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[IP] Intellectual Property Prosecutions Double, Says Justice





Begin forwarded message:

From: Richard Forno <rforno@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: June 21, 2006 8:27:59 AM EDT
To: Infowarrior List <infowarrior@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: Dave Farber <dave@xxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Intellectual Property Prosecutions Double, Says Justice

...but they can't say the same thing about terrorism, can they? Can anyone
say 'misplaced priorities'  ??

-rf


Intellectual Property Prosecutions Double, Says Justice
From Broadcasting & Cable, June 20, 2006
By John Eggerton
http://www.freepress.net/news/print.php?id=16153

The Justice Department Tuesday is issuing a status report on protection of intellectual property in the digital age, saying it has almost doubled the
number of defendants prosecuted for intellectual property crimes.

Even Court TV has been part of the solution, according to the department.

In its 104-page progress report, the Task force on Intellectual Property
says it has implemented recommendations made in October 2004, when it issued
its initial report about what steps needed to be taken.

Among the progress it is reporting:

•Boosting the number of prosecutors of intellectual property crimes by a
dozen.

•Creating an intellectual property educational program for young people
(including distributing information on college campuses).

•Increasing the number of defendants prosecuted for intellectual property
offenses 98% (from 177 in fiscal year 2004 to 350 in 2005).

•Training over 2,000 prosecutors in other countries and boosting efforts in
Asia and Eastern Europe.

•Partnering with the Patent Office to put $900,000 over three years into
piracy prevention efforts.

•Teaming with Court TV, which has covered a number of events on intellectual
property rights.

Prosecuting the theft of DISH’s satellite signal by a man who made over
$300,000 selling pirated and re-programmed devices.

Content providers, arguably led by NBC Universal Chairman Bob Wright, have been pushing for stronger copyright protections and stepped-up pursuit of IP pirates, arguing they threaten hundreds of billions of dollars across a host of sectors, from counterfeit drugs to stolen TV shows, and could impede the
transition to digital content distribution.

In October 2005, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales added new members to the
task force and told it to implement the 2004 recommendations ASAP.




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