CCIA Praises WIPO Treaty On Access To Copyrighted Material For The Visually Impaired
6/26/2013
World Intellectual Property Organization member states have
agreed on treaty language that will mean millions of visually impaired people
around the world can gain access to special-formatted books. The agreement
after years of haggling over copyright issues came during a diplomatic
conference in Morocco going on throughout the past two weeks.
The Computer & Communications Industry Association has often
been the only industry group advocating on this issue at WIPO intergovernmental
meetings over the past five years. CCIA was instrumental in building momentum
in the early days of the negotiations in bringing Stevie Wonder to speak (and sing!) to the
WIPO delegates in 2010 at the General Assembly.
The following can be attributed to CCIA Geneva Representative
Nick Ashton-Hart:
“This was the right thing to do and we’re pleased WIPO members found
a compromise that the visually impaired community believes will help reduce
what they've called the "Book Famine" - less than 5 percent of the
world's books being available in formats the blind can read. This is critical
to the visually impaired, but it also helps copyright stakeholders from
musicians to distributors to fans, as it demonstrates that International
copyright can respond when markets fail and ensure access to knowledge.
“The agreement illustrates how critical effective, interoperable limitations
and exceptions are in the networked economy.
“The conclusion of this treaty is also an historic event from a
legal perspective as this is the first time in history that a binding
international treaty for copyright exceptions and limitations has been
finalized.”