On April 29, the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative released its 2025 Special 301 Report. Based on an annual review of the state of intellectual property (IP) protection and enforcement in foreign nations, the 2025 Special 301 Report identifies "law, policies, and practices that fail to provide adequate and effective IP protection and enforcement for U.S. inventors, creators, brands, manufacturers, and service providers, which, in turn, harm American workers whose livelihoods are tied to America’s innovation- and creativity-driven sectors."

Mexico continues to suffer from very high rates of copyright piracy, including through online streaming, peer-to-peer file sharing, direct downloads, stream-ripping, illicit streaming devices and apps, circumvention devices for video games and consoles, and physical media. As broadband access increases, online piracy has been increasing, and stakeholders report that Mexico has one of the highest rates of music and video game piracy in the world. A barrier to effective criminal copyright enforcement is the requirement to prove a direct economic benefit to the infringer and the submission of a legitimate physical copy of the pirated content, even if the pirated copies were distributed online. The 'direct economic benefit' requirement also prevents effective criminal enforcement against not-for-profit acts of piracy, such as interrupting and distributing cable and satellite signals. According to stakeholders, civil copyright enforcement is difficult and expensive due to the lack of secondary liability for Internet service providers (ISPs), no pre-established damages, no lost profit recovery, no recovery of attorney fees, and lengthy court cases.The 2025 Special 301 Report identifies foreign countries that the Trump Administration plans to engage during the year ahead to improve legal protections for Americans' copyrighted property and other IP overseas. Hopefully, those efforts will bear fruit and better safeguard the value of American-owned creative works.
Focusing here on copyrights, areas of concern covered in the report include, "challenges with border and criminal enforcement against counterfeits, including in the online environment," "high levels of online and broadcast piracy, including through illicit streaming devices," and "systemic issues regarding IP protection and enforcement, as well as market access."
According to the report, "during the review period, countries such as Argentina, Bulgaria, Canada, Chile, China, Colombia, Ecuador, Guatemala, India, Mexico, the Netherlands, Pakistan, Poland, Romania, Russia, Switzerland, Thailand, and Vietnam had high levels of online piracy and lacked effective enforcement." It observed that "stream-ripping was reportedly popular in countries such as Canada, Chile, India, Mexico, Nigeria, Russia, and Switzerland."
Furthermore: "Stakeholders continue to report notable levels of piracy through ISDs and illicit IPTV apps, including in Algeria, Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Chile, China, Guatemala, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Jordan, Mexico, Morocco, Singapore, Switzerland, Taiwan, Thailand, the United Arab Emirates, and Vietnam. China, in particular, is a manufacturing hub for these devices."
Also, "[t]he proliferation of 'camcords' – that is high-quality unlawful video recordings of new movies shown in theaters – continues to be a significant trade problem" in Russia, China, and India. The report stated that some foreign countries need to update their laws to deter such conduct. Apparently, "the requirement in some countries that a law enforcement officer must observe a person camcording and then prove that the person is circulating the unlawfully recorded movie before intervening often precludes effective enforcement." The report added that countries such as Argentina, Brazil, Ecuador, and Russia do not effectively criminalize unauthorized camcording in theaters.
Along with ongoing challenges and concerns regarding online copyright piracy in countries such as China and Russia, the report also spotlighted Mexico:
Mexico continues to suffer from very high rates of copyright piracy, including through online streaming, peer-to-peer file sharing, direct downloads, stream-ripping, illicit streaming devices and apps, circumvention devices for video games and consoles, and physical media. As broadband access increases, online piracy has been increasing, and stakeholders report that Mexico has one of the highest rates of music and video game piracy in the world. A barrier to effective criminal copyright enforcement is the requirement to prove a direct economic benefit to the infringer and the submission of a legitimate physical copy of the pirated content, even if the pirated copies were distributed online. The 'direct economic benefit' requirement also prevents effective criminal enforcement against not-for-profit acts of piracy, such as interrupting and distributing cable and satellite signals. According to stakeholders, civil copyright enforcement is difficult and expensive due to the lack of secondary liability for Internet service providers (ISPs), no pre-established damages, no lost profit recovery, no recovery of attorney fees, and lengthy court cases.
In the year ahead, we will see if the Trump Administration is successful in prompting improvements in copyright protections for Americans in those nations identified by the 2025 Special 301 Report.