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Pirate Party of Kazakhstan

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Pirate Party of Kazakhstan

Қазақстан Пираттық Партиясы
Qazaqstan Pırattyq Partııasy
LeaderMarat Mulkubaev
Founded11 January 2010
IdeologyPirate politics
Copyright reform
International affiliationPirate Parties International
Website
pirateparty.kz

The Pirate Party of Kazakhstan (Kazakh: Қазақстан Пираттық Партиясы, romanized: Qazaqstan Pırattyq Partııasy; Russian: Пиратская партия Казахстана) is an unregistered political party in Kazakhstan. Based on the model of the Swedish Pirate Party, it supports intellectual property reform, freedom of speech, and privacy. It was a founding member of Pirate Parties International.[1]

Ideology[edit]

The Pirate Party of Kazakhstan supports the following principles:

The freedom to redistribute and access information[edit]

The party stands for free-for-profit information sharing in any way in any medium. The persecution of its members is unacceptable. Copyright laws and other laws should not be a pretext for punishing non-commercial participants in the exchange of information, limiting the right of the author to choose how to work with a publisher or censorship.

The reform of copyright in accordance with the interests of authors and society, rather than publishers[edit]

The party believes that the copyright system should encourage and reward writers, respecting and observing the rights of others. Kazakhstan's legislation should respect internationally recognized free licenses such as Creative Commons Licenses, GNU GPL /GFDL, BSD License and others, and contribute to their performance in full.

Reform the patent system[edit]

Patents should be encouraging and rewarding to inventors, not an artificial impediment of free competition. In industries where this is impossible, patents should be abolished.

The orientation of government towards free and open technology[edit]

Citizens have the right to communicate with the state, using the Open Standards, Network Protocols, open formats, and files using completely free software programs. All the results of intellectual activity of government authorities, including laws, regulations, and standards should have public domain status and be available for free inspection and copying.

Privacy[edit]

Public authorities should require only the citizen information they need to perform their duties. Claims must be substantiated and may be appealed in court. Gathering private information about citizens is permissible only by court order and only to persons reasonably suspected of committing crimes.

References[edit]

  1. "22 Pirate Parties from all over the world officially founded the Pirate Parties International". Pirate Parties International. 2010-04-21. Archived from the original on 2010-06-20. Retrieved 2010-05-28. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)

External links[edit]



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