Tuesday, August 28, 2012

The CETA is no longer records ISPs


European Commission spokesman John Clancy Trade announced that the controversial agreement have been removed CETA provisions regarding the disclosure of data by ISPs of suspected copyright infringement.
Information removal from the contract goods and 27.4 27.3 Clancy announced on Twitter: "The text has leaked from February, it is the biggest change, but of course during the negotiations there may be other".
The draft agreement CETA (Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement), negotiated between Canada and the European Union, there are rules very similar to the provisions of ACTA, which was rejected by the European Parliament - according to documents that revealed on Monday on his blog of Michael Geist University of Ottawa.
Deleted articles 27.3 and 27.4 apply to have the responsibility of Internet service providers (ISP called). This includes of compelling the disclosure without a court order of personal data of persons suspected of copyright infringement on the Internet.
Documents that are presented Geist - as provides - working versions CETA agreement prepared in February 2012. CETA agreement itself can bring Geist by introducing legislation in the European Union, which was challenged in the case of ACTA. It was such the provisions on the protection of copyright, intellectual property and the liability of Internet service providers, who would provide the owners of the rights of suspected violations.
Geist welcomed the announcement that the articles on the internet providers have been removed, while noting that the answer to the Ombudsman suggests that the majority of the remaining provisions of ACTA is copied intact.
Founder of the Swedish Pirate Party Rickard Falkvinge, who are actively engaged against the ratification of ACTA, said it's too early to raise the alarm. According to him, the working version of the CETA in February was just developed for the ACTA agreement is adopted by the European parliament.
Clancy confirmed that the documents presented by Geist may be true. Like Falkvinge said, however, that "these articles were included in the documents that leaked, so that in February ACTA was not rejected at EU level."
ACTA is an international trade agreement on combating trade in counterfeit. It contains provisions on the protection of intellectual property, which - according to critics - will limit the free functioning of the Internet. In early July, the agreement was rejected by the European parliament.

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