The government imposed
time allocation
yesterday on Bill C-11, a move that will wrap up second reading debate
on the copyright reform bill on Friday and send it to the Bill C-11
committee soon thereafter. While the government's overuse of time
allocation is certainly a concern, the debate is not over and several well
coordinatedtweets
of support hardly mask the huge
public concern
with the bill's digital lock rules and proposed SOPA-style amendments
proposed by several copyright lobby groups that has generated tens of
thousands of emails to MPs in recent days. As described further below,
the opposition stems from rules that will have an impact on the
legitimate activities of millions, creating barriers to creators,
students, journalists, researchers, and the visually impaired.
During yesterday's
debate,
several Conservative MPs emphasized that the copyright bill is one of
the most consulted pieces of legislation in recent memory. For
example, Canadian Heritage Minister James Moore stated "this is my 12th
year as a member of Parliament and I can tell her that except for the
Liberal government's Bill C-2, the response to 9/11, this legislation
will have had more consideration at a stand-alone legislative committee
and parliamentary and public consideration with all of the tens of
thousands of submissions we received from Canadians in person and in
writing and the consultations we did across the country before we
drafted the bill."
The government is right when it says there has been wide consultation
(a recap of the 2009 copyright consultation here).
The question is whether it has taken the public comments into account
and conducted a full analysis of the implications of its current
proposal. There is reason to believe that it has not.
Last month, the Hill Times ran a policy
briefing focused on copyright
and new media that featured an interview
with Industry Minister Christian
Paradis on Bill C-11. The interview included a particularly notable
exchange on
Conservative MP Lee Richardson's comment
that Canadians need not be concerned by the digital lock rules since
lawsuits are unlikely to follow:
Q. Liberal MP Geoff
Regan said during debate of Bill C-11 that “government members have
apparently been saying that it would be okay to break the new law and
to circumvent digital locks. The member for Calgary Centre wrote: ‘If a
digital lock is broken for personal use, it is not realistic that the
creator would choose to file a lawsuit against the consumer, due to
legal fees and time involved.’ In other words, he is suggesting not to
worry about this, that the law can be broken and nothing would happen,
that really we are encouraging consumers to break the law. What does
that say about the Conservatives’ position, that they are telling
Canadians to break this law that they have not passed yet?” What’s your
response?
A. “Like any
country, Canada has laws that all citizens must respect and obey. Bill
C-11 sets out the exclusive rights of creators, including musicians,
with respect to their artistic creations. Enforcing these rights in a given instance,
however, is a private legal matter on which the government cannot
speculate.”
While governments often refrain from commenting on active litigation
that is before the courts, they must surely anticipate the likely
effects of their legislative proposals. Indeed, that is precisely what
the government is doing when it repeatedly claims (as it did yesterday)
that the bill "make Canada an attractive location for creators,
innovators and investors."
In order to determine whether the digital lock rules found in
Bill C-11 strike the right balance the government must speculate -
typically described as anticipate or project - how it will be enforced.
The overwhelming
opposition
to the
current draft - which includes the opposition parties, business groups,
retailers, artists groups, consumers, education associations, and
thousands of Canadians - is based on analysis about how the rules as
drafted will be enforced. After months of debate, there is no longer
any question that the current draft goes far beyond international
requirements. There is no question that the 2009 copyright consultation
came out strongly against the approach in the current draft and there
is no doubt that the majority of what the Bill C-32 committee heard was
similarly critical of the digital lock rules. In recent days, the
government has heard from over 50,000 Canadians repeating their concern
with the proposed approach.
If Paradis and Canadian Heritage Minister James Moore have not
speculated on how their digital lock rules could enforced, perhaps it
is because they don't need to. They know - or ought to know - that the
following scenarios are some of the possible outcomes:
a Canadian documentary film maker wants to use a video clip found
in a commercial DVD within their film. The clip would qualify as fair
dealing under the law. They circumvent the digital lock on the DVD in
order to use the clip. When the film maker seeks to distribute the film
or screen it at a film festival, they require insurance against
infringement claims. They are unable to obtain the insurance - and
therefore unable to distribute or screen their film - because the
circumvention of the DVD lock (which include both access and copy
controls) violated Canadian law. U.S. documentary film makers do not
face the same restriction.
a television journalist wants to use a clip found on a DVD for a
news report. The piece is a controversial one and is reviewed by a
lawyer. The lawyer refuses to approve the use of the clip since it
similarly requires circumvention of a DVD lock. While news reporting is
a fair dealing category, the circumvention would still constitute
infringement.
a Canadian media researcher plans a major new project that
involves using a wide range of media clips. The researcher completes a
full grant proposal to support the research. Before submitting the
grant, they are required to sign an ethics document confirming that the
research does not violate any Canadian laws. The researcher cannot sign
the document and cannot apply for the grant since the circumvention
would violate the Bill C-11 digital lock rules.
a B.C. school district opts
for open source software for all workstations throughout local schools.
The school licenses educational DVDs for classroom purposes. The
licence includes a provision that the school will comply will all
applicable copyright laws. The school cannot use the DVDs on the
workstations without circumventing the DVD locks in violation of the
law and licence.
a Canadian computer science researcher wants to circumvent
digital locks on several computer programs for encryption research
purposes. The researcher does not alert the owner of the programs,
since the program owner has threatened other researchers who have tried
to do the same thing with a lawsuit. The company follows up with a
lawsuit against the Canadian researcher, noting that the researcher did
not qualify for the encryption research exception in Bill C-11 by
failing to provide advance notice of the circumvention.
a Canadian family receives a package of DVDs from relatives in
Japan. The DVDs
are region coded and will not play on a Canadian DVD player. They try
to find a service that will circumvent the digital lock so they can
view the movies. No local service will do it since the law prohibits
circumvention services.
a non-profit group representing visually impaired Canadians
offers services circumventing digital locks on electronic books to
improve access for their members. A leading publisher threatens a
lawsuit if the service continues, arguing that service unduly impairs
the technological protection measure found on the e-book in violation
of Bill C-11.
a privacy group is concerned with the surreptitious capture of
personal information by consumer electronics companies. The group
creates a software program that will circumvent the digital lock on the
products to identify whether personal information is being collected. A
leading consumer electronics company sues to block distribution of the
product, arguing that the privacy exception does not apply where the
service unduly impairs the technological protection measure.
These are not mere hypotheticals. A detailed
review of the U.S. DMCA provisions - which are very similar to
those found in Canada - has identified numerous examples where the law
chilled freedom of expression and scientific research, jeopardized fair
use, and impeded competition and innovation. Moreover, many involve
situations where the user does not have the "choice" to not purchase a
digitally-locked product, but rather find that the digital lock, when
coupled with the Bill C-11 approach, impedes legitimate, legal
activity. These examples are in addition to the many consumer rights -
format shifting, time shifting, backup copies, etc. - which are all
inapplicable anytime a digital lock is present.
This is precisely the kind of "speculation" that many groups have
conducted in reaching the conclusion that the Bill C-11 digital lock
rules do not strike the right balance. The proposed solution from
virtually all the critics is not to dismiss legal protection for
digital locks, but rather link protection to copyright infringement.
That approach would solve all of the above scenarios. If enacted in its current form, the law will have an impact on the
legitimate activities of millions and attempts to falsely assuage
Canadians that these provisions are mostly innocuous is simply
inaccurate.
Barry Sookman, lawyer and registered lobbyist for the Canadian
Recording Industry Association (now Music Canada), the Motion Pictures
Association - Canada, and Canadian Publishers Council, has an op-ed
in the National Post claiming that concerns that proposed amendments to
Bill C-11 could result in SOPA-style rules in Canada are the stuff of
wild claims and hysteria.
The short response is that Sookman's column - along with his clients -
downplay the dramatic impact of their proposed amendments. Their
proposed amendments to C-11 would radically alter the bill by
constraining consumer provisions, heaping greater liability risk on
Internet companies, and introducing website blocking and Internet
termination to Canada. Several of these provisions are very similar in
approach to SOPA in the U.S. and the comparison is both apt and
accurate. Moreover, the column leaves the false impression that Bill
C-11's digital lock rules are standard when they are widely opposed by
numerous stakeholders that Sookman would not dare to call
anti-copyright.
There is much more to take issue with in the column and I've done so in
paragraph-by-paragraph format below. Sookman's column is posted in
italics and my response immediately follows: Read More ...
While hysterical predictions about
copyright reform in Canada have been ratcheted up yet again, this time
the claims are so outrageous that they can perhaps best be described as
having “jumped the shark.” Canadians are being told that Bill C-11, an
act to amend Canada’s outdated copyright law, could be used to shut
down popular websites such as YouTube, fundamentally change the
Internet, sabotage online freedoms and hog-tie innovators.
Further details on how the proposed amendments to Bill C-11 could be
used to target YouTube are available here
and discussed in greater detail below. As noted in the post, the
language in the bill - if combined with amendments supported by
Sookman's clients - could be used to target legitimate sites such as
YouTube. Those same proposed amendments call for website blocking and
ISP policies that could lead to loss of Internet service.
Activist organizations are urging
Canadians to protest what they call the impending Bill C-11 “Internet
lockdown.” Making wild claims about the bill that have no basis in
reality are groups such as OpenMedia and Avaaz and illicit businesses
who sell hacking devices for pirated video games, all urging online
protests and all relying on the hyperbolic musings from University of
Ottawa academic Michael Geist of what might or possibly or could one
day happen. To fully ratchet up the frenzy, these groups are claiming
attempts are being made to bring U.S.-style legislation to Canada.
I have written in detail about the SOPA-style rules including website
blocking and expansion of liability for sites that could even cover
legitimate sites here and here. The
concerns about an "Internet lockdown" likely stem from the recording
industry's demand for ISP provisions that could lead to termination
of Internet services.
These warnings are an attempt to
exploit the controversy and unpopular anti-copyright sentiments about
the much-misunderstood U.S. legislation in Congress called the Stop
Online Piracy Act, and to derail parts of Bill C-11 and proposals to
amend it. It doesn’t seem to matter that SOPA and Bill C-11 are
entirely different pieces of legislation, with different goals and
legislative text. Canadians should examine the facts and see the
hysteria for what it is.
SOPA and C-11 are different pieces of legislation as I emphasized in an
FAQ on the
issue.
What matters is the substance of the provisions in C-11 and the
proposed changes that would add SOPA-style provisions to the bill.
Bill C-11 contains many provisions
that would greatly expand the freedoms of Canadians to copy creative
products under new exceptions for format shifting, time shifting and
creating mash-ups. ISPs and other online service providers would have
new wide exceptions when they act as neutral intermediaries. The bill
also proposes new exceptions for broadcasters and to support learning
and education. With these new exceptions, Canada’s copyright law would
become one of the most user-friendly, if not by far the most
user-friendly, in the world. An Internet lockdown? Hardly.
Bill C-11 certainly includes some user-friendly provisions. From the
day the bill was introduced, I have argued
that there are many aspect of the bill that deserve support. In fact, a
review of the transcript
of my committee appearance shows I was more supportive of the bill than
Sookman, who appeared on the same day. The public has become concerned,
however, because Sookman's clients are seeking radical amendments that
would scale back even the user-focused provisions. The proposed
amendments
(this is their document, not mine) includes limitations on the format
shifting, time shifting, and user generated content provisions,
restrictions on the ISP provisions, and elimination of the broadcaster
provision. To suggest that the bill is user-friendly while
simultaneously seeking to change those provisions amounts to a classic
bait and switch.
Bill C-11 also proposes amendments to
provide legal protection for technological protection measures (a.k.a.
digital locks or TPMs) that safeguard intellectual property products.
These amendments would use internationally accepted measures to support
new business models and innovation in digital products and services
such as online music and movie streaming services.
The SOPA rhetoric has led opponents
of legal protection for TPMs to mount further opposition to Bill C-11
by trying to link the anti-copyright sentiments about SOPA to the TPM
provisions in Bill C-11, arguing, for example, that they are the
“Canadian version of SOPA.” They do this even though there is no
connection whatsoever between them.
The argument is that some of the proposed amendments to C-11 are the
Canadian version of SOPA. Bill C-11 as it stands is better
characterized as the Canadian DMCA, since it largely mirrors the
digital lock approach found in that legislation. I discussed this point
during my appearance
on George Stroumboulopoulos Tonight.
Bill C-11 also proposes an amendment
intended to make it an infringement of copyright for a person using the
Internet to knowingly enable copyright infringement. The poster
children for this legislation are BitTorrent sites such as IsoHunt.com
that have been found to facilitate the distribution of files, 95% to
99% of which are infringing. Other targets of the enablement provision
are sites such as Megaupload.com, a cyber locker site whose principals
were just indicted for criminal copyright infringement. The FBI
estimates that the founder, Kim Dotcom, personally made $115,000 a day
from his network of sites.
In 2008, Sookman sent isoHunt a cease and
desist letter
that threatened legal action that would seek up to $20,000 per
infringement. That letter was based on current Canadian copyright
law.
In 2010, Sookman's firm filed a
lawsuit
against isoHunt, citing a long list of copyright infringing activities
based on current law. IsoHunt may be the poster child for the enabler
provision, but Sookman is the poster child for how current Canadian law
can be used to target these same sites.
This provision is currently worded to
apply only to sites that are “designed primarily to enable acts of
copyright infringement.” Mr. Geist claims that clarifying the wording
to expressly cover services that are “primarily operated to enable
infringement or induce infringement” could be used to shut down sites
such as YouTube and would stifle innovation. These claims are
ridiculous, though not surprising given his historical antipathy to
laws designed to protect the creative industries from theft.
The amendments proposed by the recording industry are not
"clarifications" of the enabler provision. They represent a significant
expansion of the provision that would risk being applied to legitimate
sites as well. I provide a full analysis of why the expanded provision
could be used to target sites such as YouTube here.
To be clear, SOPA was intended to
target foreign rogue websites that would already be illegal under U.S.
copyright law if those sites were operated from the U.S. Bill
C-11 is
not about foreign pirate sites: It is Canada’s attempt to establish
rules about what is and isn’t legal in Canada. This is long
overdue.
The fact that Canada has not updated its copyright laws to deal with
the Internet environment has led to our reputation as a haven for
internet piracy operations both with our trading partners and pirate
operators including Megaupload’s Kim Dotcom.
As noted above, Sookman's legal threats and lawsuits make it clear that
he thinks these sites are illegal under current Canadian law. Canada's
reputation as a piracy haven is due to the hyperbolic claims of Sookman
and his clients. The Business Software Alliance’s annual Global Piracy
Report shows Canada among the 15 lowest
piracy countries in the world with the Canadian piracy rate at an
all-time low. The Canadian Motion Pictures Distributors Association has
acknowledged
that illegal camcording had largely disappeared from the Canadian
market. In 2010, the World Economic Forum found
that global executives rank Canadian intellectual property protection
ahead of the United States, the United Kingdom, Japan, and most of
Europe. Canada is a world leader
in digital music sales that even the Canadian Recording Industry
Association now characterizes as a commercial opportunity.
The current wave of opposition to the
amendments appears to be an opportunist effort to turn the tide on
effective copyright reform by leveraging anti-SOPA public opinion. The
amendments that are being objected to were first tabled before the
Parliamentary Committee examining Bill C-32 in March 2011 and were
publically disseminated even by Mr. Geist, well before the SOPA ruckus.
At that time there was no public opposition to the proposed amendments
as going too far.
The Bill C-32 committee solicited comments and proposed amendments from
all Canadians. It received dozens of submissions, but none were posted
online or made publicly available. I obtained copies of the
submissions
last summer after Bill C-32 died on the order paper as part of a
request from the committee clerk. There was no public opposition to the
proposed amendments because few people were actually aware of the
specifics. Moreover, by Sookman's standard, there were no objections to
the dozens of suggested changes, the majority of which called for
reforms to the digital lock rules.
The new argument that amendments
would cover sites such as YouTube is spurious. Bill C-11 provides a
series of criteria that a court would need to consider in determining
if a site primarily enables infringement. The targeted sites are those:
promoted to enable acts of infringement; that know they are being used
to enable significant infringements; that have no significant uses
other than enabling infringement; that benefit from enabling
infringement; and that would be economically unviable but for enabling
infringement. The types of sites that would be affected are such sites
as IsoHunt and Megaupload, the very wealth-destroying “innovators” the
bill targets.
I outlined how the specific criteria could applied to YouTube here.
To repeat, contrast the Bill C-11 criteria that a court may consider
with Viacom's
claims against YouTube, as found in its appellate
brief:
whether the person expressly or
implicitly marketed or promoted the service as one that could be used
to enable acts of copyright infringement
"YouTube’s founders built an
integrated media entertainment business, in the district court’s words,
by “welcom[ing] copyright-infringing material being placed on their
website.” That copyrighted material was “attractive to users” and
“enhanced defendants’ income from advertisements,” enabling YouTube’s
founders to sell the business to Google for $1.65 billion."
whether the person had knowledge
that the service was used to enable a significant number of acts of
copyright infringement
"Almost immediately after
YouTube came online, YouTube became aware of widespread infringement on
its site. And it was the copyrighted videos—not home movies—that
people flocked to YouTube to see."
whether the service has
significant uses other than to enable acts of copyright infringement
"In their written presentation
to Google’s board and senior management, Google’s financial advisors
stated that 60 percent of YouTube’s views were “premium” —i.e.,
copyrighted—and only 10 percent of the premium videos were licensed."
the person’s ability, as part of
providing the service, to limit acts of copyright infringement, and any
action taken by the person to do so
"Dunton similarly put a stop to
efforts to implement software that would notify copyright owners when
infringing videos were uploaded. Even though a YouTube engineer
said
that implementing an automated anti-infringement tool to alert
copyright owners when suspected infringing content was uploaded
“isn’t
hard” and would “take another day or [weekend],” Dunton ordered
the
engineer to “forget about the email alerts stuff” because “we’re just
trying to cover our asses so we don’t get sued.”"
any benefits the person received
as a result of enabling the acts of copyright
infringement
"Unable to compete with
YouTube’s pirated content, in late 2006, Google bought YouTube for
$1.65 billion."
the economic viability of the
provision of the service if it were not used to enable acts of
copyright infringement
"As early as June of 2005,
YouTube’s Internet service provider complained that YouTube was
violating its user agreement by, YouTube founder Steve Chen believed,
“hosting copyrighted content.” But Chen resolved that YouTube was
“not
about to take down content because our ISP is giving us shit.”
And, in
emails with the other founders, he later remarked “we need to attract
traffic. . . . [T]he only reason why our traffic surged was due
to a
video of this type”—i.e., copyrighted and unauthorized"
The government has acknowledged that
technical amendments to Bill C-11 are required. A healthy debate based
on facts can be expected as Parliament’s Special Legislative Committee
continues to consider it, and thoughtful debate is always helpful in
ensuring a proposed law meets its objectives. But let’s not be fooled
by Chicken Little claims. Canadians will all be hurt if the debate
continues to be marred by political opportunism and misinformation
spread for political purposes.
If there has been political opportunism and misinformation, it has been
the consistent mischaracterization of Canadian law by groups such as
CRIA and their representatives, which sue on the one hand and lobby for
reform on the other. The fact that tens of thousands of Canadians have
woken up to Bill C-11 and the radical
proposed amendments
supported by Sookman's clients is a welcome development, one that will
help ensure a full debate with politicians from all parties better
aware of where Canadians stand on copyright reform.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper arrived in China today for a high
profile visit aimed at improving the Canada- China economic ties.
Many have noted the change in tone from the Canadian
government on China on rights issues, but the intellectual property
story is worth
noting here as well. Unlike a U.S. visit, which is likely to place IP
issues at the very top of the list, the Canadian visit is unlikely to
emphasize the issue. Indeed, Canada would do well to consider shifting
its approach to China on intellectual property.
While China-based
piracy is unquestionable a concern, Canada has too often used the issue
to curry favour with the U.S. at the expense of developing the China
relationship. In recent years, our support for the Anti-Counterfeiting
Trade Agreement (which deliberately
excluded China)
and now the Trans Pacific Partnership (which also excludes China) does
little to help relations. China could be a strategic ally on global IP
issues as both countries face significant external pressure for reform.
While compliance with international rules should be the starting point
for any dialogue, focusing on the flexibility that exists at
international law to address domestic concerns is in both our interests.
The biggest Canadian blunder was the decision to join a U.S. complaint
against China at the World Trade Organization in 2007 alleging that
China’s domestic laws, border measures, and criminal penalties for
intellectual property violations did not comply with its international
treaty obligations. The case was a big loss.
China was required to amend parts of its copyright law but on the
big issues - border measures and IP enforcement - almost all of the
contested laws were upheld as valid.
More interesting are the background documents that demonstrate that the
Canadian government was unable to muster credible evidence of harm
among Canadian companies.
Interestingly, the key player in promoting
the case in Canada was the Canadian Recording Industry Association,
which appears to have worked closely with the U.S. government to
pressure Canadian officials to join the case. A Wikileaks
cable notes that "CRIA is leading the charge to get the Government
of Canada to join the U.S. case." [the same cable
also states that the Entertainment Software Association of Canada
"expects not to take a position, because not all of their members are
in agreement and because their members' IP is not Canada-based anyway."]
I chronicled the background information in a column in
2009 based on documents obtained under the Access to Information
Act. The key findings:
Government records reveal that the
U.S. began to pressure Canada to join the case as a full party in 2006,
months before the case was formally filed with the WTO. In April
2006,
officials at the Department of Foreign Affairs asked the Beijing and
Shanghai consular offices for information on intellectual property
infringement problems, but neither provided much assistance.
Two months later, with the case
making little progress (in May, an RCMP official wondered aloud why
Canada was even concerned with enforcement in other countries), Foreign
Affairs launched a public consultation on intellectual property
enforcement abroad. The consultation was not limited to China, as
officials decided to keep it open-ended.
The consultation generated 55
responses, but officials hoping to build a solid case against China
were left sorely disappointed. According to a government summary
(the
consultation results have never been disclosed to the public and were
obtained under Access to Information), only one-third of the responses
specifically referenced China as a problem. In fact, there were
more
responses that criticized the United States and the consultation itself.
By the end of the summer, the U.S.
had provided Canadian officials with its legal arguments, but Canada
was without the evidence it needed to demonstrate harm and thereby
participate as a co-complainant in the case. Indeed, on the key
issue
involving criminal enforcement thresholds, a Department of Justice
official noted that Justice and RCMP guidelines used similar thresholds
for prosecutorial decisions and that the Chinese could effectively make
similar claims against Canada.
Given the weak position, Canadian
officials could not support becoming a co-complainant, instead
recommending that Canada join as a third party. Anticipating an
October 2006 complaint, a press release was prepared but was never
issued after the U.S. decided to delay launching the case.
With no complaint in sight, the
Canadian Recording Industry Association, which had been the most vocal
supporter of Canadian participation, met with senior Foreign Affairs
officials in January 2007. Documents prepared by department
officials
in advance of the meeting noted that CRIA's previous efforts to
encourage participation had "lacked specifics." The memo
concluded
that "we remain of the view that we do not have enough information
related to specific Canadian experiences and interests to go forward as
a co-complainant" and that "there is still no real concrete information
however, of Canadian interests that have been harmed in China."
Over the next few months, Canadian
officials grappled with several concerns as a U.S. complaint appeared
inevitable. For example, with plans for Canada to participate in
the
intellectual property case against China but not in a second case on
market access, officials feared that the Canadian steel industry would
voice its objections.
Further, as Canadian officials
drafted a formal letter of notification of its participation, a
Geneva-based official asked "do we have statistics to mention about
intellectual property owned by Canadians sold in China or something
like it to explain why we are interested?" Without solid
statistics,
the formal notification did not reference the issue, instead merely
stating Canada's "concern" with Chinese practices.
The U.S. commenced its action on
April 9, 2007. Canada filed its notification as a third party
participant two weeks later and within hours, CRIA wrote to Foreign
Affairs to offer its assistance on the case.
Given the weak position, Canadian
officials could not support becoming a co-complainant, instead
recommending that Canada join as a third party.
Last month, the Hill Times ran a special section on copyright and new
media. I contributed an op-ed (Hill
Times version, homepage
version)
that linked copyright reform with the government's emphasis on the
Canadian economy. The column noted that one metric for assessing the
effectiveness of copyright reform is to consider whether the bill uses
the flexibility at international law to establish
a competitive advantage when compared to our trading partners. The
answer with Bill C-11 - even without the SOPA-style amendments sought
by copyright lobby groups - is a mixed bag.
The column begins by discussing the public domain. For copyright
watchers, New Year's Day has become public domain day,
the day when the term of copyright expires on thousands of works. While
Europe celebrated the entry of James Joyce and Virginia Woolf into
their public domain, Canadians noted that both authors’ copyright
expired here in 1991. The term of copyright in Canada is consistent
with the international standard of life of the author plus 50 years,
which this year meant that the works of Ernest Hemingway and Carl Jung
entered into the public domain, twenty years before they are scheduled
to do so in Europe or the United States.
The Trans Pacific Partnership Agreement may place the difference in
copyright term in jeopardy (a recent leaked draft indicates that it
mandates extending the term of copyright), but for the moment it
provides Canada with an important competitive advantage. Canadian
businesses, creators and educators can rely on a far larger public
domain than competitors in the U.S. and Europe, leading to new creative
and commercial opportunities as well as increased access for teachers
and students.
While the government has framed Bill C-11 as a policy effort to strike
the right copyright balance, a crucial question in light of Prime
Minister Stephen Harper’s emphasis on the Canadian economy is whether
the bill uses the flexibility at international law to establish a
competitive advantage when compared to our trading partners.
The answer is a mixed bag. The bill contains several unique Canadian
proposals that should create some legal advantages. For example, the
approach to Internet provider liability, known as notice-and-notice,
strikes a better balance than the U.S. notice-and-takedown system,
making Canada an attractive home for hosting Internet content.
Similarly, the user generated content provision, which legalizes
non-commercial remix videos, provides legal certainty to intermediaries
that host content and those that create it. Rights holders have also
pointed to the “enabler provision” as a made-in-Canada approach to
assist enforcement efforts, though are now seeking a far broader rule.
Bill C-11’s approach to fair dealing leaves Canada in the mushy middle
when it comes to copyright exceptions and limitations. The inclusion of
three new exceptions – education, parody, and satire - is an
improvement, but it does not go as far as trading partners such as the
U.S. and Israel, which have both recognized that fair use lies at the
heart of many industries that rely upon a flexible copyright system.
The absence of fair use creates a competitive disadvantage for
innovative Canadian businesses, who may decide to set up shop elsewhere
as a result.
The biggest competitive shortcoming in Bill C-11 is also the most
heavily criticized – the digital lock rules. While the criticism from
consumer, education, and library groups is noteworthy, the lack of
support from business and creators groups is particularly telling.
On the business side, the Business Coalition for Balanced Copyright,
which includes leading technology, telecom, and Internet companies, has
argued for changes to the rules, as has the Retail Council of Canada,
which fears that the changes could hurt consumer confidence in the
digital environment.
The Bill C-11 digital lock rules will also place some Canadian creators
at a competitive disadvantage. For example, documentary filmmakers in
the U.S. rely on a specific exception that permits circumvention of
digital locks found on DVDs. By contrast, the Canadian approach does
not feature a DVD circumvention exception, creating additional costs
and legal uncertainty.
Supporters argue that the digital lock rules will create incentives for
new media businesses, yet there is little evidence those rules provide
a competitive advantage. Without any digital lock rules, Canadian
digital music sales have grown faster than those in the U.S. for the
past five consecutive years, Canadian entertainment software businesses
have thrived, and a steady stream of new digital businesses such as
Netflix and Rdio have entered the Canadian market, suggesting that the
current law is not holding back new marketplace entrants or commercial
success.
Copyright reform may be driven by a desire to meet international
standards, but global copyright law provides all countries with
considerable flexibility in implementation. Identifying opportunities
to create Canadian copyright competitive advantages would bring
commercial and creative benefits and though Bill C-11 features several
unique provisions, they are undermined by badly missing the mark on the
digital lock rules.
Last week, I delivered a keynote
address on copyright issues at the University of South Florida St.
Petersburg. The talk focused on the activism around SOPA and assessed
the global strategies employed by the U.S. and copyright lobby groups
of shifting away from WIPO toward closed negotiations such as the
Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement.
The reports
that the music industry lobby (along with the Entertainment Software
Association of Canada and the movie lobby) is seeking the inclusion of
SOPA-style provisions into Bill C-11 has generated considerable
discussion online and in the mainstream media (CBC,
Financial
Post).
Yesterday, Balanced Copyright for Canada, the group backed by the music
industry, fired back with several tweets claiming that opposing their
reforms would benefit "illegal
BitTorrent sites"and "illegal
hosting sites."
Leaving aside the fact that if these sites are illegal, they are
by-definition already in violation of current law, the claims point to
what seems likely to become a SOPA-like scare campaign that seeks to
paint skeptics of CRIA demands as supporters of piracy.
These claims involve two different issues with Bill C-11. The first are
the digital lock provisions, which dozens of
organizations
(including businesses, the Retail Council of Canada, creator groups,
consumer groups, and education associations) have argued are overly
restrictive. The proposed solution is to link circumvention of a
digital lock with actual copyright infringement, an approach that is
consistent with the WIPO Internet treaties and has been adopted by
trading partners such as New Zealand and Switzerland (Canada even
proposed the approach in Bill C-60). These amendments would not
legalize hacking businesses, but rather ensure that the same balance
that exists offline is retained in the digital environment.
The second issue involves expansion of the "enabler provision"
currently proposed in Bill C-11. I have pointed out that Canadian law
appears to effectively address these sites as the music industry is
currently suing
isoHunt
for millions of dollars based on the current law. In the event that
more certainty is needed, the current enabler provision would grant
even more powers to rights holders to target these sites. Yet that is
apparently not good enough for the music, software, and movie lobby
groups, who want to expand the enabler provision to include SOPA-like
liability as well as add website blocking injunctions to Canadian law.
The danger with this approach is that it threatens to target
perfectly legitimate websites.
Arguing against an overbroad enabler provision is not siding with
illegal sites, but rather ensuring that legal ones are not caught by
the dragnet.
The music industry claims to be a big supporter of Bill C-11, yet few
groups have demanded
more changes. In fact, when it appeared before the House of Commons
committee reviewing the bill, one MP noted
that their demands were "substantial" and "anything but minor."
Their demands include:
expansion of the enabler provision to include SOPA-style expanded
liability
create new injunction powers to block websites
create new injunction powers to remove content from websites
require ISPs to implement a policy on repeat infringers that
could include Internet termination
remove the non-commercial liability cap for statutory damages
restrict the user-generated content provision
create new limits on personal copying exception
create new limits on time shifting exception
create additional limits on backup copy provision
limit the safe harbour for ISPs
limit the safe harbour for caching activities
limit the safe harbour for hosting content
limit the search engine (ILT) exception
eliminate the ephemeral recording amendment
The music industry is seeking a huge overhaul of Bill C-32 that makes
any requests for adjusting the digital lock rules look minor by
comparison. As it escalates the rhetoric by claiming critics stand with
piracy, it is apparent that the lobby groups' fight to blend a Canadian
DMCA with a Canadian SOPA will only intensify in the weeks ahead.
Reports indicate that Industry Minister Christian Paradis could unveil
the government's spectrum
auction and telecom
foreign ownership policies this month. My weekly technology law
column (Toronto
Star version, homepage
version) provided a preview of some the key issues. While interest
in spectrum auction policy is typically limited to
telecom companies and business analysts, all Canadians have a stake in
this decision. The available spectrum - known as the 700 MHz spectrum -
opens up a host of possibilities for new innovation, competitors, and
open Internet access. It is viewed as particularly valuable spectrum
since it easily penetrates walls, making it ideal for delivering
wireless high-speed Internet services.
Auctioning the spectrum raises a host of critical policy choices.
Topping the list is whether the government tinkers with the auction
framework to help foster greater marketplace competition. Some of the
large incumbents unsurprisingly favour an “open auction” with no
bidding limits, but assuming Paradis concludes that some measures are
needed, the choice will likely come down to either a spectrum set-aside
that reserves some spectrum for new entrants and smaller companies or
spectrum caps.
The last spectrum auction included a set-aside, which opened the door
to a handful of new competitors such as Globalive, PublicMobile, and
Mobilicity. A further set-aside may make sense since this round of new
entrants may look to use the spectrum primarily for wireless broadband
services, providing a potential alternative to the cable and telecom
dominance.
If another set-aside proves too unwieldy, a spectrum cap, which would
limit the amount of spectrum any single company could hold, may emerge
as the alternative. A spectrum cap might prove effective if combined
with two additional conditions.
First, the implementation of a use-it-or-lose it principle that would
require all bidders to use the spectrum within a defined period. The
use-it-or-lose-it approach would help guard against the hoarding of
spectrum, particularly for incumbents who may overbid in the hopes of
keeping new competitors out of the market.
Second, safeguards against opportunistic flipping of the spectrum with
the prohibition on its sale within the first five years of the auction.
The trio of policies – caps, mandatory use, and a block on transfer,
may increase the number of successful bidders.
Another critical issue is who should be entitled to bid for the
spectrum. The last spectrum auction featured Canadian ownership
requirements, thereby limiting potential entrants. Given that Canada is
one of the only developed countries that has retained significant
telecom foreign ownership restrictions, the auction provides a
tailor-made opportunity to eliminate the restrictions by opening the
market to all bidders.
The spectrum policy decision will also determine which spectrum is
available for auction and which is reserved for alternate purposes. The
government has already indicated that it plans to grant some of the
spectrum to law enforcement agencies, which intend to create their own
emergency wireless network.
Many leading technology companies have recommended allocating some of
the spectrum for unlicensed purposes. This spectrum, which would be
free to anyone to use without the need for licence or government
approval, could yield new services and technologies.
Beyond the technical details of the spectrum auction, the final
billion-dollar question is what the government should do with the
auction proceeds. While the $4 billion in proceeds from the last
auction went into general revenues, this auction represents the best –
perhaps only – opportunity to access billions of non-tax dollars for
the digital economy. The money could be used to support broadband
initiatives, digital content creation, and digital skills
programs.
Last night I appeared
on George Stroumboulopoulos Tonight
with a short "Soapbox" segment to explain mounting concerns over Bill
C-11. The program has posted a video version of my comments on some of
the digital lock issues in the bill and the demands for SOPA-style
amendments.
Akamai has released its latest State
of the Internet Report
and it finds that Canada continues to slide in global broadband
rankings. Last year, the Akamai report was often favoured by those who
took issue with criticisms of Canadian broadband, claiming
it offered "an objective sanity check" on comparative broadband speeds.
If so, even Akamai now finds Canadian broadband declining when compared
to other countries.
Just six months ago, Canada was tied for
9th in average broadband speed. According to the latest
report,
Canada now sits tied with Hungary for 14th behind countries that
include the United Arab Emirates, Romania, the Czech Republic, and
Ireland. On the peak connection speed, Canada ranks 19th in the world.
The data isn't very impressive on the mobile broadband metrics either.
The mobile broadband speed measured carriers around the world including
one Canadian carrier. The Canadian carrier ranked 68th worldwide for
average broadband speed, below carriers in every region of the world.
In recent days there has been massive new interest in Canadian
copyright reform as thousands of people write to their MPs to express
concern about the prospect of adding SOPA-style rules to Bill C-11
(there are even plans for public protests
beginning to emerge). The interest has resulted in some completely unacceptable threats
and confusion -
some claiming that the Canadian bill will be passed within 14 days (not
true) and others stating that proposed SOPA-style changes are nothing
more than technical changes to the bill (also not true). Even the
mainstream media is getting into the mix, with the Financial Post's
Terrance Corcoran offering
his "expert" legal opinion that CRIA's lawyers are likely to lose their
lawsuit
against isoHunt.
Given the
importance of Canadians speaking out accurately on Bill C-11, ACTA, and
the TPP, I've posted ten key questions and answers to sort through the
claims. The first eight questions address the links between Bill C-11
and SOPA as well as proposed changes to the current copyright law. The
final two question focus on ACTA and the TPP. Read More ...
1. What, if
anything, are the links between current Bill C-11 and SOPA?
Bill C-11, the Canadian copyright reform bill, is the latest iteration
of several attempts at Canadian copyright reform. There is a lot to
like about the bill: it includes an expansion of the fair dealing
provision, new consumer rights for format shifting, time shifting, and
backup copies, a provision facilitating user generated content, a new
distinction between commercial and non-commercial infringement, as well
as a fair and effective approach to Internet provider liability. Some
of these provisions are not perfect (flexible fair dealing would be
better than the C-11 model, eliminating statutory damages for
non-commercial infringement is needed), but the bill is far better than
prior Conservative copyright bills.
As I have stated since its introduction, Bill C-11 is flawed but
fixable.
The major problem with the bill remains the digital
lock provisions,
which eviscerate many of the new consumer rights and undermine fair
dealing. The approach has been widely
criticized
by dozens of groups representing business, creators, consumers,
educators, and librarians. The proponents of the digital lock rules are
chiefly U.S.-backed lobby groups, the same groups that were behind SOPA
in the U.S. In fact, there is considerable
evidence
that the Canadian approach is a direct result of ongoing U.S. pressure
on the issue. Had SOPA passed, it included a provision requiring
further linkages between U.S. trade pressure and intellectual property
policy.
2. Could Bill C-11
become more like SOPA?
Yes. Last week, I noted that music and entertainment software lobby
groups have proposed
SOPA-style changes to C-11.
For example, the industry wants language to similar to that found in
SOPA on blocking access to websites, demanding new provisions that
would "permit a court to make an order blocking a pirate site such as
The Pirate Bay to protect the Canadian marketplace from foreign pirate
sites." Section 102 of SOPA also envisioned blocking of websites.
Several lobby groups also want language similar to that found in the
infamous Section 103 of SOPA. That provision, which spoke of sites
"primarily designed or operated for the purpose of...offering goods or
services in a manner that engages in, enables, or facilitates"
infringement, raised fears that it could be used to shut down
mainstream sites such as Youtube.
According to a music
industry document,
Bill C-11's "enabler provision" should be expanded to include "services
that are primarily operated to enable infringement or which induce
infringement." Those demands are echoed by the Entertainment Software
Association of Canada, which called on the government to "amend the
enabling provision to ensure that it applies to services that are
"designed or operated" primarily to enable acts of infringement." Both
groups also want statutory damages added to the enabler provision so
that liability can run into the millions of dollars for a target
website.
Bill C-11 committee member Dean Del Mastro, a Conservative MP,
specifically referenced the enabler provision in a recent
interview
about potential changes and there are rumours that the U.S. government
is pushing the Canadian government to toughen the enabler provision
(while keeping the digital lock rules unchanged).
3. Are there plans
to add "three strikes and you're out" Internet termination rules to
Bill C-11?
The government has indicated that it does not want to add Internet
termination (often called graduated response) to the bill.
However,
the music industry is demanding that Internet providers be required to
adopt a termination policy for subscribers that are alleged to be
repeat infringers. According to the music industry document:
To incent service providers to
cooperate in stemming piracy by requiring them to adopt and reasonably
implement a policy to prevent the use of their services by repeat
infringers and by conditioning the availability of service provider
exceptions on this being done.
This demand would move Canada toward the graduated response policy that
could result in loss of Internet service for Internet users. There is
no indication in the music industry document of due process or even
proof of infringement.
4. Are these
SOPA-style changes simply technical amendments?
No. The expansion of the enabler provision to include SOPA-style rules
could create new legal risk for legitimate websites. For example,
last
week I illustrated how the rules
could be used to target online video sites such as Youtube.
If those proposed changes are adopted, it could create a huge chill in
the investment and technology community in Canada. Online video sites,
cloud computing sites, and other online services may look at the Bill
C-11 and fear that even a lawsuit could create massive costs, scare
away investors, and stifle new innovation.
5. Can Bill C-11 be
fixed?
I believe the answer is yes. First, the SOPA-style demands,
including website blocking, Internet termination, and expanded
liability, must be rejected. Second, the digital lock provisions must
be fixed by linking circumvention of digital locks to copyright
infringement. Such an approach enjoys broad support as it would provide
legal protection for
digital locks, be consistent with the WIPO Internet treaties, and
follow the model of trading partners such as New Zealand and
Switzerland.
6. Aren't these
digital lock rules needed to help the music industry?
No. As the industry itself now promotes,
Canada is a leader when it comes to online music sales. Canada is the
6th largest market for recorded music in the world, ranking 6th for
digital sales and 7th for physical sales. Digital sales have grown
faster in Canada than the U.S. for the past five consecutive years.
There are wide range of online music services in Canada, all created
without restrictive digital lock rules. I delivered a full
talk on the issue titled Why Copyright
Reform Is Not the Cure for What Ails the Music Industry last year
at the Nova Scotia Music Week conference (talk sources).
7. Aren't these
digital lock rules needed to help the entertainment software industry?
No. The Entertainment Software Association of Canada has been one of
the most outspoken proponents of restrictive digital lock rules. Yet
its own evidence demonstrates why balanced digital lock rules do not put
the industry at risk. In 2007, it released a report called Entertainment
Software: The Industry in Canada,
which estimated that there were approximately 9,000 video game jobs in
Canada. Four years later, the industry has grown to 16,000 jobs, yet
Canada has had no digital lock legislation during that period. In other
words, without any changes to Canadian copyright law, the industry has
emerged as a major success story.
Not only is the claim unsupported by years of experience, but when the
industry was recently asked about perceived risks, copyright concerns
fell well down on the list. Last year, the ESAC commissioned a study
by SECOR Consulting
that surveyed the industry and asked for the top three risks faced by
the Canadian video game industry over the next two to five years.
Copyright ranked far behind many other concerns.
8. Aren't these digital
lock rules needed to be compliant with international law?
9. Where does Canada
stand on the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA)?
Canada signed
ACTA
in October of last year. At the moment, ratification of ACTA will
require legislative change in Canada. Some of those changes are
contained in Bill C-11, but not all. A second intellectual property
enforcement bill is expected to be introduced in Canada later this year
that will provide new powers to customs officials as well as other
measures. The Department of Foreign Affairs is presently conducting an open
consultation on ACTA. Email your comments
to the department or write Consultations and Liaison Division (BSL),
Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA), Foreign Affairs and
International Trade Canada, Lester B. Pearson Building, 125 Sussex
Drive, Ottawa, Ontario, K1A 0G2.
10. Where does
Canada stand on the Trans Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPP)?
The Canadian government filed notice
of a public consultation
on December 31, 2011 on the possible Canadian entry into the Trans
Pacific Partnership negotiations, trade talks that could result in an
extension in the term of copyright that would mean nothing new would
enter the Canadian public domain until 2032 or beyond. The TPP covers a
wide range of issues, but its intellectual property rules as
contemplated by leaked U.S. drafts would extend the term of copyright,
require even stricter digital lock rules, restrict trade in parallel
imports, and increase various infringement penalties. I've written
about the effect in Canada here, here, and
here.
The major intellectual property lobby groups want to keep Canada out of
the deal until we cave to the current U.S. copyright demands. The IIPA,
which represents the major movie, music, and software lobby
associations, points to copyright reform and new border measures as
evidence of the need for Canadian reforms and states "we urge the U.S.
government to use Canada’s expression of interest in the TPP
negotiations as an opportunity to resolve these longstanding concerns
about IPR standards and enforcement." These are the same groups that
supported SOPA in the U.S.
The consultation is open until February 14, 2012. All it takes a single
email with your name, address, and comments on the issue. The email can
be sent to consultations@ international.gc.ca. Alternatively,
submissions can be sent by fax (613-944-3489) or mail (Trade
Negotiations Consultations (TPP), Foreign Affairs and International
Trade Canada, Trade Policy and Negotiations Division II (TPW), Lester
B. Pearson Building, 125 Sussex Drive, Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0G2).
Yahoo's The Right Click reports
on the mounting protests from Canadians against the prospect of adding
SOPA-style amendments to Bill C-11.
Feb.09/12Comments (1)
Government House Leader Peter Van Loan announced yesterday that the government is imposing time allocation on the second reading debate on Bill C-11. That means debate on the bill should conclude on Friday and the bill will be sent to committee for further hearings and review. While the government's overuse of time allocation is a concern, sending C-11 to committee places the core issues on the table - will it amend the digital lock rules as so many are asking and/or will it cave to copyright lobby pressure and add SOPA-style amendments to the bill? Now is the time to speak out.Feb.08/12Comments (6)
Alexander Furnas explains
in the Atlantic why the broader implications of ACTA may make it as bad
as SOPA. Furnas notes "while many of the alarmists specific claims are
inaccurate, ACTA exposes the systemic danger in how international
intellectual property regulation has evolved over the last 20 years." Feb.07/12Comments (0)
Kris Kotarski writes an opinion
piece in the Calgary Herald that calls attention to the lobby panic
that leads to legislation like SOPA and ACTA.
Feb.07/12Comments (0)
The National Post featured an op-ed
from Jesse Kline
over the weekend that notes "the essential question that must be
addressed going forward is whether government regulation is needed to
protect industries that have failed to innovate." He says the answer is
no.
Feb.07/12Comments (3)
John Ibbitson discusses
the implications
for Canada of joining the Trans Pacific Partnership, noting it would
likely include surrendering Canadian sovereignty over copyright law. A
reminder that the government is currently consulting on the TPP.
Details on the agreement and participating here, here, and
here.
Feb.06/12Comments (0)
Open Media has launched a new
campaign
against copyright reforms that threaten digital rights including the
prospect of website blocking, Internet termination, and digital locks.
Feb.06/12Comments (0)
AccessNow is maintaining an excellent
map
of the protests planned across the continent on February 11th, which
has been designated an international day of action against ACTA. The
issue has attracted mainstream media attention (eg. New
York Times) and questions
emerge about the likelihood the treaty will receive the necessary
approvals for ratification.
Feb.06/12Comments (0)