t byfield on Fri, 19 Nov 2004 15:19:12 +0100 (CET) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
<nettime> WIPO sneak trashes NGO dox |
< http://www.eff.org/deeplinks/archives/002117.php > Letter to WIPO on stolen EFF documents November 18, 2004 Let me try to convey to you the depth of the weirdness that arose when all the public-interest groups' papers were stolen and trashed at WIPO. No one gets into the WIPO building without being accredited and checked over, so this was almost certainly someone who was working on the treaty -- in other words, a political opponent (none of the documents promoting the Broadcast Treaty were touched). As the Indian delegation put it, WIPO is an organization based on information. For someone who believes in an information-protection instrument like the Broadcast Treaty to sabotage the negotiation by hiding information from the delegates is bizarre. The people who run the table were shocked silly -- this has apparently never happened before at WIPO. We ended up posting a guard over the table -- thanks to Rufus Pollock from the Campaign for Digital Rights for yeoman duty! -- and rescuing our papers from the trash and from reserve stashes. Unfortuately, we couldn't make any more copies because the UN Secretariat -- who administers logistics -- has announced that as of this meeting, non-governmental organizations (NGOs) can no longer have their materials photocopied by WIPO. Getting copies made means going all the way back into town. This new rule, combined wiht a new procedure that radically cut down on the floor time afforded to NGOs meant that we were largely silenced by the saboteurs. Lucky for us, the delegates from Brazil and India demanded that the Secretariat and Chair take pains to protect our documents and yeild the floor to us. Times like this, I remember a Ghandi quote that I heard from EFF-founder John Gilmore: "First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win." 18 November 2004 Mrs. Rita Hayes, WIPO Deputy-Director General Dear Mrs. Hayes: We welcome WIPO's recent efforts at greater transparency and support for civil society participation at these important meetings. It is therefore with regret that we have to inform you of difficulties we have experienced during this 12th Session of the Standing Committee on Copyright and Related Rights. We write to you to request your assistance to avoid a repetition of these unfortunate events. Both yesterday and again today, written statements provided by IP Justice and the Electronic Frontier Foundation, which were placed on the table designated for floor papers, were stolen within minutes of being deposited on the table. Additionally yesterday documents provided by the Union for the Public Domain were also missing shortly after being placed on the table. This morning, many of these documents were recovered from the trash can in the first floor men's restroom. Another set of IP Justice statements as well as copies of the alternative NGO Proposal for a Broadcasting Treaty were recovered from behind a desk on the ground floor. These documents provided by IP Justice, EFF, and the Union for the Public Domain were critical of the Broadcasting Treaty. The papers drafted by the broadcasting industry, urging the treaty's adoption, however, remain undisturbed on the table for floor papers. Delegates' receipt of written statements provided by civil society are doubly crucial because of the limited time that has been allocated for interventions for civil society during this meeting. The briefing papers' disappearance causes us particular difficulty given WIPO's new procedure to no longer photo-copy NGO floor papers for the delegates. In order for us to get replacements, we would have to get on a bus and travel back into town to make more copies for the delegates, who have invited us to submit advice on these issues. Currently, we have placed a representative from civil society near the table for floor papers to "guard" these written statements. But clearly this in not an acceptable situation for NGOs or WIPO. We request that you take adequate and effective measures to protect the materials placed on the floor paper table, regardless of the views expressed in those statements. Thank you for your attention to these matters. Very truly, Robin Gross IP Justice robin@ipjustice.org Cory Doctorow Electronic Frontier Foundation cory@eff.org David Tannenbaum Shyamkrishna Balganesh Union for the Public Domain davidt@public-domain.org cc: US Delegation, SCCR Chair # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net