CRIA' s reaction to the Kazaa ruling provides a helpful advance preview of its likely comments before the parliamentary committee reviewing Bill C-60. The release applauds the Kazaa decision (CRIA was ready for this one as its PR firm emailed journalists on Friday with offers to comment on the decision), […]
Archive for September 6th, 2005
Canadian Copyright Reform and Fair Dealing
Recent Posts
Flawed Arguments and Inappropriate Analogies: Why Netflix Taxes and Cancon Requirements Should be Rejected
February 12, 2019CRTC on OpenMedia’s Site Blocking Campaign: “Contributed to a Better Understanding of the Issues”
February 8, 2019Government Service Delivery in the Digital Age: My Appearance Before the Standing Committee on Access to Information, Ethics and Privacy
February 7, 2019The Real Over-the-Top: CBC President Likens Netflix to Cultural Imperialism Such As the British in India or French in Africa
January 31, 2019Hidden in Plain Sight?: The Search For Canadian Content on Netflix
January 31, 2019
Recent Columns
Flawed Arguments and Inappropriate Analogies: Why Netflix Taxes and Cancon Requirements Should be Rejected
February 12, 2019Building a Digital Wall: What Lies Behind The Emerging Battle Over New Taxes to Support Canadian Content
January 29, 2019A Failure of Enforcement: Why Changing the Law Won’t Fix All That Ails Canadian Privacy
December 7, 2018Why the USMCA Will Enhance Online Free Speech in Canada
October 5, 2018Setting the Standard?: How the USMCA Quietly Reshapes Global Digital Trade Agreements
October 4, 2018