Hague Conference Threatens Entire Internet/Public Domain
           From James Carmody [EMAIL PROTECTED]
           Random-bits digest, Vol 1 #252 - 6-21-1

                          By James Love
                          [EMAIL PROTECTED]
                  Consumer Project on Technology
                       http://www.cptech.org

As the Hague Conference Diplomatic Conference Ends The Internet and
the Public Domain Are At Risk

INTRODUCTION

Today the Hague Conference on Private International Law will end
its first diplomatic conference on a new treaty to set the rules
for jurisdiction for nearly all commercial and civil litigation. In
a world where everyone is struggling to understand how to address
jurisdiction issues raised by the Internet, this new proposed
treaty imposes a bold set of rules that will profoundly change the
Internet, and not only that. As drafted, it will extend the reach
of every country's intellectual property laws, including those that
have nothing to do with the Internet.

What exactly does this new treaty seek to do? In a nutshell, it
will strangle the Internet with a suffocating blanket of
overlapping jurisdictional claims, expose every web page publisher
to liabilities for libel, defamation and other speech offenses from
virtually any country, effectively strip Internet Service Providers
of protections from litigation over the content they carry, give
business who sell or distribute goods and services the right to
dictate via contracts the countries where disputes will be resolved
and rights defended, and narrow the grounds under which countries
can protect individual consumer rights. It provides a mechanism to
greatly undermine national policies on the "first sale" doctrine,
potentially ending royalty free video rentals for corporate
entities with overseas assets, and it opens the door for cross
border enforcement of a wide range of intellectual property claims,
including new and novel rights that do not have broad international
acceptance. It will lead to a great reduction in freedom, shrink
the public domain, and diminish national sovereignty. And
practically no one knows anything about the treaty.

This proposed Hague treaty stands the tradition globalization
approach on its head. It does not impose global rules on
substantive laws -- countries are free to enact very different
national laws on commercial matters. The only treaty obligation is
that member countries follows rules on jurisdiction and agree to
enforce foreign judgments. Rather than a WTO or WIPO type approach
of harmonization of substantive policies, every country can march
to its own drummer. The treaty is about enforcing everyone's laws,
regardless of their content, and enforcing private contracts on
which national courts will resolve disputes. It is a treaty
framework that made some sense in a world of trade in pre-internet
goods and services that lend themselves to easy interpretation of
jurisdiction based upon physical activity. It is a treaty that
makes little sense when applied to information published on the
Internet, and more generally for intellectual property claims,
where one should not leap into cross border enforcement without
thinking.

THE HAGUE CONFERENCE ON PRIVATE INTERNATIONAL LAW

The Hague Conference on Private International Law is a little known
organization that held its first meetings in 1893, but did not have
a permanent status until 1951, and since then has adopted 34
international conventions, mostly on very narrow and often obscure
topics, such as the taking of evidence abroad, the form of
testamentary depositions, wills, traffic accidents, and several
dealing with children.

In 1965, the Hague Conference adopted a Convention on the choice of
court for civil litigation, but it only was endorsed by one country
-- Israel. The current effort is a renewed effort to deal with that
issue, and also the enforcement of judgments and other items, and
the scope is extremely wide -- nearly all civil and commercial
litigation. It is, without a doubt, the most ambitious project
undertaken by Convention, and the Secretariat and the member
country delegates are anxious to establish the Conference as a
major league actor in the rapidly changing global political
economy. Despite its grand ambition, the Hague Conference
secretariat is tiny, about a dozen according to a FAQ on its web
page. The small size and low profile of the Hague Conference has
allowed this treaty, which has enormous significance, to go
virtually undetected, even though it is has been in discussions
since 1992.

POLITICS OF THE CONVENTION

The official version of this particular convention on jurisdiction
and enforcement of foreign judgments is that in 1992 the US began
seeking ways to obtain more equitable treatment of the enforcement
of judgments from commercial and civil litigation, and was willing
to cut back on some aspects of US "long arm" jurisdiction to do so.
In the beginning, none of the negotiators were thinking about the
Internet, and the treaty seemed to have limited interest to most
persons. By 1996 it was obvious to some that the Internet in
general and e-commerce in particular would pose special problems
for the Convention. By 1999 there was considerable attention given
by business interests on how the Convention could be drafted to
resolve a number of jurisdiction problems they faced, and in
particular, the Hague Secretariat began suggesting the Convention
could be used to replace overlapping national laws on consumer
protection and privacy with industry lead alternative dispute
resolution systems -- a top priority for the biggest e-commerce
firms.

Meanwhile, Europe was developing its own rules for jurisdiction
that made some sense in an environment where you had entities like
the European Parliament and the European Commission to force
harmonization of substantive law. Europe was also alarmed and
jealous of the US leadership in the development of the Internet.
European negotiators pushed hard to impose a treaty based upon the
EU's Brussels Convention, not only to preserve the European
approach, but to lead, for once, in an important area for the
Internet.

The European negotiators were also unhappy with the generally free
and unruly nature of the Internet, and saw the convention as a
mechanism to reign in hate speech, libel and defamatory speech,
"piracy" of intellectual property, the publishing of government
secrets and documents on the Internet (the David Shayler case), and
other unsettling aspects of the Internet.

The business community, meanwhile, was unhappy with the EU approach
to providing consumer protection, including privacy rights, and
fearful that the Convention could expose them to lawsuits from
several different countries for violating consumer protection and
privacy laws.

Meanwhile, Napster had mobilized the music and movie businesses,
and they increasing saw the need for stronger cross border
enforcement of copyrights, including the need for injunctive relief
aimed at ISPs, and the strong long and order (you can run but you
can't hide) nature of the Hague convention was very appealing to an
industry afraid of losing control over its own business models.

A few IPS (Verizon and AT&T) and portals (Yahoo, following its
education over the French civil suit over Nazi artifacts) saw this
as a repeat of the fights over the digital copyright laws, and
lobbied to retain some form of common carrier status, which was
greatly undermined by the architecture of the Hague Convention,
which was to make everyone's judgments enforceable everywhere,
even in countries that had no connection to the tort or delict
(greatly undermining the usefulness of national "public policy"
exceptions).

Within the various member country delegations, you have some that
have strong experience in contracts and business to business
arbitration, and who see the 1958 New York Convention on the
Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards as a
successful model to emulate. You have other members who are
primarily interested in torts, which come at the issues from a
different perspective, and who don't see the convention entirely as
strengthening the enforcement of contracts.

In 2000 some elements of civil society became aware of the
convention, and in particular, BEUC (the European consumer groups),
the Trans Atlantic Consumer Dialogue (TACD), including both US and
EU members, the American Library Association, the Free Software
movement, and some US free speech groups, such as the ACLU, began
to follow the Convention. In 2000 the Consumer Project on
Technology made the Hague Convention its top e-commerce priority,
and by September 2000 the US government added Manon Ress from
Essential Information on the US delegation (which already had
several private sector members representing business interests).

For the past two years, in a series of meeting leading up to the
June Diplomatic Conference (which ends today), there were efforts
to sort of the impact of the convention on e-commerce and on
intellectual property. The US in particular was quite open in
consulting with civil society and the public in general, and
Australia asked for public consultations too, but it would appear
that no other countries did. However, while civil society concerns
were presented at virtually every negotiating meeting over the past
year, this month's diplomatic conference was a powerful
illustration of the power of the business lobbies.

The EU seemed to undertaking a strategy of pushing for a
"disconnect" for regional agreements, and in particular, for its
own EU directive on Jurisdiction take precedence in EU to EU
transactions, leaving intact the stronger EU consumer protection
measures for EU to EU transactions, while bowing to US government
pressure to gut consumer protection provisions from the 1999 draft
of the convention. This was a major victory for the big e-commerce
firms.

One element of this was to essentially expand the definition of
"business to business" transactions, and to greatly strengthen the
role of contracts in the convention, making for example, choice of
court clauses mandatory in almost everything that does not involve
personal or household use (and sometimes even then), even when
these are "non-negotiated" contracts, such as shrink wrap or click-
on contracts. Despite repeated efforts by civil society to fix
this, and to limit the enforcement of such clauses where the
contracts had been "obtained by an abuse of economic power or other
unfair means." The delegates refused, at least in this draft.

So too there was a complete unwilling to address the importance of
speech related torts, despite the fact that the membership in the
Hague Conference now includes China, Egypt and many other countries
that engage in harassment of dissent, and which can easily create
repressive civil actions to stop dissent. The EU delegates would
not even consider adding favorable speech language from the
European convention on human rights.

A major objective of CPT, TACD, the Library community and the free
software movement was to take intellectual property out of the
convention, a move initially supported by the trademark and patent
societies, due to the ham-handed way that patents and trademarks
had been addressed in the 1999 secretariat draft of the convention,
and also the subject of a WIPO sponsored meeting in Geneva in
January 2001. In February 2001, in Ottawa, the US government
actually circulated a paper to the delegates that said the US would
not sign the convention if intellectual property was included.
AOL/Time Warner, Disney, the MPAA, RIAA, publisher groups and other
content owners went ballistic, and by the June meeting the US
position had changed, and yesterday, intellectual property was
included in the convention, in a form stronger than ever. Also
noteworthy was the new bracketed language:

[In this Article, other registered industrial property rights (but
not copyright or neighbouring rights, even when registration or
deposit is possible) shall be treated in the same way as patents
and marks.]

"Other registered industrial property rights" will cover a lot of
ground.

There are many more details of the negotiations from the URLs given
below.

It's time for me to end this for now. For more information, and in
particular to understand better how the convention works, see:

http://www.cptech.org/ecom/jurisdiction/hague.html
            http://www.cptech.org/ecom/jurisdiction/whatyoushouldknow.html

http://lists.essential.org/pipermail/hague-jur-commercial-law/2001-June/0000
48.html

http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/hague.html

http://www.tacd.org/cgi-bin/db.cgi?page=view&config=admin/docs.cfg&id=94

http://lists.essential.org/pipermail/hague-jur-commercial-law/

To see which countries and agencies are engaged in the Hague
Negotiations, see: http://www.hcch.net/e/members/members.html ___

   By James Love Consumer Project on Technology P.O. Box 19367,
   Washington, DC 20036  http://www.cptech.org  [EMAIL PROTECTED]





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