Showing posts with label WPPT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WPPT. Show all posts

Friday, 23 May 2014

Hot news from a cold climate? Canada does some signing-up

13 August is a red-letter day in Canada, if you consider the many and varied occurrences that have graced the country since it emerged from the swirling primaeval mists of recorded time (if you want to know what happened in Canada on that date, just click here). What's more, this very year sees two more momentous events that will grace that date.

The first is spelled out in WCT Notification No. 81: WIPO Copyright Treaty. The title is a bit of a plot-spoiler, since this notification celebrates the deposit by the Government of Canada, on May 13, 2014, of its instrument of ratification of the WIPO Copyright Treaty, which will enter into force, with respect to Canada, on 13 August 2014.

The second, something of a sequel, is recorded in WPPT Notification No. 86: WIPO Performances and Phonograms Treaty, which produces the same effect regarding ratification of the WIPO Performances and Phonograms Treaty. This instrument of ratification has a bit more to it: The said instrument of ratification was accompanied by the following declarations:
- "Pursuant to Article 3(3) of the Treaty, the Government of Canada will not apply the criterion of fixation with regard to exclusive rights of producers of phonograms;

- "Pursuant to Article 3(3) of the Treaty, the Government of Canada will not apply the criterion of publication with regard to the remuneration right of Article 15(1) of the Treaty; and

- "Pursuant to Article 15(3) of the Treaty, the Government of Canada will not apply Article 15(1) of the Treaty with regard to the retransmission of phonograms".
Let's hear from our Canadian friends: what's the story?

Monday, 26 August 2013

Macao gets some special treaty treatment

If you were a little surprised to receive a media release from the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) entitled "WIPO Copyright Treaty: Declaration by the People's Republic of China", don't worry: your memory won't be failing you. You probably thought, hey, hasn't China been a fully-fledged and active party to the WIPO Copyright Treaty since 2007? And indeed that is the case. But the recent media release, accompanied by a further release called "WIPO Performances and Phonograms Treaty: Declaration by the People's Republic of China", is actually a bit of fine-tuning, designed to bring the Macao Special Administrative Region (population c.591,000) within the ambit of both 1996 treaties with effect from 6 November 2013.

The treaties were extended to another Special Administrative Region, Hong Kong with effect from 1 October 2008.

Thursday, 9 June 2011

WPP moves to cut of advertising cash for infringing websites


In another example of how the imagined 'Wild West' of the internet is (slowly) being tamed by proactive business practices which can run alongside new legislation and court decisions, advertising giant WPP has announced a list of 2,000 websites in the USA which it says carry illegal or pirated content and will not be used for advertising for the group's clients. The list will be used by the media buying agencies within WPP's GroupM business and executives in those companies have been told not to buy any advertising on those site - and since they have a combined annual spend of $6 billion, $3.5 billion in the US alone – that’s quite a major move. WPP's clients include Ford, Unilever, AT&T and IBM and interestingly their client list also includes two major labels - Universal Music and the Warner as well as the Paramount film company. The list will be regularly updated.

GroupM Interaction's Global CEO Rob Norman told reporters: "We're serious about combating piracy and protecting our clients' intellectual property as forcefully as we possibly can. This policy extends to digital media buyers at all GroupM agencies, as well as other WPP companies like Team Detroit, which manages Ford's media business". According to The Guardian, among the sites blacklisted are access-anything.com, albumhunt.com, extratorrent.com, fileseek.info, free-tv-show.com, gpirate.com, kickasstorrents.com and laptop-downloads.com. Last year Google pledged to stop websites that infringe copyrights from using its adwords service.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2011/jun/08/wpp-groupm-sir-martin-sorrell

Friday, 26 November 2010

St Vincent and the Grenadines

Back in the 1960s we all used to make jokes about St Vincent and the Grenadines being the name of a pop group -- and now the island state has indeed shown itself greatly interested the legal side of the music industry.

By WPPT Notification No. 79 the World Intellectual Property Organization has announced that the Government of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines has deposited its instrument of accession to the 1996 WIPO Performances and Phonograms Treaty, which enters into force there on 12 February 2011.