Brazil Charged with Leading a World Gang of Intellectual Property Predators

Pirated goods are a serious problem in Brazil American trade and regulatory expert Lawrence Kogan, in a new University of Miami Inter-American Law Review article entitled, "Brazil's IP Opportunism Threatens US Private Property Rights,"  tracks how Brazil is navigating internationally to 'railroad' the great American engine of intellectual property-based innovation and economic growth.

According to Mr. Kogan, "During the past decade, Brazil has quietly assembled a gang of masked IP marauders including socialist-minded foreign governments, United Nations bureaucrats, health and 'open source' extremists and American multilateralists, each brandishing six-shooters replete with negative sustainable development bullets.

"Like the desperadoes of the old American West, they plan to hold up the locomotive, loot its treasures (research & development) and ransack its passengers' commercially valuable possessions (IP-rich assets). 

"They will then send the leading innovators off into the sunset toward a new international economic horizon (order) where proprietary technological know-how & testing data will be treated as 'universally accessible,' 'open source,' and essentially free of charge to developing country riders."

"Should this marked train ever leave the depot and such robbery take place," warns Kogan, "The constitutionally protected private IP rights of U.S. citizens will effectively be converted into 'public international goods' without payment of 'just compensation'."

"The Brazilian government has not only sought, through regulation of information and healthcare technologies and non-enforcement of IP law, to lay new global rails that facilitate below-cost national procurement of computer software, pharmaceutical products, medical devices, and health services," says Kogan, "but it has also led or actively joined other outlaws (e.g., Thailand, Kenya, Argentina, South Africa) stalking at least seven different Geneva-based UN stations."

"Most alarming of all," Kogan emphasizes, "the train's restyled caboose has been commandeered by France, Norway and Sweden, OECD nations that offer weaker private property right protections than does America, and by liberal U.S. politicians campaigning to redeem America's image abroad."

Mr. Kogan questions whether "these same bandits will strike during the upcoming April 2007 EU-US summit, a primary goal of which is to bridge transatlantic chasms in IP regulatory law."

The Institute for Trade, Standards and Sustainable Development (ITSSD) is a non-partisan non-profit international legal research and educational organization that examines international law relating to trade, industry and positive sustainable development around the world. This study is accessible at: www.itssd.org/Publications/IAL105-II(frompublisher)%5B2%5D.pdf.

Tags:

You May Also Like

After Three Months of Decline Search for Credit Rises 5.2% in Brazil

Brazilian companies search for credit has grown 5.2% in the month of April over ...

Profit Takers and Oil Price Depress Brazilian Stocks

Latin American and Brazilian stocks in particular tumbled, as the recent surge in oil ...

Brazil and Argentina Create Mechanism to Regulate Bilateral Trade

Argentina and Brazil agreed on the incorporation of a Competition Adaptation Mechanism, MAC, to ...

Brazil Gets Ready for Bird Flu: 9 Million Kits of Tamiflu

Bird flu has put the world on alert and things are not different in ...

Brazilian Multinationals Increase Overseas Investment by 44%

Speaking at a seminar yesterday, May 29, the president of Brazil’s Central Bank, Henrique Meirelles, ...

Brazil Grants Google Reprieve: Two More Weeks to Turn In Confidential Data

The deadline given Google by the Brazilian Justice to turn in data on their ...

US and Sweden Sweeten Deal While Brazil Seems Prone to Buy French Fighter Jets

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva and not Brazil’s Air Force will determine ...

Soccer: Brazil to Host 2014 World Cup

The president of the Chilean Football Association Reinaldo Sánchez almost but confirmed Brazil as ...

For Brazil the Paraguayan-Brazilian Row Over Itaipu Is Just Political

According to Brazilian president's international affairs advisor, Marco Aurélio Garcia, differences between Brazil and ...

Brazil Gets Pat on Back from U. S.

We have seen an agenda designed to fight poverty and increase economic growth and ...

WordPress database error: [Table './brazzil3_live/wp_wfHits' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `wp_wfHits`