Lodi News-Sentinel

Critics: Big Tech uses trade deals to avoid data privacy laws

- Gopal Ratnam CQ-ROLL CALL

WASHINGTON — Tech companies are using internatio­nal trade agreements to conceal software codes behind artificial intelligen­ce programs as well as circumvent U.S. legislatio­n that could curb the industry’s freewheeli­ng use of consumer data, according to lawmakers and advocacy groups.

As Congress is trying to rein in Big Tech, industry “lobbyists and lawyers are trying to rig the digital trade deals to undermine those new laws,” Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., said last week at an event organized by the advocacy group Rethink Trade.

Tech companies managed to add digital trade rules to the U.S.-MexicoCana­da Agreement that prohibits the parties from reviewing the source code for artificial intelligen­ce programs and are trying to include similar provisions in the 13-nation Indo-Pacific Economic Framework trade talks, Warren said.

“Big Tech wants to keep its code in a black box where no one can see what they’re doing,” Warren said.

Negotiator­s from the U.S. and 12 other countries in Asia have been meeting in Bali, Indonesia, for the past few days to work on the IPEF, a trade deal that is the Biden administra­tion’s signature effort to counter China’s growing economic influence in the region.

The dispute about the role trade deals play in creating global rules for the tech industry comes as Congress is weighing legislatio­n that would address data privacy, content moderation, antitrust enforcemen­t and curbs on artificial intelligen­ce technologi­es.

House Energy and Commerce Chair Cathy McMorris Rodgers, R-Wash., and ranking member Frank Pallone Jr., D-N.J., say they will revive an effort to pass legislatio­n that would create a federal data privacy standard. The committee approved a bill in the last Congress, but it didn’t get a floor vote.

Rodgers has said holding Big Tech accountabl­e is a key part of her agenda and has called for greater transparen­cy into algorithms and software.

Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., has also promised to pursue an antitrust measure aimed at tech companies. Klobuchar, the chairwoman of Senate Judiciary’s Competitio­n Policy, Antitrust, and Consumer Rights Subcommitt­ee, and Sen. Charles E. Grassley, R-Iowa, a member of the panel, teamed up on a similar bill in the last Congress.

The Coalition of Service Industries, a trade group representi­ng a broad group of service industries, including tech companies, said the trade deals allow exceptions for regulatory bodies to examine software source codes and aren’t intended to limit Congress’ ability to enact domestic laws.

The USTR has “has pursued an inclusive vision for digital trade that protects the privacy of consumers and workers, respects freedom of expression and freedom from discrimina­tion and supports our environmen­tal sustainabi­lity goals” in the IPEF negotiatio­ns, a USTR spokespers­on said, adding that the talks and a potential deal will “provide space for Congress to enact digital reforms, as well as ensure our regulators can effectivel­y implement our rules and regulation­s.”

The spokespers­on also said the USTR has held more than 300 briefings with lawmakers and their staffs on the agenda.

Warren’s concerns were echoed at the Rethink Trade event by Rep. Jan Schakowsky, D-Ill., a top Democrat on the House Energy and Commerce Committee, as well as Rep. Mark Takano, D-Calif.

Tech companies are attempting to do what pharmaceut­ical companies managed to do in the global trade framework created by the World Trade Organizati­on, said Lori Wallach, director of the Rethink Trade program at the American Economic Liberties Project.

The pharmaceut­ical industry was able to get the WTO to codify a 20-year patent on drugs although U.S. law up until that point only allowed for 17-year patents, she said. Congress enacted the law bringing the U.S. into the WTO in 1994.

“When the U.S. signed that agreement, we were legally obligated to change our domestic law to conform,” Wallach said.

Wallach cited a provision of the USMCA that precludes the parties from prohibitin­g or restrictin­g the cross-border transfer of informatio­n, including personal informatio­n of users. If similar provisions are included in other trade agreements, companies can ignore future U.S. data privacy regulation­s and move users’ personal data to a jurisdicti­on beyond the reach of U.S. law enforcemen­t, she said.

Although the USMCA provides an exception by allowing the parties to enact laws and rules to “achieve a legitimate public-policy objective,” similar safeguards are missing from the discussion draft for IPEF, Rethink Trade and 17 other consumer advocacy groups said in a March 10 letter to President Joe Biden.

“Trade pacts must not include terms that limit government regulation of data flows related to privacy protection­s or data security,” the letter said.

 ?? CHIP SOMODEVILL­A/GETTY IMAGES ?? Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., talks with reporters following the weekly Democratic Senate policy luncheon at the U.S. Capitol on March 15 in Washington, D.C. Senators were asked about the failure of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank and whether new regulation will shore up small and medium-sized banks during this period of high inflation.
CHIP SOMODEVILL­A/GETTY IMAGES Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., talks with reporters following the weekly Democratic Senate policy luncheon at the U.S. Capitol on March 15 in Washington, D.C. Senators were asked about the failure of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank and whether new regulation will shore up small and medium-sized banks during this period of high inflation.

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