2021 Review of Notorious Markets for Counterfeiting and Piracy: Comment Request, 48464-48466 [2021-18562]
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Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 165 / Monday, August 30, 2021 / Notices
quality of service offered to the public.
If this information is not collected, vital
feedback from customers and
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will be unavailable.
The Board will only process a
collection under this generic clearance
if it meets the following conditions:
• The collections are voluntary;
• the collections are low-burden for
respondents (based on considerations of
total burden hours, total number of
respondents, or burden-hours per
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the respondents and the Federal
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• the collections are noncontroversial and do not raise issues of
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• any collection is targeted to the
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Under the PRA, a federal agency that
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of information, which is defined in 44
U.S.C. 3502(3) and 5 CFR 1320.3(c),
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parties, or the public. Section 3507(b) of
the PRA requires, concurrent with an
agency’s submitting a collection to OMB
for approval, a 30-day notice and
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comment period through publication in
the Federal Register concerning each
proposed collection of information.
Comments submitted in response to
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Dated: August 24, 2021.
Tammy Lowery,
Clearance Clerk.
[FR Doc. 2021–18652 Filed 8–27–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4915–01–P
OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES
TRADE REPRESENTATIVE
[Docket Number USTR–2021–0013]
2021 Review of Notorious Markets for
Counterfeiting and Piracy: Comment
Request
Office of the United States
Trade Representative.
ACTION: Request for comments.
AGENCY:
The Office of the United
States Trade Representative (USTR)
requests comments that identify online
and physical markets to be considered
for inclusion in the 2021 Review of
Notorious Markets for Counterfeiting
and Piracy (Notorious Markets List). The
Notorious Markets List identifies
examples of online and physical
markets that reportedly engage in and
facilitate substantial copyright piracy or
trademark counterfeiting. The issue
focus for the 2021 Notorious Markets
List will examine the adverse impact of
counterfeiting on workers involved with
the manufacture of counterfeit goods.
DATES: October 11, 2021, at 11:59 p.m.
ET: Deadline for submission of written
comments.
October 25, 2021, at 11:59 p.m. ET:
Deadline for submission of rebuttal
comments and other information USTR
should consider during the review.
ADDRESSES: You should submit written
comments through the Federal
eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov (Regulations.gov).
SUMMARY:
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Follow the instructions for submitting
comments in section III below. For
alternatives to online submissions,
please contact Jacob Ewerdt at
notoriousmarkets@ustr.eop.gov or (202)
395–4510 before transmitting a
comment and in advance of the relevant
deadline.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jacob Ewerdt, Director for Innovation
and Intellectual Property, at
notoriousmarkets@ustr.eop.gov or (202)
395–4510. You can find information
about the Special 301 Review, including
the Notorious Markets List, at
www.ustr.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
The United States is concerned with
trademark counterfeiting and copyright
piracy on a commercial scale because
these illicit activities cause significant
financial losses for right holders,
legitimate businesses, and governments.
In addition, they undermine critical
U.S. comparative advantages in
innovation and creativity to the
detriment of American workers, and can
pose significant risks to consumer
health and safety and privacy and
security. Conducted under the auspices
of the Special 301 program and the
authority of the U.S. Trade
Representative to address practices that
have significant adverse impact on the
value of U.S. innovation, the Notorious
Markets List identifies examples of
online and physical markets that
reportedly engage in and facilitate
substantial copyright piracy or
trademark counterfeiting that infringe
on U.S. intellectual property (IP).
Beginning in 2006, USTR identified
notorious markets in the annual Special
301 Report. In 2010, USTR announced
that it would publish the Notorious
Markets List as an Out-of-Cycle Review,
separate from the annual Special 301
Report. USTR published the first
Notorious Markets List in February
2011. USTR develops the annual
Notorious Markets List based upon
public comments solicited through the
Federal Register and in consultation
with Federal agencies that serve on the
Special 301 Subcommittee of the Trade
Policy Staff Committee.
The United States encourages owners
and operators of markets reportedly
involved in piracy or counterfeiting to
adopt business models that rely on the
licensed distribution of legitimate
content and products and to work with
right holders and enforcement officials
to address infringement. USTR also
encourages foreign government
authorities to intensify their efforts to
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investigate reports of piracy and
counterfeiting in such markets, and to
pursue appropriate enforcement actions.
The Notorious Markets List does not
purport to reflect findings of legal
violations, nor does it reflect the U.S.
Government’s analysis of the general IP
protection and enforcement climate in
the country or countries concerned. For
an analysis of the IP climate in
particular countries, please refer to the
annual Special 301 Report, published
each spring no later than 30 days after
USTR submits the National Trade
Estimate to Congress.
II. Public Comments
USTR invites written comments
concerning examples of online and
physical markets that reportedly engage
in and facilitate substantial copyright
piracy or trademark counterfeiting that
infringe on U.S. intellectual property.
USTR also invites written comments for
the Notorious Markets List ‘issue focus’
that highlights an issue related to the
facilitation of substantial trademark
counterfeiting or copyright piracy. The
issue focus for the 2021 Notorious
Markets List will examine the adverse
impact of counterfeiting on workers
involved with the manufacture of
counterfeit goods. Some governmental
and intergovernmental organization
reports suggest that counterfeit goods
often may be produced in unsafe
workplaces with substandard and
unsafe materials, by workers who often
may be paid little or sometimes nothing
in the case of forced labor. USTR invites
the submission of research, studies,
reports, evidence, and business or
personal experience on this topic.
To facilitate the review, written
comments should be as detailed as
possible. Comments must clearly
identify the market and the reasons why
the commenter believes that the market
should be included in the Notorious
Markets List. Commenters should
include the following information, as
applicable:
For physical markets:
• The market’s name and location,
e.g., common name, street address,
neighborhood, shopping district, city,
etc., and the identity of the principal
owners/operators.
For online markets:
• The domain name(s) past and
present, available registration
information, and name(s) and
location(s) of the hosting provider(s)
and operator(s).
• Information on the volume of
internet traffic associated with the
website, including number of visitors
and page views, average time spent on
the site, estimate of the number of
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infringing goods offered, sold, or traded
and number of infringing files streamed,
shared, seeded, leeched, downloaded,
uploaded, or otherwise distributed or
reproduced, and global or country
popularity rating (e.g., Alexa rank).
• Revenue sources such as sales,
subscriptions, donations, upload
incentives, or advertising and the
methods by which that revenue is
collected.
For physical and online markets:
• Whether the market is owned,
operated, or otherwise affiliated with a
government entity.
• Types of counterfeit or pirated
products or services sold, traded,
distributed, or otherwise made available
at that market.
• Volume of counterfeit or pirated
goods or services or other indicia of a
market’s scale, reach, or relative
significance in a given geographic area
or with respect to a category of goods or
services.
• Estimates of economic harm to right
holders resulting from the piracy or
counterfeiting and a description of the
methodology used to calculate the harm.
• Whether the volume of counterfeit
or pirated goods or estimates of harm
has increased or decreased from
previous years, and an approximate
calculation of that increase or decrease
for each year.
• Whether the infringing goods or
services sold, traded, distributed, or
made available pose a risk to public
health or safety.
• Any known contractual, civil,
administrative, or criminal enforcement
activity against the market and the
outcome of that enforcement activity.
• Additional actions taken by right
holders against the market such as
takedown notices, requests to sites to
remove URLs or infringing content,
cease and desist letters, warning letters
to landlords and requests to enforce the
terms of their leases, requests to
providers to enforce their terms of
service or terms of use, and the outcome
of these actions.
• Additional actions taken by the
market owners or operators to remove,
limit, or discourage the availability of
counterfeit or pirated goods or services,
including policies to prevent or remove
access to such goods or services, or to
disable seller or user accounts, the
effectiveness of market policies and
guidelines in addressing counterfeiting
and piracy, and the level of cooperation
with right holders and law enforcement.
• Any other additional information
relevant to the review.
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III. Submission Instructions
All submissions must be in English
and sent electronically via
Regulations.gov. To submit comments,
locate the docket (folder) by entering the
docket number USTR–2021–0013 in the
‘Enter Keyword or IP’ window at the
Regulations.gov homepage and click
‘search.’ The site will provide a searchresults page listing all documents
associated with this docket. Locate the
reference to this notice by selecting
‘notice’ under ‘document type’ on the
left side of the search-results page, and
click on the link entitled ‘comment
now!’ You should provide comments in
an attached document, and name the
file according to the following protocol,
as appropriate: Commenter Name or
Organization_2021 Notorious Markets.
Please include the following
information in the ‘type comment’ field:
2021 Review of Notorious Markets for
Counterfeiting and Piracy. USTR prefers
submissions in Microsoft Word (.docx)
or Adobe Acrobat (.pdf) format. If the
submission is in another file format,
please indicate the name of the software
application in the ‘type comment’ field.
For further information on using
Regulations.gov, please select ‘how to
use Regulations.gov’ on the bottom of
any page.
Please do not attach separate cover
letters to electronic submissions.
Instead, include any information that
might appear in a cover letter in the
comments themselves. Similarly, to the
extent possible, please include any
exhibits, annexes, or other attachments
in the same file as the comment itself,
rather than submitting them as separate
files.
For any comment submitted
electronically that contains business
confidential information (BCI), the file
name of the business confidential
version should begin with the characters
‘BCI’. Any page containing BCI must be
clearly marked ‘BUSINESS
CONFIDENTIAL’ on the top of that page
and the submission should clearly
indicate, via brackets, highlighting, or
other means, the specific information
that is business confidential. A filer
requesting business confidential
treatment must certify that the
information is business confidential and
that they would not customarily release
it to the public. Additionally, the
submitter should type ‘Business
Confidential 2021 Review of Notorious
Markets for Counterfeiting and Piracy’
in the ‘comment’ field. Filers of
comments containing BCI also must
submit a public version. Begin the file
name of the public version with the
character ‘P’. USTR will place the non-
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Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 165 / Monday, August 30, 2021 / Notices
business confidential version in the
docket at Regulations.gov and it will be
available for public inspection.
As noted, USTR strongly urges
submitters to file comments through
Regulations.gov. You must make any
alternative arrangements in advance of
the relevant deadline and before
transmitting a comment by contacting
Jacob Ewerdt at notoriousmarkets@
ustr.eop.gov or (202) 395–4510.
USTR will post comments in the
docket for public inspection, except
properly designated BCI. You can view
comments on Regulations.gov by
entering docket number USTR–2021–
0013 in the search field on the home
page.
Daniel Lee,
Assistant U.S. Trade Representative for
Innovation and Intellectual Property (Acting),
Office of the United States Trade
Representative.
[FR Doc. 2021–18562 Filed 8–27–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3290–F1–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
[Docket No. FAA–2021–0067]
Agency Information Collection
Activities: Requests for Comments;
Clearance of Renewed Approval of
Information Collection: High Density
Traffic Airports; Slot Allocation and
Transfer Methods.
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), DOT.
ACTION: Notice and request for
comments.
AGENCY:
In accordance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, FAA
invites public comments about our
intention to request the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB)
approval to renew an information
collection. The Federal Register Notice
with a 60-day comment period soliciting
comments on the following collection of
information was published on March
16, 2021. The FAA collects information
from U.S. and foreign air carriers
holding or requesting a slot at Ronald
Reagan Washington National Airport
(DCA), John F. Kennedy International
Airport (JFK), and LaGuardia Airport
(LGA); operating or requesting
scheduled flights at Newark Liberty
International Airport (EWR), Los
Angeles International Airport (LAX),
O’Hare International Airport (ORD), and
San Francisco International Airport
(SFO); and conducting unscheduled
operations at DCA and LGA. The
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SUMMARY:
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information collected is necessary to
support the advance management of air
traffic demand by the FAA Slot
Administration in an effort to reduce
potential delays. The FAA proposes
renaming this information collection to
‘‘FAA Runway Slot Administration and
Schedule Analysis’’ to more accurately
reflect the collection of information
related to multiple airports subject to
different FAA regulatory and voluntary
processes under this program.
DATES: Written comments should be
submitted by September 29, 2021.
ADDRESSES: Written comments and
recommendations for the proposed
information collection should be sent
within 30 days of publication of this
notice to www.reginfo.gov/public/do/
PRAMain. Find this particular
information collection by selecting
‘‘Currently under 30-day Review—Open
for Public Comments’’ or by using the
search function.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Matthew Gonabe, FAA Slot
Administration, by email at:
matthew.gonabe@faa.gov; phone: (609)
485–9554.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Public Comments Invited: You are
asked to comment on any aspect of this
information collection, including (a)
Whether the proposed collection of
information is necessary for FAA’s
performance; (b) the accuracy of the
estimated burden; (c) ways for FAA to
enhance the quality, utility, and clarity
of the information collection; and (d)
ways that the burden could be
minimized without reducing the quality
of the collected information.
OMB Control Number: 2120–0524.
Title: High Density Traffic Airports;
Slot Allocation and Transfer Methods.
Form Numbers: There are no FAA
forms associated with this collection.
Type of Review: Renewal of an
information collection.
Background: The Federal Register
Notice with a 60-day comment period
soliciting comments on the following
collection of information was published
on March 16, 2021 (86 FR 14515). The
FAA has implemented several
initiatives to address air traffic
congestion and delay at certain airports
within the National Airspace System
(NAS). DCA slot rules are established
under 14 CFR part 93, subparts K and
S. The FAA has issued Orders limiting
operations at JFK and LGA.1 These
1 Operating Limitations at John F. Kennedy
International Airport, 73 FR 3510 (Jan. 18, 2008), as
most recently amended 85 FR 58258 (Sep. 18,
2020); Operating Limitations at New York
LaGuardia Airport, 71 FR 77854 (Dec. 27, 2006), as
most recently amended 85 FR 58255 (Sep. 18,
2020).
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Orders resulted from increasing
congestion and delays at the airports
requiring the FAA to allocate arrival and
departure slots at JFK and LGA. In
addition, the FAA has designated EWR,
LAX, ORD, and SFO as Level 2
schedule-facilitated airports under the
IATA Worldwide Slot Guidelines (WSG)
now known as the Worldwide Airport
Slot Guidelines (WASG).2 At Level 2
airports, the FAA seeks the cooperation
of all carriers planning operations, on a
voluntary basis, to maintain close
communications on runway schedules
and facilitate adjustments, as needed.
At DCA, U.S. and foreign air carriers,
including commuter operators, must
notify the FAA of: (1) Written consent
and requests for confirmation of slot
transfers; (2) slots required to be
returned and slots voluntarily returned;
(3) requests to be included in a lottery
for the permanent allocation of available
slots; (4) reports on usage of slots on a
bi-monthly basis; and (5) requests for
slots in low-demand hours or other
temporary allocations. Operators must
obtain a reservation from the FAA prior
to conducting an unscheduled
operation. At LGA, U.S. and foreign air
carriers must notify the FAA of: (1)
Written consent and requests for
confirmation of slot transfers; (2) slots
required to be returned and slots
voluntarily returned; (3) requests to be
included in a lottery for the permanent
allocation of available slots; and (4)
reports usage of slots on a bi-monthly
basis. Carriers must also request and
obtain a reservation from the FAA prior
to conducting an unscheduled
operation. At JFK, U.S. and foreign air
carriers must notify the FAA of: (1)
Written consent and requests for
confirmation of slot transfers; (2)
requests for seasonal allocation of
historic and additional available slots;
(3) reports on usage of slots on a
seasonal basis; (4) the return of slots;
and (5) changes to allocated slots. At
EWR, LAX, ORD, and SFO, all carriers
are asked to notify the FAA of their
intended operating schedules during
2 Notice of Submission Deadline for Schedule
Information for O’Hare International, John F.
Kennedy International, and Newark Liberty
International Airports for the Summer 2009
Scheduling Season, 73 FR 54659 (Sept. 22, 2008);
Notice of Submission Deadline for Schedule
Information for San Francisco International Airport
for the Summer 2012 Scheduling Season, 76 FR
64163 (Oct. 17, 2011); Notice of Submission
Deadline for Schedule Information for Los Angeles
International Airport for the Summer 2015
Scheduling Season 80 FR 12253 (Mar. 6, 2015);
Notice of Change of Newark Liberty International
Airport Designation, 81 FR 19861 (Apr. 6, 2016).
The FAA most recently reaffirmed the Level 2
designations by 86 FR 24428 (May 6, 2021). These
designations remain effective until the FAA
announces a change in the Federal Register.
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 165 (Monday, August 30, 2021)]
[Notices]
[Pages 48464-48466]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2021-18562]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES TRADE REPRESENTATIVE
[Docket Number USTR-2021-0013]
2021 Review of Notorious Markets for Counterfeiting and Piracy:
Comment Request
AGENCY: Office of the United States Trade Representative.
ACTION: Request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Office of the United States Trade Representative (USTR)
requests comments that identify online and physical markets to be
considered for inclusion in the 2021 Review of Notorious Markets for
Counterfeiting and Piracy (Notorious Markets List). The Notorious
Markets List identifies examples of online and physical markets that
reportedly engage in and facilitate substantial copyright piracy or
trademark counterfeiting. The issue focus for the 2021 Notorious
Markets List will examine the adverse impact of counterfeiting on
workers involved with the manufacture of counterfeit goods.
DATES: October 11, 2021, at 11:59 p.m. ET: Deadline for submission of
written comments.
October 25, 2021, at 11:59 p.m. ET: Deadline for submission of
rebuttal comments and other information USTR should consider during the
review.
ADDRESSES: You should submit written comments through the Federal
eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov (Regulations.gov).
Follow the instructions for submitting comments in section III below.
For alternatives to online submissions, please contact Jacob Ewerdt at
[email protected] or (202) 395-4510 before transmitting a
comment and in advance of the relevant deadline.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jacob Ewerdt, Director for Innovation
and Intellectual Property, at [email protected] or (202)
395-4510. You can find information about the Special 301 Review,
including the Notorious Markets List, at www.ustr.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
The United States is concerned with trademark counterfeiting and
copyright piracy on a commercial scale because these illicit activities
cause significant financial losses for right holders, legitimate
businesses, and governments. In addition, they undermine critical U.S.
comparative advantages in innovation and creativity to the detriment of
American workers, and can pose significant risks to consumer health and
safety and privacy and security. Conducted under the auspices of the
Special 301 program and the authority of the U.S. Trade Representative
to address practices that have significant adverse impact on the value
of U.S. innovation, the Notorious Markets List identifies examples of
online and physical markets that reportedly engage in and facilitate
substantial copyright piracy or trademark counterfeiting that infringe
on U.S. intellectual property (IP).
Beginning in 2006, USTR identified notorious markets in the annual
Special 301 Report. In 2010, USTR announced that it would publish the
Notorious Markets List as an Out-of-Cycle Review, separate from the
annual Special 301 Report. USTR published the first Notorious Markets
List in February 2011. USTR develops the annual Notorious Markets List
based upon public comments solicited through the Federal Register and
in consultation with Federal agencies that serve on the Special 301
Subcommittee of the Trade Policy Staff Committee.
The United States encourages owners and operators of markets
reportedly involved in piracy or counterfeiting to adopt business
models that rely on the licensed distribution of legitimate content and
products and to work with right holders and enforcement officials to
address infringement. USTR also encourages foreign government
authorities to intensify their efforts to
[[Page 48465]]
investigate reports of piracy and counterfeiting in such markets, and
to pursue appropriate enforcement actions. The Notorious Markets List
does not purport to reflect findings of legal violations, nor does it
reflect the U.S. Government's analysis of the general IP protection and
enforcement climate in the country or countries concerned. For an
analysis of the IP climate in particular countries, please refer to the
annual Special 301 Report, published each spring no later than 30 days
after USTR submits the National Trade Estimate to Congress.
II. Public Comments
USTR invites written comments concerning examples of online and
physical markets that reportedly engage in and facilitate substantial
copyright piracy or trademark counterfeiting that infringe on U.S.
intellectual property. USTR also invites written comments for the
Notorious Markets List `issue focus' that highlights an issue related
to the facilitation of substantial trademark counterfeiting or
copyright piracy. The issue focus for the 2021 Notorious Markets List
will examine the adverse impact of counterfeiting on workers involved
with the manufacture of counterfeit goods. Some governmental and
intergovernmental organization reports suggest that counterfeit goods
often may be produced in unsafe workplaces with substandard and unsafe
materials, by workers who often may be paid little or sometimes nothing
in the case of forced labor. USTR invites the submission of research,
studies, reports, evidence, and business or personal experience on this
topic.
To facilitate the review, written comments should be as detailed as
possible. Comments must clearly identify the market and the reasons why
the commenter believes that the market should be included in the
Notorious Markets List. Commenters should include the following
information, as applicable:
For physical markets:
The market's name and location, e.g., common name, street
address, neighborhood, shopping district, city, etc., and the identity
of the principal owners/operators.
For online markets:
The domain name(s) past and present, available
registration information, and name(s) and location(s) of the hosting
provider(s) and operator(s).
Information on the volume of internet traffic associated
with the website, including number of visitors and page views, average
time spent on the site, estimate of the number of infringing goods
offered, sold, or traded and number of infringing files streamed,
shared, seeded, leeched, downloaded, uploaded, or otherwise distributed
or reproduced, and global or country popularity rating (e.g., Alexa
rank).
Revenue sources such as sales, subscriptions, donations,
upload incentives, or advertising and the methods by which that revenue
is collected.
For physical and online markets:
Whether the market is owned, operated, or otherwise
affiliated with a government entity.
Types of counterfeit or pirated products or services sold,
traded, distributed, or otherwise made available at that market.
Volume of counterfeit or pirated goods or services or
other indicia of a market's scale, reach, or relative significance in a
given geographic area or with respect to a category of goods or
services.
Estimates of economic harm to right holders resulting from
the piracy or counterfeiting and a description of the methodology used
to calculate the harm.
Whether the volume of counterfeit or pirated goods or
estimates of harm has increased or decreased from previous years, and
an approximate calculation of that increase or decrease for each year.
Whether the infringing goods or services sold, traded,
distributed, or made available pose a risk to public health or safety.
Any known contractual, civil, administrative, or criminal
enforcement activity against the market and the outcome of that
enforcement activity.
Additional actions taken by right holders against the
market such as takedown notices, requests to sites to remove URLs or
infringing content, cease and desist letters, warning letters to
landlords and requests to enforce the terms of their leases, requests
to providers to enforce their terms of service or terms of use, and the
outcome of these actions.
Additional actions taken by the market owners or operators
to remove, limit, or discourage the availability of counterfeit or
pirated goods or services, including policies to prevent or remove
access to such goods or services, or to disable seller or user
accounts, the effectiveness of market policies and guidelines in
addressing counterfeiting and piracy, and the level of cooperation with
right holders and law enforcement.
Any other additional information relevant to the review.
III. Submission Instructions
All submissions must be in English and sent electronically via
Regulations.gov. To submit comments, locate the docket (folder) by
entering the docket number USTR-2021-0013 in the `Enter Keyword or IP'
window at the Regulations.gov homepage and click `search.' The site
will provide a search-results page listing all documents associated
with this docket. Locate the reference to this notice by selecting
`notice' under `document type' on the left side of the search-results
page, and click on the link entitled `comment now!' You should provide
comments in an attached document, and name the file according to the
following protocol, as appropriate: Commenter Name or Organization_2021
Notorious Markets. Please include the following information in the
`type comment' field: 2021 Review of Notorious Markets for
Counterfeiting and Piracy. USTR prefers submissions in Microsoft Word
(.docx) or Adobe Acrobat (.pdf) format. If the submission is in another
file format, please indicate the name of the software application in
the `type comment' field. For further information on using
Regulations.gov, please select `how to use Regulations.gov' on the
bottom of any page.
Please do not attach separate cover letters to electronic
submissions. Instead, include any information that might appear in a
cover letter in the comments themselves. Similarly, to the extent
possible, please include any exhibits, annexes, or other attachments in
the same file as the comment itself, rather than submitting them as
separate files.
For any comment submitted electronically that contains business
confidential information (BCI), the file name of the business
confidential version should begin with the characters `BCI'. Any page
containing BCI must be clearly marked `BUSINESS CONFIDENTIAL' on the
top of that page and the submission should clearly indicate, via
brackets, highlighting, or other means, the specific information that
is business confidential. A filer requesting business confidential
treatment must certify that the information is business confidential
and that they would not customarily release it to the public.
Additionally, the submitter should type `Business Confidential 2021
Review of Notorious Markets for Counterfeiting and Piracy' in the
`comment' field. Filers of comments containing BCI also must submit a
public version. Begin the file name of the public version with the
character `P'. USTR will place the non-
[[Page 48466]]
business confidential version in the docket at Regulations.gov and it
will be available for public inspection.
As noted, USTR strongly urges submitters to file comments through
Regulations.gov. You must make any alternative arrangements in advance
of the relevant deadline and before transmitting a comment by
contacting Jacob Ewerdt at [email protected] or (202) 395-
4510.
USTR will post comments in the docket for public inspection, except
properly designated BCI. You can view comments on Regulations.gov by
entering docket number USTR-2021-0013 in the search field on the home
page.
Daniel Lee,
Assistant U.S. Trade Representative for Innovation and Intellectual
Property (Acting), Office of the United States Trade Representative.
[FR Doc. 2021-18562 Filed 8-27-21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3290-F1-P