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ACTA Protests In Poland: Groups Fear Copyright Treaty Will Lead To Censorship

Acta Protest

By VANESSA GERA   01/24/12 02:51 PM ET   AP

WARSAW, Poland -- Hundreds of people waged a street protest in Warsaw on Tuesday to protest the government's plan to sign an international copyright treaty, while several popular websites also shut down for an hour over the issue.

Poland's support for the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement, or ACTA, has sparked days of protest, including attacks on government sites, by groups who fear it could lead to online censorship.

Prime Minister Donald Tusk insisted Tuesday that his government will not give in to the protesters. He vowed that Poland will sign the international agreement, which is aimed at protecting intellectual property – like music and books – and products including pharmaceuticals and designer items. ACTA enjoys widespread support from the producers of music, movies and a range of goods enjoying copyright protections.

"There will be no concessions to brutal blackmail," Tusk said at a news conference.

Several popular websites replaced their normal content with a statement about ACTA, including several that are popular with young people and carry a mix of celebrity news, jokes, funny photographs and other entertaining material.

At the street protest, held in front of a European Union office, people carried banners that said "Stop ACTA," while some put tape over their mouths to signify their fears that ACTA will infringe on freedom of expression online.

An extremist right-wing group is planning a separate protest Wednesday to oppose ACTA.

However, an influential group representing authors and composers – known by its Polish acronym ZAiKS – has thrown its support behind ACTA. ZAiKS argued that ACTA will not hurt Internet freedom but protect the rights of creators. It said that Internet piracy is now robbing artists and the state treasury of hundreds of millions of zlotys (many millions of dollars) in income.

ACTA shares some similarities with the hotly debated Stop Online Piracy Act in the U.S., which was shelved by lawmakers last week after Wikipedia and Google blacked out or partially obscured their websites for a day in protest.

In recent days, a group calling itself Anonymous attacked Polish government websites, leaving several paralyzed on Sunday and Monday. On Tuesday, most appeared to be working again, though the prime minister's site was unreachable.

Still, Polish leaders are vowing to stick to plans to sign ACTA in Tokyo on Thursday.

ACTA has been negotiated by a number of industrialized countries that have been struggling for ways to fight counterfeiting and intellectual property theft – crimes that cause huge losses to the movie and music industries and many other sectors.

The far-reaching agreement would cover everything from counterfeit pharmaceuticals to fake designer handbags to online piracy. The United States signed ACTA in October in Tokyo along with seven other countries: Australia, Canada, South Korea, Japan, New Zealand, Morocco and Singapore.

Critics of ACTA accuse the negotiating countries of hammering out the agreement in secret and failing to consult with the broader societies along the way.

(This version CORRECTS Updates with the websites going dark; corrects style on spelling of group ZAiKS. This story is part of AP's general news and financial services.)

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WARSAW, Poland -- Hundreds of people waged a street protest in Warsaw on Tuesday to protest the government's plan to sign an international copyright treaty, while several popular websites also shut do...
WARSAW, Poland -- Hundreds of people waged a street protest in Warsaw on Tuesday to protest the government's plan to sign an international copyright treaty, while several popular websites also shut do...
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01:57 PM on 01/26/2012
The Polish Minister of Administration and Digitization said: "The Acta agreement in no way changes Polish laws or the rights of internet users and internet usage."
BUT shortly after that Prime Minister said: "It would be an extravagance if Poland did not sign the agreement and was the only country in Europe which does not respect copyright."
Firstly, Poland has its own law regarding protection for intellectual property and it is not true that the Poles don't respect them.
Secondly, many people are confused and asking if Acta will have some impact on inner law, or not, but the Polish government is still only spreading a lot of confusion.
And finally, why the government wants to adopt this bill if it doesn’t change anything indeed?
This situation is outrageous as well as the way Poles are treated. The government signed this treaty despite the fact that over a dozen of thousands citizens had been protesting on the streets of the biggest Polish cities.
In the face of these facts, it should not surprise anyone that Poles are protesting against the document and the circumstances of its signing.
01:55 PM on 01/26/2012
The main concern about ACTA is that it has been worked on in a complete secrecy without public consultations and even without consultation with NGOs.
Moreover, there are many doubts regarding articles. Mainly because they are quite general and leave much room for interpretation.
ACTA implies that law enforcement agencies are empowered to enter to your home to confiscate your computer only on the grounds of suspicion about a piracy - without any warrant. ACTA is an excellent tool to fight with competition as well as with inconvenient opinions. Needless to say, ACTA is a straight way to cut down on the freedom of speech in the Internet, and what's the worst - in the name of protection of intellectual property.
If ACTA is ratified, internet providers will have to control private mails and analyze information which we pass on. People are afraid of surveillance and that's why they go out on the streets. They do not want to ACTA. They are against an enslavement.
02:18 AM on 01/26/2012
Obama has already signed this terrible treaty. Make sure you sign petitions on ACTA online!
12:24 AM on 01/26/2012
The WTO, The IMF, The World Bank, G7, G20, and now ACTA. All create "...its own governing body outside existing international institutions such as the World Trade Organization (WTO), the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) or the United Nations.

Add to the mix NAFTA, CAFTA, Korean Free Trade Agreement, Panamanian Free Trade Agreement.

Do you know what they are all missing? Anything related to workers rights. Environmental protection. And many other provisions related to workers. But they do include investor protections and many other investor related provisions as well as protections for corporations.

The Oligarchs strike again. This war is just about lost. Warren Buffett, after warning America about the war being waged upon them by the rich class... declared the war won... by the rich.

What do we have? OWS being target practice for tear gas canisters.
06:55 PM on 01/25/2012
Today about 100k of Polish people waged a street protests against ACTA in many Polish cities and towns.

World, please wake up!!! The thread is not for Poland only, it's worldwide. Please read:

http://images.4chan.org/b/src/1327519285996.png
04:40 PM on 01/25/2012
ACTA is a very dangerous agreement - it is very unclear and vague, and it leaves a lot of loopholes for government­s to use to control the internet (and therefore society) - the last free medium of direct dialogue between people. ACTA is not just about copyrights­. Why do you think ACTA has been prepared in such a secret? Why weren't there public discussion­s about such an important thing as a personal right to privacy and presumptio­n of innocence (according to ACTA, your internet provider can, or even should, spy on you)? Government­s have forced through a law which, in the future, they could easily use to control internet.

So if you don't won't censorship­, Orwell's "1984" in reality and the reign of the corporatio­ns lobbying the government­s, read about ACTA, SOPA and PIPA and protest in any way you can!
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02:36 PM on 01/25/2012
Awesome effort to remain "OCCUPY"! Go Poland ,twice the savior of the free / christian world!
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05:35 PM on 01/24/2012
Fantastic.