Secret Treaty Is Very, Very Scary

Seth Fischer bio ↓  ·  November 8th, 2009  ·  filed under politics

Boing Boing, the EFF and Michael Geist are reporting that a secret treaty that could determine the future of file sharing is being negotiated without any input from the public at an international conference in Seoul.

The treaty, called the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement, has, of course, leaked, and it goes way beyond counterfeiting. Instead, according to the EFF, it “will deal with new tools targetting “Internet distribution and information technology.””

According to Cory Doctorow and the EFF, the terms of this agreement, which was drafted by the Obama Administration, could cause ISP’s worldwide to shut down service at just the accusation of illegal file sharing, and if one person in a household were to be accused of violating the law, everyone in the household would lose service. It could also, according to Doctorow, make it “impossible to run a service like Flickr or YouTube or Blogger”

Basically, if a service provider ends up being responsible for the actions of its customers, it will shut off access at the very suggestion of anything illegal. This leads to bad things.

The EFF suggests you contact your Senators. I do, too.

(via Susan Taylor Chehak)

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Seth Fischer's writing has appeared in Guernica Magazine, is forthcoming in Pank, has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize, and has won an honorable mention in The Glimmer Train Fiction Open. He is Sunday Editor at this here web site, and he’s the founding editor of www.splintergeneration.com. He lives in San Francisco and has a day job where he sits in a cubicle not too far from an albino alligator. Reach him at seth.fischer (at) gmail.com or @sethfischer. More from this author →

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