Feds announce global antipiracy initiatives

By Anne Broache
http://news.com.com/Feds+announce+global+antipiracy+initiatives/2100-1028_3-
5876017.html

Story last modified Wed Sep 21 14:59:00 PDT 2005

The Bush administration on Wednesday announced new plans to expand its
crackdown on piracy overseas.

During California visits with high-tech and movie industry representatives,
Commerce Department Secretary Carlos Gutierrez described two new programs
aimed at eroding intellectual property theft, which costs U.S. businesses an
estimated $250 billion and 750,000 jobs per year, according to a department
press release.

"The protection of intellectual property is vital to our economic growth and
global competitiveness, and it has major consequences in our ongoing effort
to promote security and stability around the world," he said.

One program would place intellectual property experts on the ground in
regions where piracy is considered a concern. There they would work with
overseas U.S. businesses and native government officials to advocate
improved intellectual property rights protection, according to a department
fact sheet.

Experts will be sent to Brazil, India, Russia, Thailand, China and the
Middle East and serve a five-year tour of duty, the fact sheet said. One
such expert is already on the job in Beijing, but it was unclear when the
others would be dispatched or who they would be.

Another program, called the Global Intellectual Property Rights Academy,
would train foreign judges, enforcement officials and other stakeholders in
international intellectual property obligations and best practices. The
academy, overseen by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, plans to convene
in 24 sessions in 2006, paying all travel expenses for the foreign
participants, who will come from many of the same areas where experts will
be working.

The Commerce Department has recently taken other actions intended to combat
international piracy. In July, President Bush created within the department
a senior-level position--the coordinator for international intellectual
property enforcement. The department also plans to continue holding
small-business outreach seminars nationwide.

The Business Software Alliance was quick to applaud the announcement. In a
press release, the organization cited survey results that pegged software
piracy rates at 90 percent in China, 87 percent in Russia, 74 percent in
India, 70 percent in Thailand, 64 percent in Brazil and 58 percent in the
Middle East.

"In all those countries, there's a long history of bilateral discussions on
IPR issues," said Robert Holleyman, chief executive of BSA. "So I think they
will be very receptive to getting on-the-ground systems to help with this
effort."

Holleyman said he hoped the programs would ultimately raise revenue for U.S.
companies and resellers selling in foreign markets and for companies native
to those markets. 



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