Lawmakers renew push for "rogue websites" bill

Mon Apr 4, 5:59 pm ET

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20110404/wr_nm/us_usa_trade_websites/print

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – A bipartisan group of lawmakers from both chambers of 
Congress on Monday vowed to pass legislation giving the U.S. Justice Department 
new authority to go after foreign and domestic websites that sell pirated music 
and movies and counterfeit goods.

"Online infringement and the sale of counterfeit goods cost American creators, 
producers, and businesses billions of dollars and results in the loss of 
hundreds of thousands of jobs," Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick 
Leahy, a Democrat, told reporters.

Intellectual property theft is "one of the greatest threats to our economy 
today" because of the big role that copyrights, patents and trademarks play in 
boosting U.S. exports and productivity, said House of Representatives Judiciary 
Committee Chairman Lamar Smith, a Republican.

"If we're going to have a healthy economy, we need to have a healthy IP 
sector," Smith said.

Leahy said he would push forward with a new version of a "rogue websites" bill 
that cleared his committee last year by a vote of 19-O but did not get a vote 
in the full Senate.

The House Judiciary Committee will hold a second hearing this week on the 
issue, with the goal of crafting its own legislation, Smith said.

"I think with the leadership of both chairmen we're going to get a bill to the 
president's desk," Leahy said.

Many websites selling pirated and fake goods operate out of China, although 
lawmakers said their efforts were not aimed at any particular country.

U.S. labor and business groups backed the renewed push.

"Too few people who download entertainment illegally recognize that they are 
stealing wages and benefits from workers," said Paul Almeida, president of the 
AFL-CIO labor federation's department for professional employees.

The Chamber of Commerce's Global Intellectual Property Center estimates piracy 
and counterfeiting have stolen 2-1/2 million jobs over the years, largely due 
to websites which a recent report said receive over 53 billion visits a year.

(Reporting by Doug Palmer; editing by Eric Beech)
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