there was no result on either substance or
procedure.” But copyright exemptions are crucial to assist developing
and least developed countries to catch up with developing countries,
said Burne, which in turn was one of the declared targets of the WSIS.
WIPO Vice Director General Philippe Petit said during IP Justice’s WIPO
panel that the development agenda was one of the major work items for
WIPO for 2006, but he did not touch on it during his official plenary
speech. WIPO was already implementing the Geneva action plan by
fostering IP protection in developing countries and the summit was
encouraging WIPO to go further in this direction, he said. But
intellectual property was not mentioned again in the Tunis documents and
WIPO is not named in the list of UN organisations that shall address
implementation.
Free and Open Source Software Systematically Sidelined?
"Some countries and some big companies from phase one of the summit
tried to systematically turn down any discussion on intellectual
property and free and open source software," said Georg Greve, president
of the Free Software Foundation. "They always acted as if the
monopolizing of knowledge had nothing to do with its distribution."
The only draft expert paper of the Working Group of Internet Governance
that touched intellectual property, written by Italian software
developer Vittorio Bertola in his capacity as a member of the group, was
turned down as too controversial, according to several observers.
"During the whole summit process, and not only in the Geneva phase, the
question to whom knowledge belongs in the knowledge society has been
constantly neglected," said Markus Beckedahl, founder of Netzwerk Neue
Medien and founder and CEO of newthinking communications, an agency
focused on free and open source software. Beckedahl also was an awardee
of the Reporters without Borders Freedom Blog Awards for his blog
netzpolitik.org. "If you consider the main target of the summit to
create an inclusive information society with access for all, the summit
has failed," he said.
Greve spoke of mixed feelings: "If we imagine what could have been
gained with the summit, it was a disappointment." During the first phase
in Geneva, open source software was recognized, though it was not
declared preferential from a development point of view as proposed by
governments like Brazil, India and the Holy See. Greve and the open
source software advocates during the second phase saw much more
involvement of companies like Microsoft.
Microsoft brought over 70 people to Tunis compared to a small group of
half a dozen in Geneva during the first summit and as one of the
official sponsors got its own speaking slot in which Microsoft
International President Jean-Philippe Courtois asked for "strict
protection of intellectual property."
Microsoft also caused a stir by getting changed a document presented at
the Tunis summit by the Austrian Organizers of a World Creativity Summit
in Vienna, one of the many side events in the run-up to Tunis. Panel
members including FSFE, representatives of Austrian musicians, WIPO and
others had compromised on the final report - "not an easy compromise,"
said Greve. But Microsoft, despite not being a panel member, requested
and was granted changes then presented in Tunis as a final document
without further consultation of the panelists.
The passage in question originally read: "Increasingly, revenue is
generated not by selling content and digital works, as they can be
freely distributed at almost no cost, but by offering services on top of
them. The success of the free software model is one example, licences
like ‘Creative Commons’ that only reserve some rights and permit wide
use and distribution is another. Distributed collaborative production
models like Wikipedia also show that there are other incentives than
money to create quality content."
The published text now looks like this: “Increasingly, revenue is
generated by offering services on top of contents. Licences such as
‘Creative Commons’ reserve some rights and permit widespread use and
distribution. Distributed collaborative production models like
“Wikipedia” show that there are other incentives than money to create
quality content. To ensure ongoing innovation, digital rights management
(DRM) development and deployment must remain voluntary and market-driven.”
When Austrian media professor Peter Bruck pointed to a blog where the
“revised” document had been posted for comment, Greve reacted by
pointing out that with only four or five entries over two month time,
the blog did not appear to be very public. Still, the NGOs might be
satisfied with one point: after all there was someone paying close
attention to the IP issue.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License. All of the news
articles and features on Intellectual Property Watch are also subject to
a Creative Commons License which makes them available for widescale,
free, non-commercial reproduction and translation.
Monika Ermert, the author of this post, may be reached at info at ip-watch.ch.
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