(One wonders if this 'czar' will be any more effective than other 'czars' in
the US government.......rf)

Lawmakers OK anti-piracy czar
Federal program part of $388 billion omnibus bill
Hollywood Reporter
Updated: 8:00 p.m. ET Nov. 23, 2004
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/6567896/

Buried inside the massive $388 billion spending bill Congress approved last
weekend is a program that creates a federal copyright enforcement czar.

Under the program, the president can appoint a copyright law enforcement
officer whose job is to coordinate law enforcement efforts aimed at stopping
international copyright infringement and to oversee a federal umbrella
agency responsible for administering intellectual property law.

Intellectual property law enforcement is divided among a range of agencies
including the Library of Congress, the Justice and State departments and the
U.S. Trade Representative.

It is hoped that designating a single overseer to coordinate copyright law
enforcement will put some cohesion into the federal effort, said one Senate
Appropriations Committee aide.

"You need a head. You need someone who has to answer," the aide said. "If
staffed out and funded by a number of different agencies, it never does
anything. Agencies don't want to give up good people. When you don't have an
agency responsible, their attitude gets to be, 'I don't have to do anything
about it."'

Council funded for the first time

The legislation, part of the bill funding Justice Department operations,
also for the first time funds the National Intellectual Property Law
Enforcement Coordination Council (NIPLAC).

NIPLAC is charged with establishing policies, objectives and priorities
designed to protect American intellectual property overseas and to
coordinate and oversee implementation of intellectual property law
enforcement throughout the government. While NIPLAC has been around since
the early 1990s, it has never done anything, and appropriators hope that
giving the organization $2 million and a new charter will make the office
effective.

"This is an effort to get some air under the wings of that interagency
effort," the aide said. "NIPLAC is a good idea, but it hadn't taken off. You
really couldn't point to anything they'd ever done."

Congressional aides say Sen. Judd Gregg, R-N.H., chairman of the Senate
subcommittee that doles out funding for the Commerce, Justice and State
departments, and Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, chairman of the full Senate
Appropriations Committee, took a personal interest in ensuring that NIPLAC
was kept in the omnibus spending bill.

But their ambitions for a more robustly funded program were scaled back.
Originally the subcommittee had designated $20 million for the program, but
fiscal reality forced lawmakers to agree to one-tenth of that.



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