Wikileaks on New Zealand Copyright: US Funds IP Enforcement, Offers to Draft 
Legislation

Saturday April 30, 2011

http://www.michaelgeist.ca/content/view/5769/125/

This week I published multiple posts Wikileaks cables revelations on the U.S. 
lobbying pressure on Canadian copyright including attempts to embarrass Canada, 
joint efforts with lobby groups such as CRIA, and secret information 
disclosures from PCO to U.S. embassy personnel (posts here, here, here, here, 
here, and here). Wikileaks has also just posted hundreds of cables from U.S. 
personnel in New Zealand that reveal much the same story including regular 
government lobbying, offers to draft New Zealand three-strikes and you're out 
legislation, and a recommendation to spend over NZ$500,000 to fund a recording 
industry-backed IP enforcement initiative. Interestingly, the cables regularly 
recommend against including New Zealand on the Special 301 list, despite the 
similarities to Canadian copyright law that always garner vocal criticism.

As New Zealand was working through its own round of copyright reform in 2008, 
the U.S. was actively lobbying several cabinet members. A February 2008 cable 
notes:

Post has presented the list of noted shortfalls in the draft legislation to 
Minister Tizard (Consumer Affairs), Minister Goff (Trade) and to officials 
within the Ministry of Economic Development, the agency primarily responsible 
for drafting legislation and monitoring IP enforcement. Post remains engaged 
with Bronwyn Turley, Senior MED Policy Advisor for IP issues to maintain a 
dialogue to address the needed technical corrections. 

The copyright bill passed in April 2008 and took effect later that year. In a 
March 2009 cable, the U.S. embassy recommended that New Zealand not be included 
on the Special 301 list arguing it would be counterproductive. That 
recommendation is striking when compared to the regular placement of Canada on 
the list, despite very similar laws. In fact, New Zealand's digital lock rules 
are described in the cable as follows:

The provisions relating to technological protection measures (TPMs) remain 
largely unchanged in the bill. The Act as implemented reflects New Zealand's 
concern that TPMs should not be  protected to the extent that they restrict 
acts which are seen as not protected by copyright law. The provisions of the 
Act have  therefore been drafted to ensure that access to a work for  
non-infringing purposes, including the exercise of a permitted act, is retained.

This confirms that New Zealand's copyright law allows for circumvention for 
non-infringing purposes - much like many groups have called for under Bill C-32 
- with no objections from the U.S. under the Special 301 system.

An earlier cable similarly recommends not including New Zealand on the Special 
301 list despite the fact that NZ had not ratified the WIPO Internet treaties 
(Canada has been placed on the highest list for the same thing). The cable is 
notable for the objection to a proposed format shifting provision, similar to 
that found in Bill C-32 and under U.S. fair use.  It argues:

these exceptions to copyright protection would send the wrong message to 
consumers and undermine efforts to curb unauthorized copying of CDs in New 
Zealand. They would cost the industry in  revenue and profits and discourage 
innovation.

In other words, fair use works in the U.S., but not for other countries.

The U.S. involvement in New Zealand's ISP liability provisions, which included 
regulations for terminating subscriber access (three strikes) also comes out in 
the cables. In an April 2009 cable, the U.S. notes the decision to scrap the 
approach due to public opposition. The U.S. is anxious to bring the provisions 
back, proposing regular talks with government officials and offers to help 
drafting new provisions:

Throughout the final stages of the law's (near) implementation, the Embassy 
continued to met with IPR stakeholders and GNZ officials to ascertain progress 
and encourage resolution.  To determine how a "workable" section 92A provision 
can be secured, Econoff met with Rory McLeod, Director at Ministry of Economic 
Development (MED) with responsibility for IPR within GNZ along with Paula 
Wilson, Deputy Director for Trade Negotiations at MFAT, and was given assurance 
that the government remains committed to redrafting Section 92A. 

Embassy will continue to stress with GNZ officials the need for a shorter 
rather than protracted timeline for the redraft and will ascertain the details 
of a notice and comment period for public submissions once released by GNZ. 
During this hiatus we've proposed holding DVC(s) between NZ and U.S. 
interlocutors to possibly help with drafting and as a public diplomacy tool to 
dispel public misperceptions about proper role of IPR protection. 

One month later, another cable notes the U.S. offer to assist with the redraft 
of three strikes.

Finally, an April 2005 cable reveals the U.S. willingness to pay over 
NZ$500,000 (US$386,000) to fund a recording industry enforcement initiative. 
The project was backed by the Recording Industry Association of New Zealand 
(RIANZ) and the Australasian Mechanical Copyright Owners Society (AMCOS).  
Performance metrics include:

The project's performance will be judged by specific milestones, including 
increases in the number of enforcement operations and seizures, with 
percentages or numerical targets re-set annually.  The unit also will be 
measured by the number of reports it submits to the International Federation of 
the Phonographic Industry (IFPI) on its contributions to IP protection and 
enforcement methodology. 

The proposed budget included four salaried positions, legal costs for 
investigation and prosecution, and training programs. The RIANZ still runs an 
anti-piracy site, but does not include disclosure about the source of funding.  
It certainly raises the question of whether New Zealand is aware that local 
enforcement initiatives have been funded by the U.S. government and whether the 
same thing is occurring in Canada.
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