Archive for June, 2010

Magic Seals Are Made to be Broken

Ivor Tossell's column in the Globe and Mail focuses on Bill C-32 and the problems with the digital lock provisions found in the bill.

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June 15, 2010 Comments are Disabled News

Fixing Bill C-32: Proposed Amendments to the Digital Lock Provisions

My five-part series on the problems associated with the digital lock provisions in Bill C-32 identified many potential changes to strike a more balanced compromise (Parts One, Two, Three, Four, Five or single PDF).  Several people have asked for specific legislative language for what I have in mind.  Together with my research assistant Keith Rose, we've drafted language that builds on the recommendations contained in the series on 32 Questions and Answers on C-32's Digital Lock Provisions.  The legislative language is available as a PDF download.

The primary solution that many have discussed involves permitting circumvention for lawful purposes. As I've discussed, this approach is compliant with the WIPO Internet Treaties, provides legal protection for digital locks, and maintains the copyright balance. There are at least two possible approaches.  The first would involve amending the definition for circumvent to account for only infringing purposes:

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June 15, 2010 18 comments News

FixingC32amendments

fixingc32amendments.pdf

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June 14, 2010 Comments are Disabled General

Opening Up Canada’s Digital Economy Strategy

Appeared in the Toronto Star on June 14, 2010 as Opening Up Canada's Digital Economy Strategy The federal government’s national consultation on a digital economy strategy is now past the half-way mark having generated a somewhat tepid response so far.  The consultation document itself may bear some of the blame […]

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June 14, 2010 Comments are Disabled Columns Archive

Setting the Record Straight: 32 Questions and Answers on C-32’s Digital Lock Provisions, Part Five

The first four posts on the 32 Questions and Answers on Bill C-32's digital lock provisions focused first on general issues in the bill, second on C-32's circumvention exceptions, third on the missing exceptions, and fourth on consumer-focused provisions in the bill.  This fifth post focuses on business considerations.  For those that want it all in a single package, I've posted the full series as PDF download.

Business Considerations

This section features answers to the following questions:

  • Isn't this just a matter of consumer choice?  If consumers don't want products with digital locks, no one is forcing them to purchase them?
  • Won't the digital lock provisions help bring new businesses to Canada like Hulu.com?
  • Are the concerns associated with digital lock provisions in the United States legitimate? What issues have arisen in the U.S. under the DMCA?
  • If these digital lock provisions are too restrictive, what compromises are available?

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June 14, 2010 12 comments News