RIAA Cracks Down After Taliban Ousted (fwd)

Greg Newby gbnewby at ils.unc.edu
Sat Dec 8 07:32:32 PST 2001


Nice attempt at satire.

However, Afghanistan is almost the only country left
in the world where international copyright laws 
essentially don't apply.

They're not signatories to ANY treaties I could find
administered by WIPO, including the Berne and Paris 
conventions.  They're not part of the WTO or World 
Bank or NATO, or even the League of Arab States.  

In short, RIAA can take their legalese and shove
it up their intellectually protected arse, as
far as Afghanistan is concerned.

See http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/okbooks.html
for more on copyright and different laws in different
countries.  

For an extract of Afghanistan's 1950 copyright
law, see UNESCO's content at:
http://www.unesco.org/culture/copy/copyright/afghanistan/sommaire.html

I'd say the chances of even their law (which is very
slack by modern standards) still being enforced by
whomever is in charge in AF are slim to nil.
  -- Greg

PS: If you think this means AF is a "music haven"
where the rest of the world could go to host,
republish or redistribute content that's under
copyright elsewhere, sorry.  This would only apply
if you wanted to spend the rest of your life there,
because as soon as you left and arrived at, say,
a signatory to the new WIPO copyright treaty, you'd
find yourself Skylarov'd.

PPS:  Number of .af hosts listed at Netcraft = 1 (http://www.nic.af)

PPPS: Number of functional .af hosts listed at Netcraft = 0


On Fri, Dec 07, 2001 at 07:18:32PM -0600, measl at mfn.org wrote:
> 
> 
> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> Date: Fri, 07 Dec 2001 17:17:09 -0700
> From: xxxx
> To: yyyy
> Subject: RIAA Cracks Down After Taliban Ousted
> 
> http://bbspot.com/News/2001/11/riaa.html
> 
> 
> Kabul, Afghanistan - The Recording Industry Association of 
> Afghanistan (RIAA) has begun a major crackdown on pirated 
> music since the Taliban fell from power 2 days ago, and
> launched their own bid for control in the war torn city. 
> Many cheered the fall of the Taliban, but the RIAA feels 
> that if music can be listened to that copyrights will be 
> violated. 
> 
> Soon after the Taliban fled Kabul, black market Qamar Gul 
> and Ahmad Zahir CDs were being openly peddled on street 
> corners. Rumors of Abdullah Muqri MP3s circulating on the 
> Kabul computer were widespread.
> 
> "It was much easier to control music piracy when the Taliban 
> was in control. Now we fear that with their new found freedom 
> the people of Kabul and in the rest of Afghanistan will turn 
> to copyright violation to satisfy their musical needs," said 
> RIAA President Ghulam Hotak. "An RIAA lead country will be 
> able to enjoy the joys of music, but only if artist are 
> properly compensated."
> 
> Opposition groups denounce the RIAA power grab. "We will fight 
> to the last man to keep the RIAA from power in Afghanistan," 
> said General Mahommed Dawood of the Northern Alliance. "We did 
> not unseat the Taliban only to have them replaced by a more 
> oppressive regime."
> 
> The Recording Industry Association of America has pledged 
> support to the RIAA by offering troops from its elite piracy 
> fighting Freedom Squad. "We can not sit idly by and watch the 
> people of Afghanistan violate copyrights. Our brothers in the 
> RIAA need our support," said Hilary Rosen.
> 
> EOF





More information about the cypherpunks-legacy mailing list