USA 2011 Special 301 Report
E' uscito il solito rapporto annuale dell'Office of the United States Trade Representative, il cosiddetto "Rapporto 301": http://www.ustr.gov/about-us/press-office/reports-and-publications/2011/2011... A seguire la scheda sull'Italia (ancora in "Watch List"). Notate il vivo incoraggiamento all'AGCOM. juan carlos ITALY Italy remains on the Watch List with an Out-of-Cycle review to be conducted this year. Italy continued to make progress in improving its IPR protection and enforcement in 2010, including by increased cooperation among law enforcement officials and improved enforcement actions against certain types of IPR violations. The United States remains concerned that, overall enforcement against copyright piracy continues to be inadequate and that piracy over the Internet continues to grow, severely damaging the legitimate market for distribution of copyrighted works. The United States welcomes recent efforts to address piracy over the Internet, and looks forward to measures to help ameliorate this problem. Specifically, proposed regulations by the Italian Communications Authority (AGCOM) could provide rights holders with an avenue to curb IPR violations online in an effective manner. The United States encourages Italy to ensure that the AGCOM regulations are swiftly promulgated and implemented, that these regulations create an effective mechanism against copyright piracy over the Internet, and that they address all types of piracy that takes place online. The United States also encourages Italy to address other IPR issues, including a troubling Data Protection Agency ruling prohibiting the monitoring of peer-to-peer networks. While rights holders report good efforts by the Finance Police and the Customs Police, few cases reach final sentencing and courts still fail to impose deterrent level sentences. The United States will continue to work with Italy to address these and other matters.
Scusate ma questo passaggio non è scandaloso? "The United States also encourages Italy to address other IPR issues, including a troubling Data Protection Agency ruling prohibiting the monitoring of peer-to-peer networks" On 2 May 2011 21:54, J.C. DE MARTIN <demartin@polito.it> wrote:
E' uscito il solito rapporto annuale dell'Office of the United States Trade Representative, il cosiddetto "Rapporto 301":
http://www.ustr.gov/about-us/press-office/reports-and-publications/2011/2011...
A seguire la scheda sull'Italia (ancora in "Watch List"). Notate il vivo incoraggiamento all'AGCOM.
juan carlos
ITALY
Italy remains on the Watch List with an Out-of-Cycle review to be conducted this year. Italy continued to make progress in improving its IPR protection and enforcement in 2010, including by increased cooperation among law enforcement officials and improved enforcement actions against certain types of IPR violations. The United States remains concerned that, overall enforcement against copyright piracy continues to be inadequate and that piracy over the Internet continues to grow, severely damaging the legitimate market for distribution of copyrighted works. The United States welcomes recent efforts to address piracy over the Internet, and looks forward to measures to help ameliorate this problem. Specifically, proposed regulations by the Italian Communications Authority (AGCOM) could provide rights holders with an avenue to curb IPR violations online in an effective manner. The United States encourages Italy to ensure that the AGCOM regulations are swiftly promulgated and implemented, that these regulations create an effective mechanism against copyright piracy over the Internet, and that they address all types of piracy that takes place online. The United States also encourages Italy to address other IPR issues, including a troubling Data Protection Agency ruling prohibiting the monitoring of peer-to-peer networks. While rights holders report good efforts by the Finance Police and the Customs Police, few cases reach final sentencing and courts still fail to impose deterrent level sentences. The United States will continue to work with Italy to address these and other matters.
_______________________________________________ nexa mailing list nexa@server-nexa.polito.it https://server-nexa.polito.it/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nexa
-- Avv. Marco Scialdone Blog: http://scialdone.blogspot.com Site: www.computerlaw.it PEC: marcoscialdone@ordineavvocatiroma.org Flavors me <http://flavors.me/marcoscialdone> My profile: www.linkedin.com/in/marcoscialdone CC Network: https://creativecommons.net/marcoscialdone/
Marco, On Tue, May 3, 2011 at 9:48 AM, marco scialdone <marcoscialdone@gmail.com> wrote:
Scusate ma questo passaggio non è scandaloso?
"The United States also encourages Italy to address other IPR issues, including a troubling Data Protection Agency ruling prohibiting the monitoring of peer-to-peer networks"
Perche` lo trovi scandaloso? Ciao, Andrea
Non so se l'ho letta male io, ma a me sembrava un "prendersela" con un'autorità amministrativa nazionale come se fosse un suo vezzo quello di opporsi al monitoraggio indiscriminato del traffico p2p e non l'applicazione delle legislazione italiana in materia di protezione dei dati personali. On 3 May 2011 10:04, Andrea Glorioso <andrea@digitalpolicy.it> wrote:
Marco,
On Tue, May 3, 2011 at 9:48 AM, marco scialdone <marcoscialdone@gmail.com> wrote:
Scusate ma questo passaggio non è scandaloso?
"The United States also encourages Italy to address other IPR issues, including a troubling Data Protection Agency ruling prohibiting the monitoring of peer-to-peer networks"
Perche` lo trovi scandaloso?
Ciao,
Andrea _______________________________________________ nexa mailing list nexa@server-nexa.polito.it https://server-nexa.polito.it/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nexa
-- Avv. Marco Scialdone Blog: http://scialdone.blogspot.com Site: www.computerlaw.it PEC: marcoscialdone@ordineavvocatiroma.org Flavors me <http://flavors.me/marcoscialdone> My profile: www.linkedin.com/in/marcoscialdone CC Network: https://creativecommons.net/marcoscialdone/
In data martedì 3 maggio 2011 10:17:59, marco scialdone ha scritto:
Non so se l'ho letta male io, ma a me sembrava un "prendersela" con un'autorità amministrativa nazionale come se fosse un suo vezzo quello di opporsi al monitoraggio indiscriminato del traffico p2p e non l'applicazione delle legislazione italiana in materia di protezione dei dati personali. forse il report intende dire che l'autorità interpreta in maniera partigiana le norme? m.c.
On 3 May 2011 10:04, Andrea Glorioso <andrea@digitalpolicy.it> wrote:
Marco,
On Tue, May 3, 2011 at 9:48 AM, marco scialdone
<marcoscialdone@gmail.com> wrote:
Scusate ma questo passaggio non è scandaloso?
"The United States also encourages Italy to address other IPR issues, including a troubling Data Protection Agency ruling prohibiting the monitoring of peer-to-peer networks"
Perche` lo trovi scandaloso?
Ciao,
Andrea _______________________________________________ nexa mailing list nexa@server-nexa.polito.it https://server-nexa.polito.it/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nexa
Essendosene discusso in lista, segnalo la mia posizione sul rapporto: http://punto-informatico.it/3149990/PI/Commenti/signori-del-copyright-chiama... Buon lavoro e/o buona serata a tutte/i, gs __ www.guidoscorza.it Il giorno 02/mag/2011, alle ore 21.54, J.C. DE MARTIN ha scritto:
E' uscito il solito rapporto annuale dell'Office of the United States Trade Representative, il cosiddetto "Rapporto 301": http://www.ustr.gov/about-us/press-office/reports-and-publications/2011/2011...
A seguire la scheda sull'Italia (ancora in "Watch List"). Notate il vivo incoraggiamento all'AGCOM.
juan carlos
ITALY
Italy remains on the Watch List with an Out-of-Cycle review to be conducted this year. Italy continued to make progress in improving its IPR protection and enforcement in 2010, including by increased cooperation among law enforcement officials and improved enforcement actions against certain types of IPR violations. The United States remains concerned that, overall enforcement against copyright piracy continues to be inadequate and that piracy over the Internet continues to grow, severely damaging the legitimate market for distribution of copyrighted works. The United States welcomes recent efforts to address piracy over the Internet, and looks forward to measures to help ameliorate this problem. Specifically, proposed regulations by the Italian Communications Authority (AGCOM) could provide rights holders with an avenue to curb IPR violations online in an effective manner. The United States encourages Italy to ensure that the AGCOM regulations are swiftly promulgated and implemented, that these regulations create an effective mechanism against copyright piracy over the Internet, and that they address all types of piracy that takes place online. The United States also encourages Italy to address other IPR issues, including a troubling Data Protection Agency ruling prohibiting the monitoring of peer-to-peer networks. While rights holders report good efforts by the Finance Police and the Customs Police, few cases reach final sentencing and courts still fail to impose deterrent level sentences. The United States will continue to work with Italy to address these and other matters.
_______________________________________________ nexa mailing list nexa@server-nexa.polito.it https://server-nexa.polito.it/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nexa
participants (6)
-
Andrea Glorioso -
Guido Scorza -
J.C. DE MARTIN -
Marco Ciurcina -
marco scialdone -
Paolo Brini