This post discusses some of the tensions that exist between the increasing effort to enforce Intellectual Property Rights and the impact of the Internet.<\/em><\/p>\n
<\/a>Traditionally, Intellectual Property was only considered in the context of select fields, such as images, writing, music and inventions.\u00a0 However, in recent years, technology, and specifically the Internet, has been changing personal and social behaviour, the way we do business, and even the ways in which wealth is being created. This week, 23\u201427 April, the Jamaica Intellectual Property Organisation (JIPO)<\/a> has been celebrating IP Week under the theme, \u201cNation Building through Creativity & Innovation: Maximising our IP Potential<\/em>\u201d. \u00a0One of the activities, which was held yesterday, 26 April, was a seminar, \u201cIP in the digital age<\/em>\u201d, which discussed the use of trademarks on the web, and navigating rights and disputes on the Internet.<\/p>\n
Although most of us inherently have an idea of what Intellectual Property (IP) is, according to the World Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO<\/a>), it refers to \u201ccreations of the mind: inventions, literary and artistic works, and symbols, names, images, and designs used in commerce\u201d<\/em>.<\/p>\n
Table 1: Key types of Intellectual Property (Source: United States Patent and Trademark Office)<\/p><\/div>\n
Over the past 10\u201415 years in particular, the Internet has grown by leaps and bounds and is having a direct impact on all aspects of our lives. Due to its sheer pervasiveness \u2013 over 2.2 billion or 33% of the world\u2019s population have access to the Internet as at 31 December 2011 (Source: Internet World Stats<\/a>), it means that in principle, each individual user has the ability to reach every other person that has access to this resource. This potential is changing the way we interact with each other online, and offers a broad range of options through which we can share, earn and live.<\/p>\n
<\/a>Copyright infringement activities<\/strong>. However, one of the distinct challenges that has emerged, due to the relative anonymity and, to varying degrees, the absence of geographical borders the Internet affords, there are numerous opportunities to infringe on the IP rights of others for financial gain. As indicated in What do you need to know about the PROTECT IP Act?<\/em><\/strong><\/a>, developed countries are reportedly losing billions of dollars and thousands jobs due to copyright infringement activities that undermine a wide cross section of industries. Hence, in addition to the traditional IP legislation, countries worldwide, led by the United States, have been enacting ever more stringent laws to try to protect and enforce the rights of content creators.<\/p>\n
\u2026. a party’s liability under the law, on the condition that the party performed its actions in good faith or in compliance with defined standards. Legislators may include safe-harbor provisions to protect legitimate or excusable violations, or to incentivize the adoption of desirable practices\u2026 (Source: Wikipedia<\/a>)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
Final remarks<\/h3>\n
The above conflicts suggest that Internet users and IP owners are not fully reconciled on the impact of the Internet on IP. IP owners are often eager for the support of users in promoting their products, ideas, services online, still want to have almost exclusive control of how those activities are conducted, which often and inherently undermines the desire (and opportunity) to share. Hence although a mutually beneficial relationship between IP and IT can exist, there are still a number adjustments that ought to be made to better accommodate the changing paradigm that is occurring due to the Internet.<\/p>\n
Images courtesy of Idea go <\/a>and Stuart Miles<\/a>, freedigitalphotos.net<\/em><\/p>\n
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