An upcoming round of negotiations for the Anti Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA, the notorious, punishing secret copyright treaty) is schedulef for New Zealand in April 2010. Under the terms of the treaty, New Zealand could be forced into accepting the “three strikes” rule that was defeated after a lengthy parliamentary battle last year (“three strikes” means that if someone you live with gets three unsubstantiated accusations of copyright infringement, you and everyone you live with loses access to the Internet and it becomes a crime for any other ISP to hook you back up again).
The opposition movement that formed in response to the “three strikes” rule is ready to take action on ACTA, to make sure that New Zealand’s information policy is made democratically, and not through secret meetings in back rooms. They are organizing their response to the ACTA negotiations next April, and given their amazing mobilization against “three strikes” the last time around, I expect great things. If you’re from .nz or live there now, tell your friends and loved ones about this: your family’s ability to communicate, earn a living, get an education and participate in civil society could be jeapordized by the decisions the elite plan on making in your country.
And hey, Mexico! There’s an ACTA meeting headed your way in January. Got anything planned?
(via Michael Geist)
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