Exciting news today from Access Copyright and Creative Commons Canada as the two are joining forces to establish a public domain registry. The registry should assist in identifying works in the public domain in Canada and will be further supported by the Wikimedia Foundation to allow individuals to contribute to the registry. Regardless of your views of Access Copyright, I think they should be congratulated for moving forward with this terrific initiative which has the potential to serve as a critical resource for all Canadians and emerge as model for other countries.
Access Copyright And Creative Commons Canada Launch Public Domain Registry
March 3, 2006
Tags: access copyright / CopyrightCopyright Microsite - Canadian Copyright / creative commons / public domain
Share this post
3 Comments
Law Bytes
Episode 199: Boris Bytensky on the Criminal Code Reforms in the Online Harms Act
byMichael Geist
April 15, 2024
Michael Geist
April 8, 2024
Michael Geist
March 25, 2024
Michael Geist
March 18, 2024
Michael Geist
March 11, 2024
Michael Geist
Search Results placeholder
Recent Posts
- Debating the Online Harms Act: Insights from Two Recent Panels on Bill C-63
- The Law Bytes Podcast, Episode 199: Boris Bytensky on the Criminal Code Reforms in the Online Harms Act
- AI Spending is Not an AI Strategy: Why the Government’s Artificial Intelligence Plan Avoids the Hard Governance Questions
- The Law Bytes Podcast, Episode 198: Richard Moon on the Return of the Section 13 Hate Speech Provision in the Online Harms Act
- Tweets Are Not Enough: Why Combatting Relentless Antisemitism in Canada Requires Real Leadership and Action
Whose rules?
When and where will the analysis of what, exactly, constitutes “public domain” in Canada, be published?
I realize the way our current copyright act is written, that this is the only viable option, but….
The way this should be done is with a registry of copyrighted works. Those works not in the registry would then be assumed to be PD.
The way it is now you end up with all sorts of unearned royalties for unlocatable authors going to fat cat collective agencies who purport to represent the authors but (by definition) don’t.
Well, I guess this is better than nothing as long as it isn’t those collectives that get to decide what works end up in this PD database…. Oh wait…
nice try AC
IANAL, but this seems as bizarre as a registry of legally approved behaviour.
I agree with the idea of a copyright registry. Automatic Copyright is looking more and more like a well-meaning idea gone astray.