With a plethora of recommendations and reviews outstanding, the Attorney-General’s commitment to an overhaul of the Copyright Act 1968 is well timed. The ADA forum kicks off the year exploring many of the current legal gaps and innovative solutions in the world of copyright. From the challenges of making WWI materials accessible to regional areas through to digital publishing and open licencing, the ADA Forum remains the premier user-focused event discussing the changing copyright landscape in Australia.
The Attorney-General’s Department is seeking comments on the best way to implement the Marrakesh Treaty. The treaty aims to ensure the blind and visually impaired can obtain works in an accessible form, such as braille, large print or audio books. Currently only between 3-7% of the world’s books are ever produced in accessible formats, a situation often referred to as the ‘book famine’.
Unlike the rest of the secret TPP trade deal, we actually know a lot about the IP chapter. A series of leaks, the most recent of the May 2014 version of the negotiating text means that we can analyse the proposals in some detail.
The chapter has been subject to a fair amount of criticism, in current form it has the ability to impact negatively upon economic growth, innovation policy, freedom of expression and public health.
Overnight a ray of light broke across the secretive Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPP) with the release of the negotiating text for the highly contentious Intellectual Property Chapter. The leak confirms that worrying provisions that would negatively impact on access to knowledge, freedom of expression<
A new research paper into authorisation liability commissioned by the Australian Digital Alliance has thrown into further doubt claims that we are in breach of our international obligations.
Comparing Australia’s regime to those in place in other common-law countries, including the USA, the report concludes that ‘Australia’s authorisation law is already at least as broad as its overseas equivalents’ and that extending it further ‘would impose new obligations on all sectors beyond those required of their competitors overseas’.