The sadder news is that the European Parliament Register continues to
deny full access to ACTA related documents:

    European spring is over
    http://acta.ffii.org/?p=1137

If you want to follow the developments closely, the FFII ACTA blog is
warmly recommended.

//Erik

On 02/06/2012 05:04 AM, Lauren Weinstein wrote:
> Europe battles ACTA: "A new question of Internet freedom"
>
> http://j.mp/wRLoq9  (New York Times)
>
>    "After more than three years of talks, which critics say were conducted
>     without sufficient public input , the United States signed on to ACTA
>     last October in Tokyo, along with Australia, Canada, Japan, Morocco,
>     New Zealand and South Korea. (The agreement is to come into force when
>     six of those countries have ratified it.)  But the issue moved into
>     the mainstream in Europe after the European Union and representatives
>     of 22 of 27 E.U. members - all except Cyprus, Estonia, Germany, the
>     Netherlands and Slovakia - signed Jan.  26."
>
>  - - -
>
> --Lauren--
> Lauren Weinstein ([email protected]): http://www.vortex.com/lauren 
> Co-Founder: People For Internet Responsibility: http://www.pfir.org 
> Founder:
>  - Network Neutrality Squad: http://www.nnsquad.org 
>  - Global Coalition for Transparent Internet Performance: http://www.gctip.org
>  - PRIVACY Forum: http://www.vortex.com 
> Member: ACM Committee on Computers and Public Policy
> Blog: http://lauren.vortex.com 
> Google+: http://vortex.com/g+lauren 
> Twitter: https://twitter.com/laurenweinstein 
> Tel: +1 (818) 225-2800 / Skype: vortex.com
> _______________________________________________
> nnsquad mailing list
> http://lists.nnsquad.org/mailman/listinfo/nnsquad

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