Felix Stalder on Sat, 10 Oct 2015 12:10:54 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> ttip: digital respect and resistance |
On 2015-10-10 00:48, Kristoffer Gansing wrote: > I am just curious to see what kind of response it will evoke! > Especially I am curious if the nettime community has anything to say > about the supposed fear of dealing with TTIP within digital art and > culture, well knowing of course that there is an assumed "field" > here that might already be declared obsolete or for which there are > many names and definitions. Hi Kristoffer, > These questions haunts me on a daily basis as I try to balance my > intensive working life of being the artistic director of a big > digital art and culture festival such as transmediale with also > being an engaged citizen.... I think this is the key issue. Things like TTIP challenge everyone as a citizen, as basic democratic rights are being undermined and extreme forms of corporate governance are being enshirned in hard-to-change international law. Everyone is affected by this, artists in particular through the intellectual property provisions. WIKILEAKS published yesterday the respective section of the comparable TPP agreement where negotiations have been concluded. (see below) But intellectual property which affects many of us in our professional lifes is only a small aspect of the type of deep rule setting that is taking place on a scale almost too big to comprehend, certainly from the vantage point of art. So, how do we align our narrow and specialized identities as "artists", "researchers" and so on and with more broadly shared identities such as "citizen" or, in case of climate change, "living being". In types of hyper-specialization it seems almost impossible to acknowledge that in may respects, each of us is not uniquely special, but, that tiny peaks of specialization grow out of oceans of commonality . Felix TPP Treaty: Intellectual Property Rights Chapter - 5 October 2015 https://wikileaks.org/tpp-ip3/press.html Today, 9 October, 2015 WikiLeaks releases the final negotiated text for the TPP (Trans-Pacific Partnership) Intellectual Property Rights Chapter. The TPP encompasses 12 nations representing more than 40 per cent of global GDP. Despite a final agreement, the text is still being withheld from the public, notably until after the Canadian election on October 19. The document is dated four days ago, October 5th, or last Monday, the same day it was announced in Atlanta, Georgia that the 12 member states to the treaty had reached an accord after five and a half years of negotiations. The IP Chapter of the TPP has perhaps been the most controversial chapter due to its wide-ranging effects on internet services, medicines, publishers, civil liberties and biological patents. âIf TPP is ratified, people in the Pacific-Rim countries would have to live by the rules in this leaked text,â said Peter Maybarduk, Public Citizenâs Global Access to Medicines Program Director. âThe new monopoly rights for big pharmaceutical firms would compromise access to medicines in TPP countries. The TPP would cost lives.â Hundreds of representatives from large corporations had direct access to the negotiations whereas elected officials had limited or no access. Political opposition to the TPP in the United States, the dominant member of the 12 negotiating nations, has increased over time as details have emerged through previous WikiLeaks disclosures. Notably, the Democratic front runner, Hillary Clinton, came out against the TPP on Wednesday saying: âBased on what I know so far, I canÂt support this agreement.â This is a populist reversal by Hillary Clinton as earlier she has hailed the TPP as âthe gold standard in trade agreementsâ. In June the House of Representatives of the US Congress narrowly approved to âfast-trackâ the TPP, preventing the Congressmen from discussing or amending any parts of the treaty, only vote for or against it. 218 voted for the âfast-trackâ measure and 208 against. Only 28 House Democrats backed it. TPP is the first of a trinity of US backed economic treaties, the "Three Big Tâs", to be finalized. The other two being Trade in Services Agreement (TISA) which covers 52 countries and TTIP, the EU-US version of TPP. Read the document. https://wikileaks.org/tpp-ip3/ ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| http://felix.openflows.com |OPEN PGP: 056C E7D3 9B25 CAE1 336D 6D2F 0BBB 5B95 0C9F F2AC # 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: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org