Antigua WTO win could enable government‑authorized IP piracy, raising US‑Antigua settlement talks
Antigua WTO win could enable government‑authorized IP piracy, raising US‑Antigua settlement talks The email flags a WTO decision that could let a small nation authorize the wholesale copying of U.S. intellectual property, and mentions potential involvement of high‑profile figures (Bill Gates, President Obama) in a hypothetical dispute. While it hints at a novel legal mechanism and possible back‑channel settlement, it lacks concrete details on transactions, dates, or specific actors beyond a lawyer and a U.S. spokeswoman, limiting immediate investigative traction. Key insights: Antigua and Barbuda won a WTO ruling allowing it to claim U.S. IP as damages (~$21 M/yr).; Lawyer Mark Mendel suggested the ruling could be used to “authorize theft of intellectual property.”; U.S. government spokeswoman Nkenge Harmon warned such piracy would hurt foreign investment.
Summary
Antigua WTO win could enable government‑authorized IP piracy, raising US‑Antigua settlement talks The email flags a WTO decision that could let a small nation authorize the wholesale copying of U.S. intellectual property, and mentions potential involvement of high‑profile figures (Bill Gates, President Obama) in a hypothetical dispute. While it hints at a novel legal mechanism and possible back‑channel settlement, it lacks concrete details on transactions, dates, or specific actors beyond a lawyer and a U.S. spokeswoman, limiting immediate investigative traction. Key insights: Antigua and Barbuda won a WTO ruling allowing it to claim U.S. IP as damages (~$21 M/yr).; Lawyer Mark Mendel suggested the ruling could be used to “authorize theft of intellectual property.”; U.S. government spokeswoman Nkenge Harmon warned such piracy would hurt foreign investment.
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