Latest Posts

CIPPIC Files Complaint in Data Breach Case

The Canadian Internet Policy and Public Interest Clinic has filed a formal complaint with the Canadian Privacy Commissioner, requesting a formal investigation into the widely-reported security breach suffered by the Winners group of companies, and affecting consumers who shop at any Winners or HomeSense store in Canada. CIPPIC is concerned […]

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January 25, 2007 Comments are Disabled News

CBC on Online Video Sharing

I spent an hour yesterday talking about the impact of online video and social media on CBC's Ontario Today.  The discussion and callers highlighted the great benefits (ie. musician talking about the benefits of the Internet) and the anxiety that some parents feel about their kids interaction with MySpace, Facebook, […]

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January 24, 2007 1 comment News

Why the WIPO Development Agenda Matters

If a picture tells a thousand words, this chart, which graphically demonstrates global royalty flows, instantly demonstrates why the development agenda deserves our support and why Canada – alongside virtually every other country – will continue to face enormous pressure from the U.S. on IP policy.  Note in particular the […]

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January 24, 2007 4 comments News

Schneier on Security Disclosure

One of the world's leading security experts on why full disclosure is a good idea.

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January 24, 2007 Comments are Disabled News

Unparalleled Access

For the past two mornings, CBC Radio's Business Network has featured an asynchronous debate between myself and CRIA's Graham Henderson.  The Henderson interview [Real] includes claims that it is the failure to reform copyright law that is to blame for industry woes.  Henderson adds that Canadians have a developed a culture where they won't pay for music and therefore investors won't invest in the Canadian music industry.

My interview [Real] hits on many of the points I've made in postings over the past few months:

  • Digital downloads actually grew faster last year in Canada in 2006 than they did in the U.S. or Europe. While Canada starts from a smaller base, that reflects the fact that iTunes only arrived here in late 2004.
  • The digital download figures fail to account for the revenues from the private copying levy.  Throw in the $30 – 40 million collected last year alone and the amount that Canadians are paying for digital music becomes very significant.
  • CRIA's push for copyright reform continues its ill-advised emphasis on DRM and anti-circumvention legislation.  The industry is shifting away from this as consumers don't want music that won't play on their iPod or allow them to transfer between devices.  Moreover, Sony rootkit-type cases cause real damage to the industry's reputation and drive fans away.
  • CRIA is increasingly isolated within the Canadian market.  Last year, the major Canadian indie labels left CRIA and the CMCC provided a new voice to many of Canada's best known musicians.  In fact, according to documents recently obtained under the Access to Information Act, last year eleven professional organizations representing most Canadian copyright holders in the music industry, including songwriters, composers, performers, record producers, and publishers, wrote to Ministers Oda and Bernier to reject CRIA's new opposition to the private copying system and to "express their reservations concerning the legal protection of technological measures used to limit access to, or reproduction of, musical works."

CRIA's insistence on focusing on copyright as the source of its problems – along with its continual derision of Canadian policy and the motives of Canadians – is genuinely difficult to understand.  Even more difficult to understand, notwithstanding the well-documented fundraising issues, is why the government keeps granting it unparalleled access.

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January 23, 2007 18 comments News