US Senate: Broadcast Treaty subverts copyright!
The US is one of the staunchest proponents of this treaty, and the Senate has directed the US's delegate to WIPO to cut it out -- stop subverting American law to appease the broadcasters.
The Revised Draft Broadcasting Treaty appears to grant broadcasters extensive new, exclusive rights in their transmissions for a term of at least 20 years, regardless of whether they have a right in the content they are transmitting. While we support the need to protect against signal theft of broadcast transmissions, the treaty appears to go beyond this purpose and grant broadcasters a right in their transmissions similar to a content holder's copyright. As a result, the rights that would be granted to broadcasters by the Revised Draft Broadcasting Treaty could limit legitimate, fair use of the content and would add an unnecessary layer of uncertainty in consumer use.Link


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