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PRESS RELEASE FFII -- [ Europe / Politics ]

======================================================================
Open Letter: EU Council Farce Discredits EU Constitution
======================================================================

This morning, the Council Presidency rubberstamped the illegal
patenting practise of the European Patent Office by adopting a
proposal without vote and without a qualified majority of member
states, "so as not to create a precedent which might have a
consequence of creating future delays in other processes". In an open
letter, Jonas Maebe, Belgian computer scientist and board member of
FFII, summarises the experience with the treatment of the software
patent directive by the EU's supreme legislative organ, and explains
how this is a reason to distrust the project of the European Union and
to reject its proposed Constitution. Maebe's assessment is seconded
by a new text from a professor for European Law.

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The Letter
======================================================================

Dear Legislators of the European Union,
Dear Supporters of the European Constitution,

I'm not "against Europe", nor against the concept of the EU. On the
contrary, I very much enjoy several of the benefits that the EU has
brought us and I think that close cooperation between member states
can help everyone. I'm also not against the principle of a European
Constitution. That said, I would like to say a few things about
democracy in Europe as I experienced it until now, the proposed
Constitution and how the latter may or may not affect the former.

I have now been involved for almost two years in the discussion and
political process surrounding the software patents debate. I was not
involved from the start, but I did spend several weeks in the European
Parliament and have been in contact with several parliamentarians,
civil servants and representatives of the European Patent Office. I
even spent a night in the European Parliament in Strasbourg, helping
to prepare the FFII voting list for the legendary 24 September 2003 EP
vote. Overall, it has been a very educational two years.

As you are undoubtedly aware, the EU Council of Ministers adopted its
Common Position on the software patents directive on 7 March 2005. At

      http://wiki.ffii.org/Cons050307En


can find the Foundation for a Free Information Infrastructure's
account of what happened. There is also a quote from me on that page,
in which I deride supporters of the Constitution, without providing
any arguments as to why I attack the Constitution in particular.

In what follows, I would like to clarify my position.

======================================================================
The Council session of 7 March 2005
======================================================================

An MEP who saw our press release noted that "it certainly appears that
the Council presidency took some procedural shortcuts". That is an
extremely diplomatic way to put it. The Council Presidency spoke in
name of the entire Council (pluralis majestatis as it were) and
reversed voting requirements. The rules states that "an A item (formal
point) shall be taken off the agenda if a member state so requests or
if it might lead to further discussions, unless the Council decides
otherwise".

When Denmark asked for that, the Presidency simply announced it did
not want to take it off, instead of asking whether there was a
majority against taking it off. Therefore, "unless the Council decides
otherwise" became "if a majority of the Council wants to go against
the Presidency's will, while not even a vote has been called". This
might seem like splitting hairs, but in the Council where every sign
of opposition is presented to us as something which foreshadows the
end of EU decision making as we know it, this is a difference between
night and day.

======================================================================
Some more interesting points:
======================================================================

   * The request for a B item (discussion point) was supported by
     Poland, Denmark, Portugal and the Netherlands. Losing the support
     of even one of those countries was enough to be left with a text
     no longer supported by a qualified majority. Asking for renewed
     discussions means that they are not happy with the current text,
     otherwise they wouldn't do so.


   * Unilateral declarations with concerns of no less than 8 countries
     (7 of which officially voted in favour of the text) are attached
     to the text of the Common Position. Especially the Polish one is
     very harsh, and basically states "we recognise a political
     agreement has been reached and do not dare to attack it, but the
     text from 18 May is our worst nightmare". You can read it at
     http://register.consilium.eu.int/pdf/en/04/st16/st16120-ad02.en04.pdf


This has nothing to do with software patents. There was simply no
qualified majority (possibly not even a simple majority) in the
Council for this text. It was purely due to diplomatic inertia and
fear of doing something against whatever is customary that it slipped
through. Unless the Constitution says somewhere "the written rules
always have precedence over diplomatic customs and fears", it won't
change this.

======================================================================
National Parliaments
======================================================================

An often touted advantage of the Constitution is that national
parliaments must get the opportunity to look at all legislation before
Council deliberations. In fact, this is even used as justification for
giving the Council the great power that it has. The problem with this
is that this directive has shown that various governments simply do
not care about what the national parliaments say (let's not even
mention the European Parliament).

Before the political agreement of May 2004 was reached

The Dutch national parliament was misinformed about the directive.
Minister Brinkhorst told the Dutch Parliament in April 2004 that there
was a compromise between the Council and the European Parliament, so
that the political agreement in the Council was a formal non-issue.
One could argue that the Dutch Parliament should have verified whether
or not this is true, but as Mr Rocard would put it, that was quite an
"inelegancy".

Consequently, in July 2004, the Dutch Parliament adopted a motion in
which it stated that it had been misinformed, and called upon the
government to from then on withhold its support for the Council text.
The Dutch government promised to execute this motion, but
reinterpreted it as meaning "only if it ever becomes a B item again
and it is voted upon, then we will change our vote into an
abstention". Given all the panic reactions we saw the last few months
about the possibility of this ever becoming a B item again, this
amounted to saying "Nice motion, but no cigar".

======================================================================
At the May 2004 Council session
======================================================================

As you undoubtedly know, a political agreement has not an ounce of
legal value in any way. As the name implies, it's purely political.
Given that in this case there were three last-minute amendments
introduced by the Commission and one last minute "compromise" by the
German delegation and the Commission, it is fair to say that not a
single parliament has had the chance to decide about the final text
that was adopted on 18 May 2004. And due to everything that happened
later, they didn't have any chance later on either.

Before those amendment were introduced, the majority of the Council
members were against the text. After those "compromises" (which did
not change anything to the substance of the text), a 10 minute break
was held in which everyone was scrambling to call national experts to
judge those texts. Several delegations failed to reach anyone and as
such did not really know what to do. Many simply followed Germany,
since they had been sort of coordinating the opposition in the Council
before.

However, Germany seemed to be in bed with the Commission now, being
content with the sole addition of the word "new" in the definition of
"technical contribution". After Denmark was persuaded to be "80%
happy" by the Council Presidency, the Presidency even didn't ask
Poland anymore because their vote was no longer needed. If you have
not yet seen the Denmark-Ireland dialogue, you can find it at the link
below this paragraph. It's only 45 seconds long, and if it weren't
about a decision as important as this one it would even be quite
funny:

     Windows media version
     http://media.ffii.org/Council18may/denmark040518.wmv


     Quicktime/mpeg4 version
     http://media.ffii.org/Council18may/denmark040518.mov


======================================================================
The European Parliament
======================================================================

Another advantage of the proposed Constitution is that the European
Parliament has to approve the legislation in all areas in which the
Council acts by majority. Since this directive is being handled under
codecision already, that will not prevent any situations as they
occurred in the case of this directive however.

It indeed seems like the only way out now is a massive rejection by
the European Parliament in second reading, but I would not consider
that a victory for the EP. It's giving up against the Commission and
Council who seem to be determined to do whatever they like, unless the
EP simply stops the whole procedure by destroying the directive
project.

The EP can merely act as an emergency break in the current situation,
and that will not change with the Constitution as far as I can see.
Their first reading will remain merely "advice" to the Council, and
the second reading will still be handicapped by "majority of its
component members" requirements. Additionally, the Commission can
still basically nullify the EP position in the Council by disagreeing
with amendments, and thus require the Council to act by unanimity
rather than by qualified majority on those points.

======================================================================
The Constitution
======================================================================

Relating to the Constitution in particular, I would like to note my
concern regarding one specific paragraph, which simply says
"Intellectual property shall be protected" (Article II-17). Given that
many people consider software patents to be intellectual property,
this almost seems to make any directive excluding software patents to
become unConstitutional.

The term "intellectual property" should at least be defined in some
way, because everything but the kitchen sink is categorised under that
generic term (patents, copyright, trademarks, design rights, digital
rights/restrictions management technologies, ...), and things keep
getting added. The fallacy that "every idea" has to be someone's
"intellectual property" is promoted more and more, which means that
such a generic provision is extremely dangerous and may start to
conflict quite severely with Article 10 of the European Charter of
Human Rights in the near future.

I understand I'm quite late with my remark, but as explained before I
was busy with other important things as well.

======================================================================
Conclusion
======================================================================

I am sorry to be so pessimistic and to throw this out all over you,
even though many of you personally have no fault in all this. I'm also
certain you have the best intentions with the proposed Constitution.
However, I'm becoming tired:

   1. We got almost unanimous support in the European Parliament's Legal
      Affairs Committee to restart the directive.


2. This request was confirmed by an overwhelming majority in plenary

   3. The Commission declined and until today has not been able to
      produce any explanation as to why (except for "we want the
      procedure to continue")


   1. We managed to secure a generous blocking minority in the Council
      (Spain, Austria, Belgium, Italy, Portugal, Denmark, Poland,
      Hungary, Latvia, The Netherlands)


   2. This position was confirmed by the German, Dutch and Danish
      national parliaments


   3. The Council presidency "takes some shortcuts" and shoves it
      through as a "non-discussion" item, "so as not to create a
      precedent which might have a consequence of creating future delays
      in other processes"


Because democratic ways fail over and over again, the situation has
now become so bad that some people even set up a web page

      http://mjr.iki.fi/texts/patentfund


where you can pledge money to bribe the Council, because that's the
only way they see that's left to get anything done at all. It may seem
like a joke, but after everything I've experienced the past
one-and-a-half year (since the directive was passed from Parliament to
Council), it would not surprise me in the least if they're
half-serious.

The Constitution merely enshrines all of the above. Of course it does
not codify the fact that the people who lead the European Patent
Office should be the same people as those who write the Council
version of the directive as it happened last year, but it also does
not prevent this. It does not say that the Commission should introduce
last minute amendments at Council sessions so as to confuse
delegations, but it also does not call a halt to this practice. It
does not say political agreements are cast in stone, but neither does
it clearly say that they have less legal value than the ticket you get
in a supermarket and that they should be treated as such when there is
reason to do so.

How on Earth am I expected to still believe in this farce? I really do
want to believe. Just give me chance to do so...

Sincerely yours,

                   Jonas Maebe


                jmaebe at ffii.org


                FFII Board Member


     Research Assistant in Computer Science, Ghent University, Belgium


======================================================================
Additional Texts
======================================================================

Dr. Karl-Friedrich Lenz, professor of European Law at Aoyama Gakuin
University in Tokyo, in his latest piece

Luxembourg Presidency Making Up Some New Rules
http://k.lenz.name/wordpress/index.php?p=26

also concludes that the Luxembourg Presidency's behaviour has
discredited the EU as a whole.

You can find more news and more texts of professor Lenz at

FFII Software Patent News
http://wiki.ffii.org/SwpatcninoEn

==========================================================================
Contact
==========================================================================

Jonas Maebe:
jmaebe at ffii org
tel. +32 (0)485 36 96 45

Dieter Van Uytvanck:
dietvu at ffii org
tel. +31 (0)6 275 879 10

Hartmut Pilch
phm at ffii org
tel. +49 (0)89-18979927

==========================================================================
About FFII -- http://www.ffii.org
==========================================================================

The Foundation for a Free Information Infrastructure (FFII) is a
non-profit association registered in several European countries, which
is dedicated to the spread of data processing literacy. FFII supports
the development of public information goods based on copyright, free
competition, open standards. More than 500 members, 1,200 companies
and 80,000 supporters have entrusted the FFII to act as their voice in
public policy questions concerning exclusion rights (intellectual
property) in data processing.

_______________________________________________
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(un)subscribe via http://lists.ffii.org/mailman/listinfo/news, or
contact media@??? for more information.


--
Nothing short of total gender.