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Antigua may seek sanctions in the form of withdrawing intellectual property protection for U.S. trademarks or copyright. Known as "cross-retaliation,'' such sanctions are legal at the WTO when an economy can't afford to impose sanctions in the form of higher customs duties on goods.
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This last bit could prove interesting, given the internet. If protection ceases, then Antigua could allow P2P file sharing networks to base main index servers there to replace the losses of casinos. This will make the sanction really bite, but it will bite the asses of the big private corporations with much to lose, such as the Music, Film and Software industries. These corporate monoliths will move to protect their own interests, and will want an end to these sanctions at the earliest possible opportunity, even if this means pressuring the US government to comply with the WTO ruling despite their moralistic and/or protectionist attitudes.
Microsoft has been stung by large EU fines for attempting to drive out the competition, and they still resist more openness of it's OS so that competitor software can be written to interface more smoothly to effectively compete with the Microsoft inclusive packages such as Media Player and Internet Explorer.