Obama’s trade reps and the MPAA are killing a copyright treaty that gives rights to disabled people

FileCopyrightSimpleEnglishWikibookheader.pngJim Fruchterman, founder of the NGO Benetech, writes in frustration from the World Intellectual Property Organization in Geneva, where the US Trade Representative is scuttling a treaty that will help blind people and people with other disabilities access copyrighted works, largely by making the (actually rather good) US laws the standard around the world.

1. Commercial Availability Requirements. This poison pill says that if a book is commercially available in an accessible format, it can’t be provided by a library to a person with a disability. This is equivalent to walking into a public library and finding padlocks on all the books with a note that says: “If you want to read it, buy it.” With a commercial availability requirement, libraries like Bookshare, with hundreds of thousands of accessible books available to people with print disabilities, would have to go through such complex bureaucracy that we couldn’t afford to serve people outside the U.S. under a Treaty. The World Blind Union’s lead negotiator pointed out how these provisions would, in practice, stop Bookshare from serving blind people in India.

via Boing Boing.

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