United States International

Over 100,000 tell TPP leaders to reject Internet censorship at Bali summit starting Monday

Online campaign goes viral, spurred on by citizen outrage at secretive and extreme Trans-Pacific Partnership proposals, says OpenMedia

In under a week, 100,342 people have told TPP leaders to:

  • Protect the right of everyone to access the Internet in their daily lives.
  • Do not force ISPs to act as “Internet Police” monitoring our Internet use, censoring content, and removing whole websites.
  • Preserve the democratic rights of sovereign countries to draft their own copyright laws.

Executive Director of OpenMedia Steve Anderson said: “Our small team here at OpenMedia was absolutely delighted when we hit the 100k mark earlier this morning. We’ve never seen a campaign grow this fast - and the numbers just keep on climbing. It’s going viral as thousands spread the word about the TPP on social media. We even hit the front of Reddit which nearly crashed our servers.”

Anderson continued: “This remarkable milestone speaks to the huge groundswell of concern about the secretive and extreme Internet censorship proposals in the TPP. It’s time for elected leaders to wake up and listen to citizens, not just old media lobbyists who are trying to shore up their failing, last-century business model.”

Citizens are continuing to speak up in huge numbers right now at https://openmedia.org/censorship

About OpenMedia

OpenMedia is a network of people and organizations working to safeguard the possibilities of the open Internet. We work toward informed and participatory digital policy.

About the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement:

The TPP is one of the most far-reaching international free trade agreements in history. We know from leaked TPP draft texts that participating nations would be bound to much stricter and more extreme copyright laws than now exist under current national laws. These new rules would criminalize much online activity, invade citizens’ privacy, and significantly impact our ability to share and collaborate online.

Negotiators from 12 of the TPP negotiating nations—Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Peru, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Singapore, Vietnam, and the United States—met in Malaysia to discuss these changes without input from the public, creators, or most businesses. The negotiating documents are classified—unless you are one of just 600 industry lobbyists permitted to participate.

TPP meetings took place in Malaysia from July 15th to the 24th. Negotiators have indicated that they are in the “home stretch”, with leaders of the participating countries expecting a resolution sometime in October. However, reports have indicated that the intellectual property provisions have been quite a “challenging” issue for those behind the agreement.

Over 15,000 people have now signed a petition at http://OurFairDeal.org, which demands that negotiators reject copyright proposals that would restrict the open Internet, access to knowledge, economic opportunity and our fundamental rights.

Internet users around the world are beginning to layout their own crowdsourced vision for copyright policy at: https://OpenMedia.org/DigitalFuture.

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Contact

David Christopher
Communications Coordinator, OpenMedia
1-778-232-1858
[email protected]

More information

OpenMedia works to keep the Internet open, affordable, and surveillance-free. We create community-driven campaigns to engage, educate, and empower people to safeguard the Internet. Take action now

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