The Software & Information Industry Association spent $130,000 in  the first quarter to lobby the federal government on patent-law reform,  copyright protections and other intellectual property matters, among  other issues, according to a quarterly disclosure report.
That's  up from $110,000 in the fourth quarter of 2009 and in the first quarter  of 2009.
The trade group also lobbied during the first three  months of the year on several trade agreements, including the  Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement, which aims to crack down on  counterfeiting, copyright violations and other intellectual property  theft.
Other issues the group lobbied on included the national  broadband plan released by the Federal Communications Commission in  March, standards for targeted online advertising, H-1B visas and other  immigration issues, according to the report filed with the House clerk's  office on April 20.
Members of the Software & Information  Industry Association, which represents software and digital-content  companies, include International Business Machines Corp., Symantec  Corp., Saleforce.com and Adobe  Systems Inc.
The group lobbied Congress, the Department of  Education, the Commerce Department, the Federal Trade Commission, the  U.S. Trade Representative and the Federal Communications Commission,  among other government agencies.
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