Re: TPP 14.17
Glenn McGrath <glenn.l.mcgrath@gmail.com> writes:
> Ok, thanks, i think i see; there is layer of abstraction.
>
> The country can not requiring the transfer of source code,
> The country can allow a person to require the transfer of source code.
Well, if you broaden “a person” to include any entity *except* a state,
then yes.
In other words: Think like a transnational corporation lobbying the TPP
negotiators, and this distinction makes much more sense.
Corporations have no interest in treaties that will restrict them in any
way; so the TPP is not designed to have that effect. Corporations are
not parties to the treaty; states are.
The wording is specifically that *parties to the treaty* (which includes
no corporation) are restricted in the terms they can enforce.
Corporations, meanwhile, can continue restricting people as much as they
could before.
> I imagine high priced lawyers will disagree.
That is no doubt true.
--
\ “The future always arrives too fast, and in the wrong order.” |
`\ —Alvin Toffler |
_o__) |
Ben Finney
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