Techlawed

From today’s BNA ILN:

Welcome to the Technology Law and World Economic Development Project (Techlawed Project). Launched by Professor Michael Geist of the University of Ottawa in July 2004, the project seeks to respond to the needs of developing countries for expert legal training in technology law issues such as e-commerce, intellectual property, and privacy law. The project will initially work with established U.N. agencies to support existing programs on a pro bono basis. In the longer term, the project hopes to team with law schools and other institutions in developing countries to provide technology law training and resources.

See the Lawbytes column where he reflects on a UNSECAP meeting.

Gmail

J’ai un compte Gmail que j’ai décidé d’utiliser pour recevoir des mailing lists. J’avais un peu démissionné des mailing lists dans la grande débacle des .mac gratuits, que j’avais harnachés pour gérer le flot.

Grand bien m’en pris: j’ai découvert les fils RSS.

Mais bon. Donc, vous connaissez des listes intéressantes (juridiques, politique, et cie) qui ne sont pas disponibles sous format RSS?

Où je passe mes journées

Alors c’est la vue de mon bureau. Côté droit:
Vue de mon bureau
Au premier plan, l’édifice Varembé de l’UIT. Le hangar d’avion derrière c’est l’édifice Montbrillant de l’UIT. Derrière, Sécheron, le jardin botanique, le Lac. Si je me penche par la fenêtre, je vois le jet d’eau et la vieille ville. La photo acrobatique sera pour plus tard.

Côté gauche:
Vue de mon bureau
Au premier plan, la place des Nations, avec sa chaise. Le Palais des Nations avec à sa gauche le Musée de l’Ariana et à sa droite son parc. Toujours le Lac derrière.

Une semaine

Ca fait une semaine que je suis ici. Pour célébrer, je suis au bureau. Ça aura été une longue semaine.

Je suis bien arrivé, je suis bien (temporairement) installé, je suis bien parti au boulot.

Mon aggrégateur est rempli à ras bord. J’ai à peine le temps de lire mes comics. Mais je prévois commencer a mieux m’organiser et je remonte la pente des courriers en retard.

Mon meeting vient de se terminer. je pense que je vais aller prendre un peu d’air donner un coup de fil à Grenadine.

Tracert

J’ai nettement négligé mon blog dernièrement. Principalement parce que j’étais sur le retour d’Inde et j’avais plein de choses-en-retard à faire. Ensuite, il y a eu la recherche d’emploi, puis l’emploi. Mais l’emploi est pas celui auquel je m’attendais…

Alors je m’envole pour Genève vendredi. Je retourne à l’UIT comme juriste.

J’espère pouvoir reprendre le collier bientôt.

Monsanto Canada Inc. c. Schmeiser

La Cour suprême a rendu sa décision dans Monsanto Canada Inc. c. Schmeiser. J’ai pas eu le temps de lire autre chose qu ele résumé, mais Monsanto a gagné: le brevet sur la cellule végétale et le gène modifié sont valides (contrairement a un brevet sur une plante comme tel). Sauf que la culture de plantes contenant cellules et gènes modifiés, non brevetables comme tel, ne bénéficent pas de la protection du brevet.

Wired

Globe and Mail

Radio Can

Slashdot

ILaw

Alors c’était le ILaw 2004 la semaine dernière. Je me suis un peu abstenu de suivre ca live (pas besoin de tourner le fer dans la plaie) mais Frank a un bon sommaire pour les intéressés.

Which Italian are you for?

Un texte de mon ami Feroz Mehdi sur les récentes élections en Inde.

Which Italian are you for?
Mussolini or Sonia Gandhi

Elections in India were held in four phases between April 20 and May 10 to elect the new Parliament. India gained independence in 1947 and this was the 14th parliamentary elections. Although these elections in the world’s largest democracy went quite unnoticed by the Western media, the Indian electorate has a very important lesson for all parliamentary democracies in the world.

Indian people not only voted out the ruling coalition the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) led by the rightwing Hindu nationalist party, the Bhartiya Janata Party (BJP), it brought the Congress as the largest party in parliament which is led by the Italian-born Sonia Gandhi.

The Congress and allies won 215 seats while the BJP and its allies have 184 seats in the 543-member Parliament. The Congress will be able to muster the required 272 members with the support of the Left and other important secular regional parties.

BJP carried its election campaign on two issues: Growing economic prosperity and Hindu nationalism. The earlier issue was woven around the slogan of « Shining India » with goods and riches for the middle class and opening up all sectors in Indian economy to privatization by multinationals. It made it very easy for Indians to get loan from a bank to buy a Mercedes-Benz, it boasted of high growth rate of nearly 8%, it created a post in the Cabinet for Minister of Disinvestment (first time in modern Indian history; the task of this ministry is to sell state-owned enterprises to private capital), it boasted of a very comfortable bank balance of foreign currency.

The second issue of nationalism taken up by the BJP in the election campaign was armed with the ongoing attack on minorities, especially Muslims, and a thrust towards their fascist ideology of one people, one religion and one culture. Sonia Gandhi’s Italian origin were thus a target in the campaign.

The BJP lost on both grounds. While it is true that it is much more easier for an Indian to get a bank loan to buy a Mercedes Benz, nearly 70% of households do not have a bank account. Whatever figures might be thrown in for the growth rate of economy, a journalist rightly commented that the fastest growing sector in India is Inequality. « Whether food or other items, rich Indians are consuming on a scale even they have never managed before. In a country which accounts for the largest number of malnourished children in the world ». India is home to about half the planet’s hungry people. Where nearly nine out of 10 pregnant women aged between 15 and 49 years suffer from malnutrition and anaemia. And where about half of all children under five suffer moderate or severe malnourishment or stunting. Most of these are girls.

That much for « India Shining ». The people of India have given their verdict. The second largest partner in the NDA coalition government was the Telgu Desam Party (TDP), a regional party in the province of Andhra Pradesh. This party was the leader in the neo-liberal globalization drive started five years ago. It has been completely routed out of power.

The Asian Social Forum was held in 2003 in Hyderabad, capital of Andhra Pradesh and the World Social Forum 2004 was held in the financial capital of India, Mumbai. There is no intention to draw any causality between the election results and these two events. Only to mention, that the 130 000 participants in the Social Forum can breathe a bit more freely now. But let us not stretch this beyond proportions. The Structural Adjustment Program of opening the Indian economy to the dictates of the IMF and the World Bank was initiated by the Congress in 1995. It was under its governance that the BJP led campaign of hatred succeeded in demolishing the historic Babri mosque.

No one expects the Congress to reverse the neo-liberal policies and its flirting with the USA. One thing was very clear to the activists in social movements: which so ever party wins, their struggle has to continue.

So why is there jubilation in the secular progressive camp? Why has the Left extended its support to the Congress in the formation of the next government? One of the reasons is that defeat of the BJP is in fact a defeat of the RSS, the ideological backbone of the BJP which is an overtly fascist party inspired by the Nazis and Mussolini. While the Indian electorate has defeated the followers of one Italian, they have brought to power a democratic party led by an Italian born woman. Participants in this battle were over 390 million voters!