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    The National Post on Liberating Music

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    Sunday December 30, 2007
    The National Post runs a lead editorial applauding the move away from DRM in the music industry that now includes the Warner Music Group.  The editorial concludes that:

    In this digital age when consumers continually add to and update existing formats for playing music, record companies that sell DRM-free music will prosper. Those that don't will turn off consumers who will tune-out their music. Warner has recognized this. Now it's Sony BMG's turn.

    Of course, the paper (and the government) should recognize that the policy linkage to this issue is that a Canadian DMCA perversely encourages the use of DRM at the very time when the industry and consumers are rejecting it.
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    "Anything is Better Than The U.S.'s Restrictive, Lawsuit-Heavy Model"

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    Sunday December 30, 2007
    So says Mike Doherty of the National Post.
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    U.S. Public Radio on Canadian DMCA

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    Friday December 07, 2007
    Jon Gordon's Future Tense program on American Public Media covers the Canadian DMCA story (MP3 version) .
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    The Canadian DMCA: What You Can Do

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    Sunday December 02, 2007
    With the Canadian version of the DMCA likely to be introduced within the next two weeks, there has a remarkable outpouring of interest from individual Canadians about what they can do to have their concerns heard.  The unfortunate reality is that there is nothing can be done about what the bill will look like when it is introduced - Industry Minister Jim Prentice has simply decided discard consumer, education, research, and privacy interests, ignore his own party's policy platform, and the cave into U.S. pressure.  Once the bill is introduced, however, Canadians can send a message to their MPs, the Ministers, and others, calling for a fair copyright bill that addresses Canadian concerns (those in Calgary can do so in person on December 8th as Prentice hosts an open house).

    Many people have pointed to the my 30 Things You Can Do posting.  I've decided to update the posting - and create a short YouTube video - to better reflect the current situation.  I've also launched a Facebook group called Fair Copyright.  The next 60 days are absolutely crucial.  If Canadians speak out in large numbers, the government may rethink its current strategy of fast-tracking the Canadian DMCA.

    What can you do?


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