White House bypasses Senate to ink agreement that could allow Chinese companies to demand ISPs remove web content in US with no legal oversight
Months before the debate about Internet
censorship raged as SOPA and PIPA dominated the concerns of web users,
President Obama signed an international treaty that would allow companies
in China or any other country in the world to demand ISPs remove web
content in the US with no legal oversight whatsoever.
The Anti-Counterfeiting
Trade Agreement was signed by Obama on October 1 2011, yet is currently
the subject of a White House petition demanding Senators be forced to
ratify the treaty. The White House has circumvented the necessity to
have the treaty confirmed by lawmakers by presenting it an as "executive
agreement," although legal scholars have highlighted the dubious
nature of this characterization.
The hacktivist group Anonymous attacked
and took offline the Federal Trade Commission's website yesterday
in protest against the treaty, which was also the subject of demonstrations
across major cities in Poland, a country set to sign the agreement
today.
Under the provisions of ACTA, copyright
holders will be granted sweeping direct powers to demand ISPs remove
material from the Internet on a whim. Whereas ISPs normally are only
forced to remove content after a court order, all legal oversight will
be abolished, a precedent that will apply globally, rendering the treaty
worse in its potential scope for abuse than SOPA or PIPA.
A country known for its enforcement
of harsh Internet censorship policies like China could demand under
the treaty that an ISP in the United States remove content or terminate
a website on its server altogether. As we have seen from the enforcement
of similar copyright policies in the US, websites are sometimes
targeted for no justifiable reason.
The groups pushing the treaty also want
to empower copyright holders with the ability to demand that users who
violate intellectual property rights (with no legal process) have their
Internet connections terminated, a punishment that could only ever be
properly enforced by the creation of an individual Internet ID card
for every web user, a system that is already
in the works.
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"The same industry rightsholder
groups that support the creation of ACTA have also called for mandatory
network-level filtering by Internet Service Providers and for Internet
Service Providers to terminate citizens' Internet connection on repeat
allegation of copyright infringement (the "Three Strikes"
/Graduated Response) so there is reason to believe that ACTA will seek
to increase intermediary liability and require these things of Internet
Service Providers," reports
the Electronic Frontier Foundation.
The treaty will also mandate that ISPs
disclose personal user information to the copyright holder, while providing
authorities across the globe with broader powers to search laptops and
Internet-capable devices at border checkpoints.
In presenting ACTA as an "international
agreement" rather than a treaty, the Obama administration managed
to circumvent the legislative process and avoid having to get Senate
approval, a method
questioned by Senator Wyden.
"That said, even if Obama has declared
ACTA an executive agreement (while those in Europe insist that it's
a binding
treaty), there is a very real Constitutional
question here: can it actually be an executive agreement?"
asks TechDirt. "The law is clear that the only things that can
be covered by executive agreements are things that involve items that
are solely under the President's mandate. That is, you can't sign an
executive agreement that impacts the things Congress has control over.
But here's the thing: intellectual property, in Article 1, Section 8
of the Constitution, is an issue given to Congress, not the President.
Thus, there's a pretty strong argument that the president legally cannot
sign any intellectual property agreements as an executive agreement
and, instead, must submit them to the Senate.".
26 European Union member states along
with the EU itself are set
to sign the treaty at a ceremony today in Tokyo. Other countries
wishing to sign the agreement have until May 2013 to do so.
Critics are urging those concerned about
Obama's decision to sign the document with no legislative oversight
to demand
the Senate be forced to ratify the treaty.
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