PublicACTA: The Wellington Declaration
The Wellington Declaration
Arising
from the PublicACTA Conference
10 April 2010
Preamble
The participants at
the PublicACTA Conference of 10 April 2010 respectfully
submit this, the Wellington Declaration, to
the parties negotiating the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade
Agreement (ACTA), for their consideration during the
Wellington round of negotiations.
Consistent with the European Parliament’s Resolution of 10 March 2010 on the Transparency and State of Play of the ACTA Negotiations (P7_TA(2010)0058), ACTA should be limited to an Agreement regarding enforcement against counterfeiting (the large scale commercial production of illicit physical goods).
The first part of the Declaration deals with general matters and principles.
The second part of the Declaration deals with some of the specific points under discussion in Wellington.
Part One: General
Matters and Principles
Preserving the
Internet
We recognise that the Internet has
enabled creativity and innovation, the sharing of knowledge,
citizen engagement and democracy, and is an engine of
economic growth and opportunity. This is the result of
certain attributes of the Internet: its open protocols and
its generativity; the fact that anyone can connect and
anyone can build new applications, and find new uses without
discrimination. ACTA should preserve these
attributes.
Forum for the
Negotiations
We note that the World Intellectual
Property Organisation has public, inclusive and transparent
processes for negotiating multilateral agreements on (and a
committee dedicated to the enforcement of) copyright,
trademark and patent rights, and thus we affirm that WIPO is
a preferable forum for the negotiation of substantive
provisions affecting these matters.
Purpose of
ACTA
We note that the purpose of copyright is to
encourage creation & distribution of works for the public
good, by allowing creators a limited opportunity to control
their work. ACTA assumes that this is under threat, and
further protection must be developed. We call for a clear
statement of the problem that ACTA is designed to solve,
with independent evidence to support
it.
Process
ACTA’s process must change:
Transparency
We declare public scrutiny and accountability to be important aspects of life in a free society. We call for full transparency and public scrutiny of the ACTA process including release of the text after each round of negotiations. Governments have been unwilling to respond to specific concerns raised by the public. Public scrutiny will help to ensure the Agreement has no unintended consequences and has maximum positive benefit.
Impact Analysis
We believe that Governments should not sign ACTA without an independent impact analysis covering economic, social, environmental and cultural impacts of the agreement on their respective countries. Such analysis should be published well in advance of any agreement being signed, so it is open to public scrutiny and consideration of its thoroughness.
Participation
We call for wider participation in setting the agenda and scope of ACTA. The negotiation and consultation process must enable full participation and informed input into reviewing and developing drafts. All governments must be invited to be part of the negotiating process. Input must be sought from affected sectors such as Education, Health Care, Arts & Culture and Information Technology, NGOs, and consumer rights groups.
Local Flexibility
We
affirm the importance of local flexibility and the need to
preserve a nation’s tino rangatiratanga and sovereign
rights to adjust copyright, trademark and patent law to
reflect local culture, preferences and conceptions of the
public good.
Part Two: Specific matters for the Wellington Round
Should the negotiations continue to deal with wider copyright, trademark and patent issues, we call on the parties to take account of the following matters:
Exceptions and
limitations
We declare that ACTA must address
exceptions and limitations, such as fair use and fair
dealing, to maintain the balance that is fundamental to
copyright.
Technological Protection
Measures
We note that ACTA is an Agreement to,
among other things, enforce copyright interests. TPMs
concern access and control and so should be beyond the scope
of the Agreement, because existing copyright law is
sufficient to address infringement. TPMs should not be
protected: copyright works should.
In the event that ACTA provides legal protection for TPMs, such protection shall go no further than Article 11 of the WIPO Internet Treaty. TPMs should not infringe on or limit the rights of users to use or access copyright material in a manner that would be permitted without the TPM.
Preserving civil
procedures
We declare that ACTA must not
override or supplant domestic civil procedure. Those
accused of infringement must have the benefit of robust
consumer protections and safeguards, and access to due
process.
Privacy
We declare the
importance of maintaining people’s right to privacy
including user details, personally identifiable information,
IP addresses, and similar information. The Agreement should
not require or permit such information to be disclosed to
third parties without due process and judicial oversight,
and nor should it limit or derogate from any existing data
protection or privacy regimes, nor introduce
surveillance.
Intermediaries
We
declare that ACTA must recognise that intermediaries, such
as ISPs, web site hosts, and search engines, are central to
enabling people to derive the benefits of the Internet.
Their role must be protected and
encouraged.
Intermediaries who do not initiate or direct the content on their systems or networks must have the benefit of safe harbours that are not predicated on enforcement obligations designed to address third-party infringement.
ACTA must not mandate secondary liability standards.
Access to the Internet
We
declare that access to the Internet is increasingly
necessary for participation in society.
Disconnection, account suspension, or limitation of service, have disproportionately negative consequences for civil rights. ACTA cannot require or allow that it be an acceptable sanction for copyright or trademark infringement.
Damages
We declare that
damages:
must be determined only by competent legal
authorities (such as courts) within each sovereign
nation.
must be proportionate to the intent, and to the
real and actual harm.
must not be implemented by means of
a statutory damages regime.
Criminal
liability
We declare that ACTA must provide a
high bar for criminal liability. ACTA must not attempt to
reframe personal use and private acts to fit a definition of
“commercial” infringement.
ACTA must recognise the need for proportionate criminal provisions acknowledging the problem of large-scale commercial infringement, for profit, that is direct and intentional.
Done at Wellington,
New Zealand on Saturday 10 April 2010.
Civic Suites, Wellington Town Hall.
Further information regarding
this Declaration
is available from the PublicACTA
website:
www.publicacta.org
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We urge everyone interested in protecting their digital rights online to sign the petition to endorse the Wellington Declaration.
Sign Here
Signatures added by Tuesday morning NZ time will be appended to the Declaration when it is communicated to the NZ Government negotiators, who we hope will circulate it to all the ACTA delegations.
ENDS