Ars Technica has an excellent analysis of a new U.S. government report that has been trumpeted by the movie and music industries as evidence of the importance of the IP economy. Upon closer inspection, the vast majority of the “IP economy” refers to trademark rights including residential construction and grocery […]
Post Tagged with: "copyright"
Crack the Coursepack
A group of McGill students have created a new project – complete with informative comics and an FAQ – that explores alternatives to the traditional coursepack with an emphasis on open access and fair dealing.
U.S. Online Real Estate Site Claims Canadian Realtor Infringed Copyright
Estately, a Seattle-based online real estate site, filed a DMCA takedown notice against Sutton WestCoast over the look and feel of its website. The complaint succeeded in taking the Canadian site offline.
Canadian Hurt Locker Lawsuits Withdrawn
New records indicate that the file sharing lawsuits in Quebec against individuals downloading the Hurt Locker have been withdrawn. The cases attracted wide attention last year after the Federal Court ordered several ISPs to disclose the identities of alleged infringers.
Does Bill C-11 Create Barriers to Network PVRs and Cloud Services in Canada?
- remove the user generated content provision
- create a new fair dealing test
- remove new statutory damages limits for non-commercial infringement
- remove a new exception for educational use of publicly available materials on the Internet
- add an iPod tax
- add statutory damages to circumvention of digital locks
- force ISPs to keep subscriber data for 3 years after an alleged infringement
While the extreme demands were rejected, the government also decided against proposed amendments from many groups such as those representing the visually impaired, documentary film makers, and librarians. One of the more notable decisions was to leave untouched a provision that could create some legal risks for cloud computing based services such as network-based PVRs. Both Rogers and Shaw raised concerns with the approach in Bill C-11, yet the government did not amend the provision in question despite a proposal on point from the Liberals.