This has a lot of US companies worried, but the US government has so far decided to ignore World Trade Organisation rulings on the matter.
http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117982630.html?categoryid=1338&cs=1The government of Antigua is likely to abrogate intellectual property treaties with the U.S. by the end of March and authorize wholesale copying of American movies, music and other "soft targets" if the Bush administration fails to respond to proposals for settling a trade dispute between the two counties, according to the lawyer representing the Caribbean island nation.
The Motion Picture Assn. of America has been closely following the case with tremendous concern, an org official said, fearing that the copying could be extensively damaging and that -- worse -- a dangerous precedent could be set for other small countries angry at U.S. trade policy.
"It is not our preferred option to punish the MPAA or others for the U.S. government's intransigence, but the U.S. has refused to negotiate fairly," said Mark E. Mendel, who represents Antigua.
Goods and materials that would be copied include "virtually everything from pharmaceuticals to music, anything with IP protection that can be duplicated, though we'll go for softer targets first," Mendel said.
Many folks are looking forward to this threat being carried out, perhaps the whole island will become a new place to host trackers and centralised file sharing operations from, the possibilities are endless, but the "cold reality" solution is very simple and inexpensive, pay them off and chalk it up to experience, doing anything else will start something neither country can reasonably hope to control.