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Canadian Heritage Minister James Moore: The iPadLock Minister?

Since his appointment as Canadian Heritage minister in 2008, James Moore has carefully crafted an image as "Canada's iPod Minister." Young, bilingual, and tech-savvy, Moore has expressed regular support for the benefits of the Internet and is always ready with a quick "tweet" for his many followers.  Yet as my op-ed in the Hill Times notes (HT version (sub required), homepage version), according to the scuttlebutt throughout the copyright community, Moore may be less iPod and more iPadlock. As the government readies its much-anticipated copyright package, Moore is said to be pressing for a virtual repeat of Bill C-61, the most anti-consumer copyright proposal in Canadian history.

Moore's about-face on copyright will come as a surprise to those who have heard his enthusiasm for new technology and the Internet.  In June 2009, Moore told Industry Minister Tony Clement's Digital Economy conference that "the old way of doing things is over.  These things are all now one. And it's great. And it's never been better. And we need to be enthusiastic and embrace this things."

Those comments were quickly followed by the national copyright consultation that generated thousands of responses, the majority of which called on the government to abandon the C-61 approach in favour of copyright rules that struck a better balance between the interests of creators and consumers.

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April 26, 2010 64 comments Columns

Kenya Constitutional Court Blocks Anti-Counterfeiting Law

The Constitutional Court of Kenya has blocked the government from implementing that country's Anti-Counterfeiting Act as it applies to generic medicines.  The law has been challenged as unconstitutional on the grounds that it endangers lives by arbitrarily denying access to affordable generic medications.

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April 23, 2010 1 comment News

DFAIT Posts French Language Version of ACTA

The Canadian government has posted a French language version of ACTA.  An English version was widely circulated earlier this week, but Canada may have taken the initiative to have it translated.

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April 23, 2010 Comments are Disabled News

ACTA Analysis Across the Web

There is lots of coverage of ACTA in the wake of the official release of the draft text.  Notable comments include: Margot Kaminski at Balkanization Sean Flynn's analysis at PIJIP CCIA response Story on NPR Rob Pegoraro at the Washington Post Ars Technica: ACTA Arrives Andres Gaudamuz on ACTA and […]

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April 22, 2010 4 comments News

India Introduces Major Copyright Reform Bill

The Government of India has just introduced a major new copyright reform package.  Of particular note from a Canadian perspective are the approaches to fair dealing and anti-circumvention.  On fair dealing, the provision is expanded to cover "private and personal use."  On anti-circumvention, the bill is consistent with implementing the […]

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April 22, 2010 4 comments News