• World Intellectual property Organization DG Addresses COVID-19 ; Statement on Patent Sharing Due this Week | infojustice
    http://infojustice.org/archives/42235

    Le directeur de l’OMPI se pose des questions sur ce qu’il faut faire avec les progrès médicaux pour contrer le COVID-19. Un relâchement des règles de propriété intellectuelle est à l’étude.

    C’est un pas important pour ré-équilibrer la « hiérarchie des normes », en plaçant le droit à la santé et les droits humains devant les brevets de médicaments.

    Il reste à espérer que ce qui va sortir des décisions sera à la hauteur.

    Dans tous les cas, n’oublions pas que les Etats peuvent bloquer un brevet pour des raisons d’urgence nationale... Si un médicament contre le COVID-19 devait être breveté, cela serait un sous-produit de la démission politique des États... inimaginable en temps de cirse, n’est-ce pas ?

    Director Gurry Responds II: Considering Patent Sharing Tools

    The day after his public address, Director Gurry took questions from several members of the press. There he expounded on the issue of IP and health technology at some length, and released that he would be publishing a statement on the topic this week.

    On the press briefing, a reporter asked whether a recent compulsory license by Israel for COVID-19 medicines indicated “any risk of serious conflict growing” and “for the integrity of the patent market.” Gurry explained:

    “This is a hot issue and a very sensitive issue. I would say that starting point should be – we are in a profound crisis that is causing widespread suffering. There is a unanimous approach to reduce the suffering occurring. It is an extraordinary situation. The international framework does envision flexibilities to deal with health emergencies.”

    Gurry stated a desire that countries efforts be “targeted,” “that they deal with real needs and shortages.” He confirmed that this is what he was seeing in country responses thus far. “So far that is what we are seeing – targeted actions to people that need them.”

    Director Gurry appeared dismissive of more fundamental critiques of the IP “system” and expressed concern that some actions could derogate form the rights of artists and musicians. “I hope it is not a general blah blah about the intellectual property system,” he remarked.

    “We have an economy dependent on innovation. We have a society that is dependent more or less on the vitality of cultural products. We have to ensure as a secondary consideration (primacy is health and safety) that the actions we take are not just to derogate, for example in the creative industries — the actors and others who are unemployed.”

    Director Gurry stated his desire to “ensure that measures are time bound, targeted, . . . Whether that translates into a completely different system, I doubt it.”

    Gurry answered favorably to a follow up question on whether he envisioned “that WIPO will advance some special mechanism to share drug patents?” He described the difficulties of reaching negotiated multilateral solutions and stated that “non-legislative practical measures are a great way forward. We are in discussion with various parties to see what could be done in this regard.”

    Director Gurry included in his response that he actively considering a policy statement on the issue. “I will address this [issue of IP and health technology] in a communication toward the end of this week. It is a work in progress. I will say more about it at that stage.”

    #Brevets #Médicaments #OMPI #Big_pharma #Normes _internationales #Propriété_intellectuelle

  • An endless stream of law proposals, soft-law initiatives and free-trade agreements keeps trying to eradicate or prevent the non-market sharing of digital works between individuals. New strategies are pushed using incentives and threats so that intermediaries will police the Internet to save the #scarcity based business models of a few from the competition of abundance.

    Sharing is not a problem but a condition for the human (cultural) development.

    Failing to recognize sharing between individuals as a cultural right is an by-product of market fundamentalism.

    #Sharing is caring !

    http://infojustice.org/archives/29840

  • Nature Publishing Group to Allow Authors to License Their Work Under #Creative_Commons Attribution Licenses
    http://infojustice.org/archives/27784

    Earlier this month the Nature Publishing Group announced a new policy allowing authors of articles published in all 19 of its journals to publish under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) license. Authors choosing to make their work available under a CC-BY license will pay a “premium” article processing charge, which Nature says will make up for income it typically earns on reprints.

    #open_access #recherche via @hlc

  • Boldrin and Levine: “The Case Against Patents”
    http://infojustice.org/archives/27608

    The case against patents can be summarized briefly: there is no empirical evidence that they serve to increase innovation and productivity, unless the latter is identified with the number of patents awarded – which, as evidence shows, has no correlation with measured productivity. This is at the root of the “patent puzzle”: in spite of the enormeous increase in the number of patents and in the strength of their legal protection we have neither seen a dramatic acceleration in the rate of technological progress nor a major increase in the levels of R&D expenditure

    #brevets #recherche

  • On a piraté le droit de propriété intellectuelle. C’est en gros ce qu’affirment 180 professeurs de droits et juristes du monde entier qui se sont rassemblés le mois dernier à la Faculté de Droit de l’Université de Washington et ont conclu leurs travaux par une déclaration commune.

    Que dit cette déclaration ? Tout simplement que les extrémistes du copyright ont étendu au cours des 25 dernières années l’application du droit de propriété intellectuelle à un point qui menace les fondements même de nos sociétés [...]

    La déclaration de Washington « on Intellectual Property and the Public Interest » : http://infojustice.org/washington-declaration

    Une introduction en français : http://www.homo-numericus.net/breve1013.html

  • Draft Bill for a Civil Rights-Based Framework for Internet in Brazil

    It is the result of an initiative from the Brazilian Ministry of Justice, in partnership with the Center for Technology and Society of the Getulio Vargas Foundation (CTS/FGV), to develop a collaborative online/offline consultation process in which all the actors from Brazilian society could identify together the rights and responsibilities that should guide the use of the Internet in Brazil. The process, which resulted in a Bill of Law, is an example of the importance and the great potential of multistakeholder involvement on policy-making.

    http://infojustice.org/archives/5684