[wilhelmtux-discussion] [Fwd: <nettime> jamie love: USPTO, Microsoft seek to kill WIPO meeting on open collaborative models to develop public goods]

Nicola Fankhauser nicola.fankhauser at variant.ch
Son Aug 24 18:15:41 CEST 2003


hallo liste

ich denke, ihr kennt die geschichte schon - wipo in genf wollte eine
interessante konferenz zu u.A. open source machen, u.s. officials hatten
was dagegen, dass eine organisation, die sich dem schutze des
intellectual property's verschrieben hat, nun plötzlich konferenzen zum
thema open source abhält, also die _aufhebung_ von urheberrecht
propagiert. 

also: kennt jemand eine ch-kontaktperson, die einfluss im bei der WIPO
in genf hat? habe nur die email adresse der webmistress gefunden:
http://www.eda.admin.ch/geneva_miss/e/tool/conta.p.html

ich würde gerne eine kleine bitte bei denen anbringen, damit dieser
sinnbefreiten argumentation etwas entgegnet wird.

dank & gruss
nicola

-----Forwarded Message-----

> From: t byfield <tbyfield at panix.com>
> To: Nettime-l <nettime-l at bbs.thing.net>
> Subject: <nettime> jamie love: USPTO, Microsoft seek to kill WIPO meeting on open collaborative models to develop public goods
> Date: 20 Aug 2003 13:36:08 -0400
> 
> ----- Forwarded 
> 
> From: James Love <james.love at cptech.org>
> Subject: USPTO, Microsoft seek to kill WIPO meeting on open collaborative
>       models to develop public goods
> Date: Wed, 20 Aug 2003 13:27:50 -0400
> 
> August 19, 2003. Technology Daily PM Edition
> 
> --
> Intellectual Property
> Global Group's Shift On 'Open Source' Meeting Spurs Stir
> by William New
> 
> A request for a meeting on open development issues has plunged the 
> Geneva-based World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) into a 
> Washington political battle, causing it to shift its position on the issue.
> 
> At issue is whether WIPO should hold a meeting next year on "open and 
> collaborative projects" such as "open source" software, which allows 
> users to view and modify underlying code.
> 
> The meeting was proposed in a July 7 letter sent to WIPO Director 
> General Kamil Idris by 68 distinguished scientists, academics, 
> technologists, open-source advocates, consumer advocates, librarians, 
> industry representatives and economists worldwide.
> 
> Although the letter cited a broad range of open collaborative projects 
> such as the World Wide Web and the Human Genome Project, the fight has 
> focused on open-source software and on one signer of the letter -- James 
> Love, director of the Consumer Project on Technology, who has actively 
> pushed for the meeting.
> 
> WIPO's initial response to the idea was so favorable that proponents 
> began planning for a meeting. After receiving the letter, Francis Gurry, 
> WIPO's assistant director and legal counsel, e-mailed a statement to a 
> Nature magazine reporter calling such open development models "a very 
> important and interesting development."
> 
> "The director general of WIPO looks forward with enthusiasm to taking up 
> the invitation to organize a conference to explore the scope and 
> application of these models as vehicles for encouraging innovation," he 
> wrote.
> 
> But a few weeks later, WIPO backed off the idea. Gurry said he and other 
> WIPO officials received "many calls" from consumer groups, trade 
> associations, professional associations and representatives from 
> governments.
> 
> "What happened in the intervening weeks is that a request for an open 
> discussion on a range of 'projects' became transformed into an 
> increasingly domestically, as opposed to internationally, oriented, 
> polarized political and trade debate about one only of those 'projects', 
> namely open-source software," Gurry told National Journal's Technology 
> Daily on Tuesday. "In those circumstances, the possibility of conducting 
> a policy discussion on intellectual property of the sort that might be 
> appropriate for an international organization devoted to intellectual 
> property became increasingly remote."
> 
> U.S. government officials have argued that WIPO is an inappropriate 
> place for such a meeting.
> 
> One developing country representative to WIPO on Monday expressed 
> disappointment at hearing that the meeting is in doubt, and Love and 
> representatives from the Computer and Communications Industry 
> Association (CCIA) were furious to learn of the shift. Love last week 
> called the decision a "temporary setback," and vowed, "We're going to 
> make this happen." But for meeting opponents, he said, it would be "as 
> if you made an atheist pope for the day."
> 
> CCIA President Ed Black said on Tuesday: "Does this indicate that WIPO 
> is abdicating authority and responsibility for these issues, including 
> open source for the future? If so, we will all live by that, but then so 
> must they. They should step up the plate or step aside. ... It is 
> inexplicable that they would shut the door on what are clearly important 
> issues."
> 
> 
> Intellectual Property
> U.S. Official Opposes 'Open Source' Talks At WIPO
> by William New
> 
> An international intellectual property body is not the place for 
> discussions about "open source" software, which allows users to view and 
> modify the underlying code, because it falls outside of the 
> organization's mission, a senior U.S. official argued on Monday.
> Reviewing the original mission of the World Intellectual Property 
> Organization (WIPO), said Lois Boland, the U.S. Patent and Trademark 
> Office (PTO) acting director of international relations, it is "clearly 
> limited to the protection of intellectual property. To have a meeting 
> whose primary objective is to waive or remove those protections seems to 
> go against the mission."
> 
> Boland was referring to a July request by a group of scientists, 
> academics, open-source advocates and others for a meeting at WIPO on 
> "open and collaborative projects," including open-source software. The 
> WIPO secretariat initially replied favorably to the idea.
> In a telephone interview, Boland gave several reasons why the 
> Geneva-based WIPO should not hold the meeting, including a tight budget 
> and late scheduling. She also said WIPO's agenda should be driven by 
> member nations, and the idea came from outside the organization.
> Officials from the 179 WIPO nations will convene in late September to 
> decide their agenda for the next two years; the agenda has been in the 
> works for months and does not include open-development issues. "It would 
> have been somewhat unusual for such a meeting to materialize out of 
> nothing," Boland said.
> 
> In the past six months, WIPO has had to cancel several meetings on 
> topics directly relevant to the organization due to budgetary issues, 
> she said, adding that with those problems, the organization should not 
> "go out on a limb and express receptivity" to an open-development meeting.
> U.S. government officials have had "informal" communications with WIPO, 
> 
> Boland said. A WIPO official said that since receiving a wide range of 
> communications, WIPO has stepped back from the idea of a meeting but has 
> not fully rejected the possibility of addressing the topic.
> 
> The U.S. government has an interagency process for developing formal 
> positions at WIPO. A meeting that included officials from PTO and the 
> Copyright Office was held last Thursday at the State Department. The 
> Commerce Department and Office of the U.S. Trade Representative are part 
> of the interagency process, too.
> 
> Boland said the United States "would certainly have some rather 
> bureaucratic objections" to WIPO considering a policy on open-source 
> software. "There are technical and legalistic arguments to that." 
> Open-source software is not protected under copyright law but only 
> contract law, which is not the domain of WIPO, she said. That point has 
> been heavily disputed by copyright experts.
> 
> Boland suggested that the U.S. government supports open-source growth as 
> a development tool and she proposed it for consideration by a U.N. body 
> focused on development.
> 
> She also reprimanded WIPO officials for publicly giving the impression 
> that the body might consider open-source issues. "We think people 
> working within the organization need to be better stewards of 
> interactions" with nonprofit groups and other non-member organizations, 
> she said.
> 
> -- 
> James Love, Director, Consumer Project on Technology
> http://www.cptech.org, mailto:james.love at cptech.org
> tel. +1.202.387.8030, mobile +1.202.361.3040
> 
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