Robin Gross wrote: > Interesting read: > http://www.knujon.com/ddb_master_draft.pdf > ... <http://www.knujon.com/ddb_master_draft.pdf> > > If domain name registrars can be punished for what 3rd-parties do, > registrars will be pressured to police and control their systems to > prevent the sale of unlicensed, but lawful, generic medicines (as if > registrars are in any position to know what is licensed, what is > dangerous, what is lawful generic, etc). It sets a very dangerous > precedent that courts (and even legislatures) have been unwilling to > give the IP Constituency and Big Pharma. > Thanks, Robin, for bringing this up. I am involved (with some others) to see if we can help some people in Thailand with legal studies: they are facing the court because of what somebody posted on their website - not they themselves. And they are accused by the censors for not having taken care of what others write; so their "intermediary liability" (this is the legal English term used in Thailand) is what made them face the censor and then the court. And what some friends try to do is collect info that "intermediary liability" is not to be applied - not to a telephone operator, not to SMS system operator, not to blogger (where others may place comments) etc. What this pharma study seems to aim at is exactly what the censors and to court in Thailand applies to suppress the freedom of expression. You said that this is a "very dangerous precedent that courts (and even legislatures) have been unwilling to give" - if there is literature about this, please let me know. Norbert -- If you want to know what is going on in Cambodia, please visit The Mirror, a regular review of the Cambodian language press in English. This is the latest weekly editorial of the Mirror: Changing Approaches to Old Problems Sunday, 13.6.2010 http://wp.me/p2Gyf-1up (to read it, click on the line above.) And here is something new every day: http://cambodiamirror.wordpress.com