|
|
|
The majority Conservatives on Monday defeated
a motion raised by the Liberals to stop Bill C-11 from being sent to
committee and effectively kill the bill. While the vote was a foregone
conclusion, the motion highlights the political divide that has emerged
on the current copyright bill. All opposition parties - NDP,
Liberals,
Bloc, and Greens - supported the motion which
read:
"the House decline to give second
reading to Bill C-11, An Act to amend the Copyright Act, because it
fails to: ( a) uphold the rights of consumers to choose how to enjoy
the content that they purchase through overly-restrictive digital lock
provisions; (b) include a clear and strict test for “fair dealing” for
education purposes; and (c) provide any transitional funding to help
artists adapt to the loss of revenue streams that the Bill would cause".
Slashdot, Digg, Del.icio.us, Newsfeeder, Reddit, StumbleUpon, TwitterTagsShareThursday December 01, 2011 |
|
View
|
|
The Association of Canadian Publishers represents approximately 135
Canadian-owned and controlled book publishers from across the country.
The membership is diverse and includes publishers from a variety of
genres. Over 80% of Canadian-authored titles are published by the
Canadian-owned sector. The ACP's 2009 national copyright consultation submission
included the following on digital locks:
Penalties for circumventing TPMs must
apply only to cases of actual
infringement. There is no merit in penalizing individuals who
circumvent TPMs but do not distribute the unlocked materials or
otherwise infringe on copyright in a fair-dealing context. The use of
proprietary TPMs tied to reader or player devices must not
be allowed to create an uncompetitive retail environment, or a retail
environment in which Canadian content is only minimally visible or
available to Canadian consumers.
Slashdot, Digg, Del.icio.us, Newsfeeder, Reddit, StumbleUpon, TwitterTagsShareThursday December 01, 2011 |
|
View
|
|
|