Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

How Republican objections to gambling undermine intellectual property rights.

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • How Republican objections to gambling undermine intellectual property rights.

    That's right. The WTO may just give the island nation of Antigua the legal right to ignore many US based intellectual property rights because Congress was to pig headed and corrupt. Anyone want a $10 copy of Windows? What about legal DVDs for $2?

    Rolling the DiceThe United States' big legal gamble with Internet gaming.
    By Henry Lanman
    Posted Wednesday, Nov. 15, 2006, at 5:32 PM ET

    Illustration by Mark Alan Stamaty. Click image to see expanded view.In the wee hours of an early Saturday morning several weeks ago, about half an hour before Congress left for its pre-election recess, it passed the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006. The act tries to bar credit-card payments to Internet gambling sites, and there has been much speculation about its wisdom and likely efficacy. What has been less noted, though, is that through this bill and a handful of similar missteps, the government has put itself in a position to be taught a sharp lesson about the nature of power in a globalized marketplace. Unless Congress and the Bush administration begin to pay a little more attention to how they handle Internet gambling, they could well end up creating an entirely avoidable headache for some very powerful constituents—holders of U.S. copyrights and patents—by punching a hole in the international web of agreements that protects them. Taken as a whole, these efforts offer a veritable master class in how not to regulate a 21st-century economy.

    The new law doesn't make any additional types of gambling illegal. Rather, it merely attempts to make it harder to engage in online-gambling activities that Congress already believes are illegal—by requiring credit-card companies to identify and block transactions with online casinos. But in laying out with specificity what kind of Internet gambling Congress thinks is—and is not—already prohibited, the law likely will add to a free-trade debacle in which the United States already finds itself knee-deep.

    To understand why this new law may cause free-trade problems, you need to know a little bit about U.S. laws governing both online and brick-and-mortar gambling. Gambling in the United States is governed by a bewildering array of both state and federal laws, but the main statute that was used to chase online casinos out of the United States was the federal Wire Act. Passed in 1961, the Wire Act basically prohibits those "in the businesses of betting" from sending or receiving certain types of bet-related information over interstate or international wires. The Wire Act doesn't prohibit everything, though. It doesn't, for instance, cover bets placed and taken within a single state, which turns out to be a significant exception. Likewise, because of a separate 1978 statute called the Interstate Horseracing Act, the Wire Act doesn't prohibit interstate betting on horse racing, either.

    In 2003, the island nation of Antigua and Barbuda took a look at the thicket of U.S. laws governing gambling and decided that they violated the United States' free-trade obligations, as administered by the World Trade Organization. Antigua had a more than scholarly interest in this issue because, when offshore Internet gambling businesses were first being set up, the country decided to both welcome and strictly regulate them. Not liking what it saw in the U.S. law, Antigua initiated a WTO proceeding challenging the regulations.

    Antigua's basic theory in its WTO complaint was simply that, if the United States allows any Internet gambling at all, it couldn't, in light of its WTO obligations, impose barriers to foreign companies seeking access to its market. It was a pretty straightforward free-trade argument. In response, the United States tried to take advantage of a "morals" defense in WTO proceedings that says, reasonably enough, that if you don't make a product in your country due to moral objections, you needn't open your market to foreign providers of that product.

    Interestingly, the United States was able to establish that there was a defensible "moral" distinction between brick-and-mortar casinos in the United States and online casinos and that it could prohibit the latter while allowing the former. But to take advantage of this distinction, the United States had to show that it prohibits all forms of Internet gambling. And to do so, it could only turn to laws such as the Wire Act, which rather plainly do no such thing. As a result, the WTO upheld Antigua's complaint and essentially ruled that while a "morals" defense could theoretically be made, the United States was in no position to actually make it, since it doesn't completely prohibit Internet gambling.

    The WTO gave the United States a year to comply with its ruling by either changing its laws to fully ban online gambling or by allowing foreign access to the online-gambling market. That year ended last April, but rather than do anything to comply, the United States simply issued a statement to the effect that it had spent the year reviewing the matter and decided that it has been in compliance all along. Antigua is, unsurprisingly, challenging this response. A final decision from the WTO is expected early next year.

    It was in this context—a context to which Congress seems to have been largely oblivious—that Congress enacted its recent legislation. The legislation causes new problems, because it seems to clarify beyond any doubt that the United States does not, in fact, prohibit all forms of Internet gambling. Indeed, the law contains an explicit list of circumstances in which Internet gambling is permitted, including betting on horse racing and in-state gambling. So, whatever slender chance the United States may have had of establishing some broad moral objection to online gaming appears to have disappeared. In fact, things look so bleak for the United States that the government recently published a "Request for Comments" in the Federal Register that is essentially a nationwide call for help from anyone who thinks they can come up with an argument it can use here. The government, it seems, is all out of ideas.

    The obvious question is what Antigua can do with a victory at the WTO. Retaliatory tariffs plainly aren't particularly appealing for small country like Antigua, because they would certainly hurt more than they would help. But the plucky little island paradise does have some creative options at its disposal. If the United States remains recalcitrant, under the WTO rules, Antigua would potentially have the right to suspend its own compliance with the treaty that obligates it to respect the United States' intellectual-property laws. That, one can well imagine, might get Washington's attention.

    Want a cheap copy of Microsoft's latest software or a nice medical device that, annoyingly, is protected by a U.S. patent? Come to Antigua. In such a scenario, Antigua couldn't simply be ostracized as a rogue state. It would have every right under WTO rules to pursue such a course. In fact, Antigua could go down this road only in response to the United States' continuing refusal to honor its international obligations. While there undoubtedly would be complicated issues and restrictions on the scope of any suspension the WTO approves, the United States shouldn't assume that the world body is too timid to hand Antigua this sort of stick with which to retaliate, since it has authorized intellectual-property-based reprisal before. Antigua's frank calculation here, of course, is that while the administration might be comfortable stiffing the Antiguan trade representative, it would probably take notice if, say, an irate Microsoft or Disney started insisting that it get this problem solved.

    This whole episode may turn out to be a case study of what can go wrong when Congress succumbs to an idea that probably should never have made it out of the 19th century—prohibition—in far more complex contemporary circumstances. To the extent it has been thinking about the dispute with Antigua at all, the United States may have been assuming that it could white-knuckle any public-relations fallout and not actually have to change its behavior. In the past, in an economy based largely on physical goods, this might have been a reasonable strategy, but it doesn't look good when intellectual property is such a crucial asset. As the United States knows better than anyone, useful intellectual-property protection requires a shared set of global enforcement agreements. Precisely because it has the most to gain from this system, the United States is also uniquely vulnerable to gaps in it. And that's why allowing countries like Antigua to suspend intellectual-property treaties in trade disputes gives them such a potent weapon, a fact that the United States, much to its annoyance, may soon learn.
    In the wee hours of an early Saturday morning several weeks ago, about half an hour before Congress left for its pre-election recess, it passed the...
    Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

  • #2
    Oerdin, just for me, could your next thread be something criticizing something that is not somehow affiliated with the Repubs?
    Resident Filipina Lady Boy Expert.

    Comment


    • #3
      Check the last five threads I've made. Only two have been about Republicans dispite the election last week.

      Edit: Actually 3 out of 7. 4 out of 8 if you think the discussion about electronic voting machines is anti-Republican. Either way I make tons of nonpolitical threads along with the tons of political threads I make.
      Last edited by Dinner; November 16, 2006, 20:16.
      Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

      Comment


      • #4
        Besides, I like politics and I'm going to keep posting about things I like.
        Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

        Comment


        • #5
          Well I only asked as a personal favour.

          Besides, I enjoy your non-politico threads
          Resident Filipina Lady Boy Expert.

          Comment


          • #6
            Before I reply I need to know more about the glorious Democrat civilization.
            1011 1100
            Pyrebound--a free online serial fantasy novel

            Comment


            • #7
              Gambling is trade?

              Comment


              • #8
                Your article has nothing at all to do with Republicans.
                "You're the biggest user of hindsight that I've ever known. Your favorite team, in any sport, is the one that just won. If you were a woman, you'd likely be a slut." - Slowwhand, to Imran

                Eschewing silly games since December 4, 2005

                Comment


                • #9
                  It talks about a law which Republicans single handedly forced through in a vain attempt to appeal to religious conservatives during the run up to last week's election. Namely the ban on using credit cards for internet gambling.

                  Apparently, gambling is indeed a form of international commerce and since the US allows politically favored domestic groups to continue gambling (like the horse racing industry) then it is illegal to block foreign companies from also taking part in this trade. The WTO gets to name a way for countries which are locked out of this trade to get compensated and since Antigue doesn't import much it looks like they might get a free ride in another area. Possibly intellectual property from the US.
                  Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    This could really nasty. A lot of American IT has export restrictions that are very commonly ignored, and IT isn't alone.

                    If the US wanted to get pissy, any Antiguan who particpated in the distribution of said technology could face a nasty surprise on a stopover in New York.
                    (\__/)
                    (='.'=)
                    (")_(") This is Bunny. Copy and paste bunny into your signature to help him gain world domination.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Oh, and filed under 'what to do the next time they **** with our trees.'
                      (\__/)
                      (='.'=)
                      (")_(") This is Bunny. Copy and paste bunny into your signature to help him gain world domination.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by Oerdin
                        It talks about a law which Republicans single handedly forced through in a vain attempt to appeal to religious conservatives during the run up to last week's election. Namely the ban on using credit cards for internet gambling.
                        No, it talks about a law that made it through the system easily. It passed 407-2 in the house and unanimously in the Senate. The Republicans didn't force anything.

                        This is about the fourth thread in two months where your comments have had absolutely nothing to do with the article you've posted.

                        Oh, and your article doesn't mention anything about religious conservatives either.
                        "You're the biggest user of hindsight that I've ever known. Your favorite team, in any sport, is the one that just won. If you were a woman, you'd likely be a slut." - Slowwhand, to Imran

                        Eschewing silly games since December 4, 2005

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          The enforcement provision is a logical bill to pass, assuming you're going to stick with what you had before. This doesn't make things any worse; it simply fails to help anything.

                          Oh, and I do think the author of this piece had a little too much crack cocaine before sitting down to write it.

                          Anyone want to tell me the odds of Antigua going to a trade war with the US? Erm, right. 0. Because the US is the global leader or at least in the top 2 or 3 in pretty much everything Antigua cares about trading for, especially tourists; while Antigua is ... um, they make something we want, right? Oh yeah, tourism. Eh, who cares...

                          You have to have something the other side wants in a trade war ... otherwise the US will simply ban travel to or from Antigua, and be done with it. Who cares about software piracy, that happens in much larger countries already ...

                          Though I'd think we need to either ban or not ban gambling over the internet. That I agree with Although I think some of the issues that the WTO/Antigua raise are due to our Federal system - ie, the Federal Government doesn't really have the power to ban gambling inside of a state, only state-to-state things. Hence Nevada. I'm not an expert on the Wire act, but I think the Wire act essentially prohibits interstate gambling while not discussing intrastate gambling... not that internet gambling qualifies, but if a state permits a gambling site to have a base in its borders, that state's residents would then be permitted to use it...
                          <Reverend> IRC is just multiplayer notepad.
                          I like your SNOOPY POSTER! - While you Wait quote.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by Jaguar

                            No, it talks about a law that made it through the system easily. It passed 407-2 in the house and unanimously in the Senate. The Republicans didn't force anything.

                            This is about the fourth thread in two months where your comments have had absolutely nothing to do with the article you've posted.

                            Oh, and your article doesn't mention anything about religious conservatives either.
                            That's just a function of bill packaging. Would you vote against the "Defense of Our Little Children from Evil Sexual Predators Act?"
                            When all else fails, blame brown people. | Hire a teen, while they still know it all. | Trump-Palin 2016. "You're fired." "I quit."

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Probably, given its likely contents, yes.

                              Although there's a reason I wouldn't make it far in politics ...
                              <Reverend> IRC is just multiplayer notepad.
                              I like your SNOOPY POSTER! - While you Wait quote.

                              Comment

                              Working...
                              X