Date: Tuesday, January 29 2013 04:46 PM From: Cecile de Jongh Po To: JEE <[email protected]>; Antigua: Land Of Sun, Sand, And Super Cheap Downloads by Jacob Goldstein http://www.npr.org/blogs/money/2013/01/28/170466137/antiqua- land-of-sun-sand-and-super-cheap- downloads January 28, 2013 3:07 PM Sun, sand and super cheap downloads. Any day now, you might be able to download Argo, Lincoln and Les Mis for a dime a piece. Microsoft Office could go for a quarter. Asong might cost a penny. And it could all be perfectly legal under international law. As part of a long-running trade dispute, the tiny island nation of Antigua and Barbuda (population: 90,000) won the right to use the intellectual property of U.S. firms — without having to pay any royalties or licensing fees. At a meeting in Geneva today, the country got the final go ahead from the World Trade Organization. The fight goes back to the 1990s, when a bunch of online casinos set up shop in Antigua. After the U.S. cracked down on the casinos, Antigua complained to the WTO, arguing that the U.S. was unfairly protecting its domestic casinos in violation of free trade rules. Antigua won the case. Typically, when a country wins a case at the WTO, it wins the right to, say, put a tariff on goods from the losing country. But Antigua is so small that tariffs wouldn't have any noticeable effect on the U.S. economy. So Antigua took another route: It asked the WTO to recover damages in the form of intellectual property, and the WTO said yes. If this seems likely to cause harm to innocents who had nothing to do with the fight over online casinos, that's the whole point. "It's so Bill Gates might ring up Obama and say, 'Why have | lost my copyright so you can protect gaming?” Mark Mendel, the lawyer representing Antigua told me. (By "gaming," Mendel means the U.S. casino business.) To be clear, the Bill Gates reference was hypothetical. Antigua has not yet said what it plans to sell or how it plans to sell it. And whateve