[GPSCC-chat] Protest ACTA today, Feb 11, 2012 at San Jose City Hall 12-2PM

Spencer Graves spencer.graves at structuremonitoring.com
Sat Feb 11 09:44:44 PST 2012


Just a reminder:


       Protest today noon - 2 PM, City Hall.


       A more descriptive name for the "Anti-Counterfeiting Trade 
Agreement" is the "Advancing Corruption and Tyranny Agreement", in my 
judgment, because the primary effect of this agreement is to provide the 
government with legal arguments for attacking almost any web site they 
don't like, shutting it down and persecuting the owners.  Current law 
was used on 31 January 2012 to block a video of an American Sign 
Language interpretation of Gnarls Barkley song Crazy 
(http://questioncopyright.org <http://questioncopyright.org/>).   I 
estimate that abuse of power by the mainstream commercial media in the 
US, ABC-Disney, CBS, NBC-GE, Fox, CNN, is costing the average American 
family $48,000 per year in lost income;  that's the increase in the 
difference between average and median family income since 1970.  One 
tiny portion of this is the $1.6 billion of US taxpayers' money used to 
support the Egyptian state terror system in 2010.


       Best Wishes,
       Spencer


On 2/4/2012 11:17 PM, John Thielking wrote:
> *Protest Against ACTA*
> *and*
> *Decolonize The Internet*
> *Protest 12PM-2PM, Saturday, February 11, 2012 at San Jose City Hall 
> Plaza at 4^th and E. Santa Clara St, San Jose, CA *
> **
> Ever since the Internet was first formed, the high tech settlers have 
> spread across the great plains of the Internet, scooping up domain 
> names and putting up their signs saying "open for business". 
> Initially, this didn't drive anyone off of their land or cost anyone 
> their job. However, the proprietary rights associated with publishing 
> material on a web site are fundamentally different from publishing the 
> same material in a book. The material in a book may be reused for a 
> commercial purpose if it is only paraphrased and is not even covered 
> by copyright when such use is made. A step up from this use is the 
> defense of "fair use", which allows news organizations to use brief 
> quotations or even entire works (such as news feeds) in their 
> broadcasts or in print for the benefit of their for profit 
> institutions without having to pay royalties to the original copyright 
> holders or enter into special contracts for each use they make of 
> copyrighted material. Indeed, according to Wikipedia, 1/6 of the US 
> economic output is based on such types of "fair use". Note that "fair 
> use" often does not extend to just any old commercial use.
> On the Internet, many web sites throw this community contract of 
> copyright law out the window and substitute in its place draconian 
> Terms Of Use contracts. The TOUs often state that no information 
> contained on the web sites may be used to make derivative works or for 
> commercial purposes. A prime example is a section from the TOU on 
> Google.com:
>
>     2.
>         You should be aware that Content presented to you as part of
>         the Services, including but not limited to advertisements in
>         the Services and sponsored Content within the Services may be
>         protected by intellectual property rights which are owned by
>         the sponsors or advertisers who provide that Content to Google
>         (or by other persons or companies on their behalf). You may
>         not modify, rent, lease, loan, sell, distribute or create
>         derivative works based on this Content (either in whole or in
>         part) unless you have been specifically told that you may do
>         so by Google or by the owners of that Content, in a separate
>         agreement.
>
>
> It would seem that even the act of reproducing this quote from the 
> Google terms on this flier violates those same terms. According to 
> these terms, apparently Youtube videos and Google Books can not be 
> used to make derivative works. Even just paraphrasing and thereby 
> reusing the information contained in such works is "using the Content" 
> which is prohibited. Indeed, the Supreme Court just recently ruled 
> that works that are in the public domain (such as the works on Google 
> Books) can be copyrighted over again and taken out of free, public 
> circulation. (Workers' World Feb 2, 2012 vol. 54 no 4.)
> This state of affairs marks the beginning of the problem that we now 
> face with ACTA (the Anti Counterfeiting Trade Agreement) and similar 
> initiatives such as SOPA and PIPA.
> See the reverse side of this flier for a discussion of ACTA and 
> similar initiatives such as
> Lamar Smith's Internet snooping bill, HR 1981.
> *ACTA includes the following, according to Spencer Graves of the Santa 
> Clara County Green Party:*
>
> 1.
>     It empowers governments to take down Internet Service Providers
>     (ISPs), not just web sites, it doesn't like. I don't know what
>     recourse a targeted web site or ISP might have to the courts.
> 2.
>     Security forces at airports and border crossings are authorized to
>     search your cell phone, MP3 player or computer for pirate copies
>     of anything and confiscate or destroy it if they find something
>     they don't like. (No search warrant required.)
> 3.
>     ACTA was negotiated in secret and signed by the US and several
>     other countries. The Bush and Obama administrations successfully
>     quashed Freedom of Information Act requests on the grounds that
>     disclosure would cause "damage to the national security."
>
>     A separate initiative is Lamar Smith's Internet snooping bill, HR
>     1981.
>
> According to an e-mail from Demandprogress.org:
> The ACLU, EFF, Demand Progress, and 25 other civil liberties and 
> privacy groups have expressed our opposition to this legislation. Will 
> you join us, by emailing your lawmakers today?... ...*ISPs would 
> collect and retain your data whether or not you're accused of a crime. 
> *Supporters shamelessly dubbed it the "Protecting Children From 
> Internet Pornographers Act," but our staunchest allies in Congress are 
> calling it what it is: an all-encompassing Internet snooping bill. 
> Rep. Zoe Lofgren of California -- a SOPA hero who also led Democratic 
> opposition to this bill -- said, "It represents a data bank of every 
> digital act by every American [that would] let us find out where every 
> single American visited Web sites."
> **
> *The current status of ACTA, according to Wikipedia, is that the EU 
> has signed it, but not completely ratified it as only 22 of 27 
> countries have ratified it. The treaty goes into full effect when 6 of 
> the 9 countries (or groups in the case of the EU) that have signed it 
> ratify it. The US has likely not ratified it. Forbes.com presents a 
> slightly different account, saying that the treaty is an executive 
> agreement that doesn't require ratification by the US Senate for 
> example after it is signed. Many protests are planned across Europe 
> for February 11, 2012 to protest the signing of ACTA.*
> **
> *There are three petitions to sign to try to stop these two 
> initiatives from going into effect. They are located here:*
> *https://www.accessnow.org/page/s/just-say-no-to-acta*
> *http://www.avaaz.org/en/stop_acta/ 
> <http://www.avaaz.org/en/stop_acta/?cl=1547510096&v=12300> *
> http://act.demandprogress.org/letter/snooping/ <http://www.blahblah.com/>
> Please take a moment and type in these URLs into your web browser and 
> sign the petitions. Thank you.
> This protest action is sponsored by www.peacemovies.com 
> <http://www.peacemovies.com/>, a web site that hopes to make its 
> author a living through the "fair use" or the not copyright protected 
> use of copyrighted material available on the Internet. One of the 
> sites that is used by Peacemovies.com is www.mercurynews.com 
> <http://www.mercurynews.com/>, which has a very clear statement in its 
> terms of use policy that the material on the site may be reused by 
> viewers under the exception to copyright law defense known as "fair 
> use", which ultimately means that the paraphrasing of information 
> taken from the site and used for commercial purposes does not violate 
> any copyright law or agreement. Please take a moment and subscribe to 
> the Mercury News. Thank you.
> *Peacemovies.com advocates overturning the laws that permit TOU 
> contracts to be formed that deprive Internet users of their rights to 
> "fair use" of content that is provided for free on the Internet.*
>
>
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-- 
Spencer Graves, PE, PhD
President and Chief Technology Officer
Structure Inspection and Monitoring, Inc.
751 Emerson Ct.
San José, CA 95126
ph:  408-655-4567
web:www.structuremonitoring.com


-- 
Spencer Graves, PE, PhD
President and Chief Technology Officer
Structure Inspection and Monitoring, Inc.
751 Emerson Ct.
San José, CA 95126
ph:  408-655-4567
web:  www.structuremonitoring.com

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