|
Tuesday November 20, 2012 |
The story of the weekend was the publication by the U.S. Republican
Study Committee of a progressive report on copyright, only to withdraw
the paper hours later (coverage from Techdirt (1, 2), Volokh Conspiracy, the American Conservative, Politico, CNET, and Macleans). The paper - which can still be found online
- identifies several copyright myths and contains several notable
proposed reforms including expanding fair use, reforming U.S. statutory
damages rules, creating copyright misuse penalties, and limiting copyright
terms.
Interestingly, Canada has already begun to move in this
direction with Bill C-11, which reformed statutory damages and
created a non-commercial user generated content provision. Moreover,
Canadian law features a shorter copyright term than that found in the
U.S. Given the rush to take the paper down, the fear is that even
modest reform recommendations face opposition from copyright lobby
groups,
who exert enormous influence with U.S. politicians. As Canada jumps into
the Trans Pacific Partnership negotiations in the next few weeks,
Canadian copyright reforms will undoubtedly face tough scrutiny as
the U.S. pressures us to undo many positive reforms and make further
changes that the Canadian government previously concluded did not strike
a reasonable balance.c-11, copyright, rsc Slashdot, Digg, Del.icio.us, Newsfeeder, Reddit, StumbleUpon, TwitterTagsShareTuesday November 20, 2012 |