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EU Courts Asked to Rule On ACTA

by - source: BBC

The European Union's highest court has been asked to rule on ACTA.

The Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement has been largely criticized and garnered international attention following the high-profile anti-SOPA and anti-PIPA demonstrations earlier this year. Already signed by numerous countries, opponents believe the treaty will harm free speech and are fighting to have their countries reexamine the bill. Germany, the Netherlands, Slovenia, and Slovakia have said they are delaying their signing of the agreement in order to carry out further discussions. Similarly, Bulgaria, Poland, the Czech Republic, and Latvia have delayed the process in their countries following pressure from Anti-ACTA supporters. Today we learn that the European Commission will be referring ACTA to the European Union's highest court.

According to the BBC, EU trade commissioner Karel De Gucht said today that the European Court of Justice had been asked to study the bill to see if it violated "the EU's fundamental rights and freedoms."

"Let me be very clear: I share people's concern for these fundamental freedoms... especially over the freedom of the internet," De Gucht is quoted as saying. "This debate must be based upon facts, and not upon the misinformation and rumour that has dominated social media sites and blogs in recent weeks."

ACTA has already been signed by 22 EU member states, as well as the United States, Australia, Canada, Japan, Morocco, New Zealand, Singapore, and South Korea. Those against ACTA believe that the agreement will harm free speech and that it is designed with only content creators in mind. Though it has been signed by many countries, no one has ratified the treaty yet. European Parliament is set to debate ACTA in June.

Follow @JaneMcEntegart on Twitter for the latest news.                        

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wifiwolf 22/02/2012 20:02
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So we sign it first and discuss later?
Wow

silver565 22/02/2012 20:12
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America pushing their rubbish on the world. Because this never happens!

Keep your stupid laws to yourself, quit ruining the world for the rest of us

dizzy_davidh 23/02/2012 06:37
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Any EU country that signs-up to the act is simply wasting it's time as until the EU courts have given it the green light it will be seen as a contravention of human rights and any legal cases raised by it's supposed powers would be overturned upon appeal to the european court as it would be a breach of your human rights (until such time that the EU signs the act to make it european law).

Sign-up to the EU then you have pretty much no say as a nation when it comes to these types of acts which is good in some cases but not in others such as when you want to deport condemned terrorists to their home country (nations right not to have a terrorist living amongst them versus a terrorists right to not be deported to his home country because when there he will go straight to prison - go figure? That is the EU for you, a real contradiction!).

ppumkin 23/02/2012 13:46
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So.. we will just create a sub internet.. that ignores all this *cencored by acta*,*cencored by acta**cencored by acta**cencored by acta*--*cencored by acta**cencored by acta*!! *cencored by acta*.

You know- Look at apple Store.. How quick did cydia pop up.. and the frightening thing everybody knows about. ACTA schmatka.. Just these big corporations want a legal way to put praters (pirate'es) into jail. You know- like tobacco kills.. but is legal because of multi billion corporation laws and tax income.. And it it our fault, because we are just human.

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