Wkrótce zacznie się wprowadzanie poprawek do Konwencji Haskiej. Nie byłoby w tym nic nadzwyczajnego, gdyby nie fakt, że obecny projekt zmian zakłada m. in. uznawanie amerykańskiego prawa patentowego (części związanej z internetem) oraz możliwość cenzurowania europejskich site’ów internetowych niezgodnych z prawem jakiegoś kraju.

Oznacza to, że amerykański sąd będzie mógł nakazać zamknięcie dostępu do jakiejś witryny obywatelom amerykańskim. Taka sytuacja może wystąpić, gdy zgromadzone na niej informacje pogwałcają jeden z patentów lub amerykańskie prawo.

Teoretycznie istnieje szansa zamknięcia dostępu do danego serwera danej grupie adresów internetowych, jednak dzięki możliwości tworzenia tuneli nie sposób dziś wyłączyć jakąś grupę odbiorców, co oznacza, że jedynym sposobem spełnienia tych wymagań będzie usunięcie spornych materiałów.

Problem dotyczy również Polski, która podpisała Konwencje Haską wiele lat temu…

Poniżej przytaczam maila informującego o tej sprawie.

  -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----  Hash: SHA1    EuroLinux: U.S. Internet Patents to be Enforced in EU?  (Jun 5th, 16:57:29 )    US Internet Patents to be Enforced in EU ?            Hague Convention Draft Provides Legal Grounds for Global Internet Censorship                      EuroLinux Alliance / petition.EuroLinux.org       Paris. 2001-06-05. The draft Hague Convention is to be revised from     June 6th. The Hague Convention defines a set of provisions for the     execution of foreign judgements in the event of international     disputes. Current drafts include industrial property and intellectual     property within the potential scope of the proposed Convention. If the     current draft were approved, the Hague Convention would eventually     allow:          1.to enforce US Internet patents in EU;          2.to enforce non-EU laws in order to censor EU Internet web sites.       An EU company publishing on a server located in the EU a web service     which provides Internet airplane reservation services worldwide could     be sued in the US by PriceLine for infringement on patent 5,794,207. A     US judge could decide that this EU company should block access to its     service to US citizens unless it gets a license from PriceLine. Under     the current draft of the Hague Convention, such a  judgement would be     enforceable in the EU.       A researcher who publishes on a EU server an article on the weaknesses     of encryption techniques used in the media industry (ex. CSS, SDMI,     etc.) could be sued in the US for infringing the Digital Millenium     Copyright Act. A US judge could decide that this EU researcher should     block access to its research article to all US citizens. Under the     current draft of the Hague Convention, such a  judgement would be     enforceable in the EU.       Because all known techniques to block access to a category of     citizens, people, country or IP adresses can be easily circumvented     through "email tunneling" (a technique which consists in encapsulating     any Internet protocol into encrypted email messages), the only two     ways of enforcing foreign judgements which entail blocking access to a     server require either to close EU services or contents which infringe     on foreign laws, thus creating the conditions for global censorship,     or to prohibit encryption and deny privacy on the Internet.       Members of the Hague Conference include all EU countries as well as     Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Bulgaria, Canada, Chile, China, Croatia,     Cyprus, Czech Republic, Egypt, Estonia, Former Yugoslav Republic of     Macedonia, Georgia,  Hungary,  Israel, Japan, Republic of Korea,     Latvia, Malta, Mexico, Monaco, Morocco, Peru, Poland,  Romania,     Slovakia, Slovenia, Suriname, Switzerland, Turkey, the United States     of America, Uruguay and Venezuela.       Some of these countries are well known for their agressive software     patent practices or their restrictive laws on free speech. In     particular, EuroLinux feels very concerned by the eventual     enforceability of foreign Internet & software patents in Europe.     EuroLinux urges members of the Hague Conference to put on hold current     plans to extend the execution of foreign judgements in the fields of     industial and intellectual property until their effects on software     and the Internet have been carefully assessed.    References       CPT's Page on the Hague Conference on Private International Law's -     http://www.cptech.org/ecom/jurisdiction/hague.html       Hague Conference on Private International Law -     http://www.hcch.net/f/conventions/draft36f.html       Intellectual Property Draft -     http://www.cptech.org/ecom/jurisdiction/IPWorkgroup3.pdf       EuroLinux petition for a Software Patent Free Europe -     http://petition.EuroLinux.org/      Printed from Linux Today (http://linuxtoday.com).  http://linuxtoday.com/news_story.php3?ltsn=2001-06-05-002-21-NW-BZ-CY  - --   Hugo Gayosso  Support Free Software  Support the GNU Project   http://www.gnu.org  http://wildebeest.myip.org  -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----  Version: GnuPG v1.0.6 (GNU/Linux)  Comment: For info see http://www.gnupg.org    iD8DBQE7HXv6MNObVRBZveYRAvT1AJ0R/2UFDr3qZQjIFUFVXqEfwJlQtQCfb+B5  FZPPQW8MkmQBgctrsA2sjyY=  =4/Ou  -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----  

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