News

The Canadian DMCA: Check the Fine Print

As expected, the Canadian DMCA is big, complicated, and a close model of the U.S. Digital Millennium Copyright Act (Industry Canada provides a large number of fact sheets here).  I'll have much more to say once I've had a careful read, but these are my five key points to take […]

Read more ›

June 12, 2008 264 comments News

Slight Canadian DMCA Delay

The government is running behind schedule this morning as plans to table the Canadian DMCA have been delayed by a series of floor votes.  The reporters covering the story are stuck in the lockup.  I'll obviously be commenting on this blog once I've had a chance to read the bill.  […]

Read more ›

June 12, 2008 11 comments News

Tomorrow is Canadian DMCA Day

The government just announced that it will unveil the copyright reform bill – complete with the "Made in Canada Copyright Reform" spin – tomorrow morning (likely as Bill C-61). Update: The National Post with coverage of what may be in store for Canadians. Further coverage from the Canadian Press and […]

Read more ›

June 11, 2008 51 comments News
Canadian Copyright Reform: The Comic Book Edition

Canadian Copyright Reform: The Comic Book Edition

Gordon Duggan of Appropriation Art has created a remarkable comic book [PDF – 2.8 MB] chronicling the recent battle over Canadian copyright reform. The book includes over 100 links to websites, articles, and other resources as every quote or reference is hyperlinked.  It concludes with references to groups actively involved […]

Read more ›

June 11, 2008 4 comments News

CIRA Creates Backdoor WHOIS Exceptions for Police and IP Owners

Earlier this year, I wrote glowingly about the new CIRA whois policy, which took effect today and which I described as striking the right balance between access and privacy.  The policy was to have provided new privacy protection to individual registrants – hundreds of thousands of Canadians – by removing the public disclosure of their personal contact information (though the information is collected and stored by domain name registrars). 

Apparently I spoke too soon.  Faced with the prospect of a privacy balance, special interests representing law enforcement and trademark holders quietly pressured CIRA to create a backdoor that will enable these two groups (and these two groups alone) to have special access to registrant information.  In the case of law enforcement, police can bring cases to CIRA involving immediate risk to children or the Internet (ie. denial-of-service attacks) and CIRA will hand over registrant information without court oversight.  In the case of trademark holders (as well as copyright and patent owners), claims that a domain name infringes their rights will be enough to allow CIRA to again disclose registrant information.

This represents a stunning about-face after years of public consultation on the whois policy.  

Read more ›

June 10, 2008 16 comments News