Post Tagged with: "consumer protection"

The Telecom Policy Review: The Rest of the Story

Coverage of the release last week of Canada's telecommunications policy review centered primarily on the call for a new regulatory approach that emphasizes market independence over government interference combined with a slimmed-down CRTC and list of policy priorities. My weekly Law Bytes column (Toronto Star version, webpage version) focuses on the rest of the story as the report identified a series of important areas – including network neutrality, ubiquitous broadband access, privacy, spam, and consumer protection – that merit government intervention or support.

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March 26, 2006 1 comment Columns

Sony Hit With Another Canadian Class Action Lawsuit

Sony Canada has been hit with another class action suit arising from last year's rootkit fiasco.  This suit is particularly interesting for a pair of reasons.  First, it contains new allegations about Sony's conduct in Canada.  In particular, it alleges: Sony released at least 34 titles in Canada with sales […]

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February 2, 2006 3 comments News

Sony Settlement a Blueprint for Legislative Action

Following on my earlier posting, my Law Bytes column (Toronto Star version, freely available version) advances my thoughts on how the Sony rootkit settlement could create the starting point for a model statute that protects against the misuse of TPMs. The column repeats my overview of the settlement including the […]

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January 2, 2006 3 comments Columns

Consumer Protection and Licensing Regimes Review

The Implications of Electronic Commerce, Ontario Ministry of Consumer and Commercial Relations E-Commerce Roundtable, Toronto

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December 12, 1999 Comments are Disabled Conferences

Consumer Protection and Licensing Regimes Review: The Implications of Electronic Commerce

Consumer Protection and Licensing Regimes Review: The Implications of Electronic Commerce, Ontario Ministry of Consumer & Commercial Relations, (21 pp.) (1999)

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January 1, 1999 Comments are Disabled Reports