Post Tagged with: "supreme court"

Dell Case Sets Standard For Online Contracts

Appeared in the Toronto Star on July 30, 2007 as Dell Case Sets Standard for Online Contracts Late on a Friday afternoon in April 2003, Dell Computer's Canadian website featured a pair of erroneous prices for the Axim, the company's handheld computer.  Rather than listing the two versions of the […]

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July 30, 2007 Comments are Disabled Columns Archive

Courts, Online Contracts and Arbitration Clauses

I've been silent thus far on the recent Supreme Court of Canada decision involving Dell Computer and online contracting (that will change next week), but in the meantime it is worth noting that the Washington Supreme Court issued a decision one day before the SCC handed down the Dell decision […]

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July 25, 2007 Comments are Disabled News

Supreme Court Rules Against Patent Evergreening

The Canadian Supreme Court has issued another decision that recognized the limits of intellectual property.  This case, a pharmaceutical patent fight between AstraZeneca and Apotex, includes language from the court that explicitly warns against the practice of evergreening, whereby pharmaceutical companies seek to extend the life of patent protection by […]

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November 3, 2006 1 comment News

The Robertson Decision

The Supreme Court of Canada released its much anticipated Robertson v. Thomson decision this morning – here is a quick take.  The Canadian version of the U.S. Tasini case, at issue was the rights of freelance writers and the use of their work in electronic databases.  Much like the U.S. case (which clearly had an impact on this case), the court was split.  By a 5-4 majority, the court ruled in favour of Heather Robertson, finding that the reproduction of the freelance articles into a searchable database was not covered by the copyright held by the publishers (whose rights were limited to the compilation of works that comprise the newspaper).

At one level, the split in the court simply reflects a different view on the nature of a converting the content in a newspaper into a database.  The majority (written by Justices LeBel and Fish) thinks that the use is very different and thus no longer part of the publisher's copyright.  From this perspective, information such as date, page placement, etc. is merely "historical data".  The dissent, written by Justice Abella (joined by Chief Justice McLachlin, Binnie, and Charron) argues that the database involves a substantial reproduction of the original compilation and that therefore "the publisher's entitlement under our media neutral Copyright Act is able to adjust the form of its work to suit the exigencies of new media technologies."

At a deeper level, however, the case may signal some differing perspectives about copyright law.

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October 12, 2006 3 comments News

SCC To Release Robertson Decision on Thursday

The Supreme Court of Canada has announced that it will release its decision in Robertson v. Thompson, the long-running freelance copyright case, on Thursday morning.

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October 7, 2006 Comments are Disabled News