Articles by: Michael Geist

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.  My weekly technology law column (Toronto Star version, homepage version) argues the consultation document itself may bear some of the blame for lack of buzz since the government asks many of the right questions, but lacks a clear vision of the principles that would define a Canadian digital strategy.

One missed opportunity was to shine the spotlight on the principle of "openness" as a guiding principle. In recent years, an open approach has found increasing favour for a broad range of technology policy issues and has been incorporated into many strategy documents. For example, New Zealand identified "openness is a central principle of [its] Digital Strategy 2.0."

The consultation document includes a brief reference to open access for government-funded research, but it seemingly ignores the broader potential for a strategy with openness policies as a key foundational principle.  

Where might an openness principle make sense?

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June 16, 2010 9 comments Columns

WTO Report on TRIPS Council and ACTA

The World Trade Organization has posted further information on last week's Council meeting where India, China, and other developing countries raised concerns with the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement.  The report notes the following:

Briefly, China’s and India’s lengthy statements argued that ACTA and other agreements could:

  • Conflict with TRIPS Agreement (a reference to TRIPS Art.1.1) and other WTO agreements, and cause legal uncertainty
  • Undermine the balance of rights, obligations and flexibilities that were carefully negotiated in the various WTO agreements
  • Distort trade or create trade barriers, and disrupt goods in transit or transhipment
  • Undermine flexibilities built into TRIPS (such as for public health, and trade in generic medicines)
  • Undermine governments’ freedom to allocate resources on intellectual property by forcing them to focus on enforcement
  • Set a precedent that would require regional and other agreements to follow suit. (One example cited was negotiations involving CARIFORUM, the group of Caribbean states. However, a delegation representing CARIFORUM said it understood the concerns but denied that CARIFORUM would have to apply ACTA’s provisions.)

They also argued that the focus on enforcement did not take into account a country’s level of development. A number of developing countries broadly supported the concern.

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June 16, 2010 Comments are Disabled News

Moore Says Chamber of Commerce Support Evidence Consumers Like C-32

In one of the strangest responses to C-32 yet, Canadian Heritage Minister James Moore told the House of Commons yesterday that consumers are supportive of C-32 and cites as evidence the Canadian Chamber of Commerce.  The Chamber describes itself as Canada's largest and most influential business association and makes no pretense of representing consumer interests.  The exchange:

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June 15, 2010 32 comments News

Clement Interview on TVO’s Search Engine

TVO's Search Engine features a detailed interview with Industry Minister Tony Clement on Bill C-32.  Clement is clearly sensitive to the concerns associated with digital locks in the bill, though his suggestion that the new provision on ephemeral recordings would allow broadcasters to circumvent locks for news reporting does not […]

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June 15, 2010 4 comments News

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