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SECTION III.4: INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS ECAT strongly supports the negotiation, implementation and enforcement of strong protections for intellectual property rights to build upon and strengthen existing protections and commitments. Such provisions are critical in order to promote innovation and new research in the information technology, pharmaceutical and chemical sectors, to name just a few, and to stimulate a rich and diverse marketplace for the development and publishing of business information and literary, musical and other artistic and creative works. Intellectual Property Protections in Recent Free Trade Agreements Recent U.S. free trade agreements (FTAs) with Chile, Singapore, Australia, Morocco, Bahrain, Central America and the Dominican Republic, Peru, Colombia Panama and Korea include important commitments in the area of intellectual property that should be included in future agreements. Among the most notable provisions are the following commitments:
These provisions represent an important strengthening of intellectual property rights as reflected in international agreements and should be used as a model in future free trade agreements. WTO Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights The Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS Agreement) came into force on January 1, l995, with a phase-in of some obligations under the agreement, based on a country’s level of development. Developed countries were required to implement the agreement by January 1, l996; developing countries had to implement by January 1, 2000, and the least-developed countries had to implement by January 1, 2006, now extended to July, 2013 for many TRIPs provisions and to January 1, 2016 for pharmaceutical patents. On August 30, 2003, the WTO General Council approved the Decision on the “Implementation of Paragraph 6 of the Doha Declaration on the TRIPS Agreement and Public Health,” along with the text of a statement describing members “shared understanding” of how the Decision should be interpreted. The Decision provides for the waiver of TRIPS Article 31(f) to allow countries producing generic medicines under compulsory licenses to export the medicines to eligible countries. The accompanying statement makes clear that the provision should be used in good faith for health policy reasons, not commercial or industrial policy. As discussed in section III.10, Thailand’s use of compulsory licenses goes beyond the purpose and objective of this understanding. It is important that the United States continue to oppose the reopening of the TRIPS agreement. The WTO built-in agenda already provides an active program for review of the TRIPS agreement. The agenda includes (1) the ongoing review, mandated by TRIPS article 27.3(b), of the exclusions from patentability for certain plants and animals, and (2) the review by the TRIPS Council, mandated by Article 71.1, of TRIPS implementation. In keeping with this built-in agenda, the focus must remain on achieving full implementation of the TRIPS Agreement. In WTO accession negotiations, the United States should insist that acceding countries be required to implement the TRIPS agreement immediately upon accession without transition. As discussed in section II.3, the United States negotiated IPR action items for Russia to undertake on a specific timetable, as part of the U.S.-Russia bilateral negotiations for Russia’s accession. These action items should be implemented before Russia’s accession is finalized. WTO Dispute Settlement The United States has brought 14 intellectual property rights cases before the WTO since 1996. It has been successful in a number of cases in compelling WTO members, such as India, Portugal, Sweden, Turkey, Ireland, Denmark, Greece, Ireland, and the EU, to move toward compliance with their obligations under the WTO TRIPS agreement. Sweden and Ireland have passed legislation to strengthen enforcement of their intellectual property laws, and Greece has enacted legislation to prevent copyright infringement by television stations. In April, 2002, the United States reached a partial settlement of its ongoing WTO case against Argentina. The United States originally challenged Argentina's failure to provide a system of exclusive marketing rights for pharmaceutical products and expanded this claim to include concerns over Argentina’s failure to protect confidential test data; its denial of exclusive rights for patents; its failure to provide provisional measures, such as preliminary injunctions, to prevent infringements of patent rights; and its exclusion of certain subject matter from patentability. In the settlement, Argentina agreed to clarify several aspects of its IPR regime and to apply its rules in a manner consistent with the TRIPS agreement. Argentina also agreed to amend its patent law. Several issues remain, including data protection. STOP! Initiative On October 4, 2004, the United States Trade Representative and the Departments of Commerce, Justice and Homeland Security launched a new government-wide initiative, the Strategy Targeting Organized Piracy (STOP!), to combat global trade in pirated and counterfeit goods. Among the key elements of the STOP! initiative are:
The Administration is focused on several countries, including China, Korea, Mexico, Russia and Taiwan, but is also enlarging its focus to other countries in Asia, Central Europe and Latin America. In 2006, the Administration also sought to include similar approaches in several multilateral fora, including the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum. Special 301 Under the Special 301 provisions contained in the Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act of 1988, as amended in the Uruguay Round Agreements Act of 1994, USTR is required to identify those countries that deny adequate and effective protection for intellectual property rights or deny fair and equitable market access to persons that rely on intellectual property protection. The Special 301 provisions require that countries that have the most egregious practices with the greatest adverse impact on U.S. trade must be designated as a “Priority Foreign Country.” USTR is then required to initiate a Section 301 investigation of the intellectual property practices of such countries within 30 days of the annual April 30 deadline. USTR created two additional country classifications, referred to as “Priority Watch List” and “Watch List” countries, to allow the flexibility to encourage countries to improve intellectual property rights protection without having to designate a country as a “Priority Foreign Country” and initiate a Special 301 investigation. USTR’s 2007 Special 301 Report will be issued on April 30, 2007 after the publication of the ECAT 2007 Agenda. In its 2006 Special 301 Report, released on April 30, 2006, the United States did not identify any country as a Priority Foreign Country, but indicated both China and Russia were among the Administration’s top priorities for seeking improved intellectual property protection. The 2006 Report once again designated China, Paraguay and Ukraine for special monitoring under Section 306 of the Trade Act of 1974, which authorizes USTR to impose trade sanctions if the commitments of a bilateral agreement are breached. The 2006 Special 301 Report identified 13 countries on the “Priority Watch List,” signifying that the United States will monitor their efforts to improve their intellectual property rights protection: Argentina, Belize, Brazil, China, Egypt, India, Indonesia, Israel, Lebanon, Russia, Turkey, Ukraine, and Venezuela. A total of 34 countries and a customs territory or customs union, in the case of the European Union, were placed on the “Watch List” in the 2006 Report: Bahamas, Belarus, Bolivia, Bulgaria, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Croatia, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, European Union, Guatemala, Hungary, Italy, Jamaica, Kuwait, Latvia, Lithuania, Malaysia, Mexico, Pakistan, Peru, Philippines, Poland, Korea, Romania, Saudi Arabia, Taiwan, Tajikistan, Thailand, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Vietnam. With regard to China, the United States remains very concerned by rampant intellectual property problems in a number of areas, including with respect to trade in pirated and counterfeit products, copyright piracy, and trademark counterfeiting. As discussed in section IV.1, China agreed in April, 2006, in a meeting of the U.S.-China Joint Commission on Commerce and Trade, to an intellectual property action plan to reduce significantly infringement levels, increase penalties for violations through greater and more effective criminalization of violations, crack down on violators, improve protection of electronic data, and legalize software use in the government sector, among other actions. These commitments follow on prior commitments by the Chinese government to improve IP protection. While the 2006 Report identifies specific limited areas of progress by the Chinese government, it details many areas where additional work is necessary to address the lack of any meaningful reduction in piracy rates. The Administration is also considering bringing a potential WTO case on intellectual property rights in China. In 2007, the Administration will conduct a special provincial review to identify IPR enforcement at that level. The Administration should establish evaluation criteria that provide an objective and verifiable mechanism to measure the adequacy of IPR enforcement leading to a reduction in the rates of piracy which range between 85-to-95 percent. At a minimum, these criteria should include an evaluation of actual gains in (i) criminal, civil and administrative enforcement against all forms of piracy and counterfeiting, requiring both meaningful increases in the number of government-initiated actions, as well as the imposition of deterrent penalties in a higher percentage of cases; (ii) end-user compliance with IPR laws, including within all levels of government; and (iii) public education and awareness about the value and importance of IPR laws, requiring an increased commitment by government to sponsor training programs for law enforcement and the judiciary, as well as educational campaigns targeting consumers, particularly university communities. As recognized in the 2006 Report, IPR reforms will do little to increase market access if other barriers are imposed. For example, China’s proposal to favor domestic software over U.S. or other foreign software in government procurements would have effectively nullified China’s commitment that government agencies use only legal software discussed in section III.3. Similarly, China’s continued refusal to allow publishers to print and distribute their materials freely in China increases the likelihood of infringements and piracy by artificially raising the prices of foreign-owned publishing houses must charge to recoup transportation and customs costs. In these cases, China’s commitment to improve its IPR regime must also be accompanied by an agreement not to impose discriminatory government procurement regulations or other industrial policies that exclude or significantly restrict U.S. products from the Chinese market. With regard to Russia, the United States remains concerned in a number of areas from optical disc production and piracy and Internet piracy, to Russia’s revisions to Part IV of its Civil Code that would weaken existing IPR protection laws. As discussed in section II.3, the United States and Russia entered into a separate agreement regarding IPR protection with specific commitments by Russia to take certain actions. Optical-Media Products Piracy, Organized Crime and End-User Piracy of Software The copyright industry is increasingly using a common set of media to distribute their products worldwide, including compact disc (CD), video CD, CD-ROM, and Digital Versatile Disk (DVD), known collectively as “optical media.” There has been rapid growth in the capacity for producing optical-media products. Much of the world excess-production capacity (with capacity now estimated at twice world demand) is being used to produce pirated optical-media products, such as films, music and sound recordings, and computer software (both business and entertainment) on CDs and CD-ROMs. Such pirating poses a serious threat to every sector of the U.S. copyright industry. Piracy of computer software alone is estimated to cost the U.S. computer software industry over $11 billion per year in sales, and total worldwide piracy is estimated to cause between $20 and $22 billion in losses to U.S. copyright-based companies annually. In its 2006 Special 301 report, USTR noted progress made by Ukraine, Brazil, Pakistan and the Philippines, in taking steps to implement controls on optical-media production. The Report also cited Indonesia, Malaysia and Vietnam as improving enforcement activities. The 2006 Special 301 Report, however, cited continuing concerns in India, Thailand and Russia. Efforts to combat optical-media piracy should remain an Administration priority this year. While the U.S. government should continue to pursue the elimination of optical-media piracy through traditional intellectual property-right enforcement mechanisms, because of the ease of production and distribution of pirated optical-media products, these enforcement methods may be insufficient to prevent the spread of digital piracy. It is, therefore, important that the U.S. government continue to urge that countries of concern undertake to create a regulatory framework for licensing optical-media production and tracking raw materials inputs in order to establish an effective system to deter piracy. While taking steps to have these countries address production, the Administration must also increasingly look to foreign governments to attack the open sale of pirated materials. CD-Rom piracy is growing rapidly, and addressing it will require an attack against consumption (offer for sale) as well as production and distribution. The Administration should also sustain its efforts to combat end-user piracy of computer software, which is the greatest single source of software piracy. In many countries, government entities are the major users of software, both legal and illegal. It is imperative that foreign governments make the issue of legal use of software a priority. Countries and/or customs territories that have issued decrees requiring governmental use of legal software include China, Colombia, Ireland, Jordan, Paraguay, Thailand, France, the United Kingdom, Greece, Hungary, Hong Kong, Macao, Lebanon, Taiwan, Israel, Spain, and the Philippines. Implementation of World Intellectual Property Organization Treaties Strong intellectual property protections are essential to the promotion of further growth in the Internet and digital trade. To that end, the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) adopted the Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT) in 1970 (and amended and modified it in 1979, 1984, and 2001) and the WIPO Copyright Treaty (WCT) and the WIPO Performances and Phonogram Treaty (WPPT) in 1996. The PCT permits individuals and companies to seek patent protection for an invention simultaneously in each of the contracting states by filing an "international" patent application and establishes rules and procedures for such applications. The United States ratified the PCT in 1978, and there are currently 126 contracting states. The WCT and WPPT provide a basic framework for minimum standards of copyright protection for the online distribution of copyrighted works. The WCT came into force on March 5, 2002, and the WPPT came into force on May 20, 2002. The United States implemented the two WIPO treaties under Title I of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998 and ratified them in September, 1999. The 1998 Act prohibits the circumvention of technological measures that control the access to copyrighted works and their unauthorized reproduction, as well as the importation, manufacture, or sale of devices used to circumvent such technological protections. The 1998 Act also prohibits the removal or alteration of copyright management information used to identify a work or various categories of information about the work. Civil and criminal remedies enforce these provisions, with certain exceptions for libraries, educational institutions, and other carefully delineated categories of users. Digital piracy is a serious threat to global electronic commerce. The adoption of the WIPO treaties represent a necessary and significant step toward the protection of copyrighted materials on the Internet and fostering the growth of electronic commerce. To date, they have been ratified by 62 (WCT) and 60 (WPPT) countries, with the anticipated joint ratification of EU member states expected to bring the total to above 80. Promoting International Patent Harmonization Greater harmonization between patent offices is critical to ensuring broader access for all inventors across national borders. While discussions on harmonizing patent laws have been ongoing at some level for many years, there is a new urgency to take steps now given the increasing importance of patent protection to inventors around the world. International harmonization requires two things: first, increased collaboration among patent offices, and second, legal reform. As to the former, ECAT welcomes the ongoing efforts of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) to strengthen cooperation and information sharing among national and regional patent offices. For instance, the PTO has been urging cooperation toward building international consensus among patent offices on what constitutes "prior art," which, if successful, substantially increases predictability for inventors and promotes consistency of outcomes across jurisdictions. A parallel goal should be the creation of opportunities for mutual recognition of patent office reviews, at least among the three largest patent offices: the PTO, the European Patent Office, and the Japanese Patent Office. ECAT Position: ECAT supports the strong intellectual property commitments included in recent free trade agreements and the negotiation of similar protections in future free trade agreements, particularly efforts to provide national treatment for digital products and innovative pharmaceutical and other products. ECAT also supports U.S. efforts to secure full implementation of the TRIPS Agreement by insisting on adherence to existing transition deadlines, opposing any moratorium on dispute settlement cases, and making aggressive use of WTO dispute settlement procedures to enforce the agreement. ECAT urges the Administration to make every effort to encourage additional countries to ratify and implement fully the WIPO Patent Cooperation Treaty and the WIPO Internet treaties and to continue to promote strong intellectual property protection for digitized trade. ECAT supports efforts to combat piracy of optical-media products through effective enforcement and regulation, and to combat end-user software piracy, particularly by foreign governments. ECAT also supports continued efforts to promote increased cooperation and harmonization among patent offices.
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