Post Tagged with: "CRIA"

Billboard on Industry Canada’s File Sharing Study

There has unsurprisingly been a tremendous amount of coverage and online discussion regarding the economic study commissioned by Industry Canada that found that there is a positive correlation between file sharers and music purchasing.  You can read the Globe, the Guardian, or hundreds of blogs on the topic.  Or you […]

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November 5, 2007 8 comments News

CRIA Granted Leave to Intervene in iPod Levy Case But Court Doesn’t Want To Hear About File Sharing

The Federal Court of Appeal on Friday granted CRIA's request to intervene in the private copying/iPod levy judicial review, a case that openly reveals the divisions between CRIA and the Canadian Private Copying Collective (CRIA is on the board of CPCC but the CPCC objected to its intervention request).  CRIA's Graham Henderson identified seven objections to the Copyright Board decision:

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October 29, 2007 3 comments News

Music Industry Needs Dose Of Innovation, Not Intervention

My weekly technology law column (Toronto Star version, Ottawa Citizen version, The Tyee version, homepage version) focuses on the contrast between artists such as Radiohead and Nine Inch Nails that are adopting new distribution models, and the recording industry, which continues to lobby for anti-circumvention legislation.  In the weeks leading up to today's Speech from the Throne, CRIA and others lobby groups have urged the government to prioritize intellectual property protection. 

While the data suggests that peer-to-peer file sharing is at best only a minor reason for the decline (more significant is competition from DVD and video game sales and the emergence of big box retailers such as Wal-Mart who have pushed down retail prices and decimated sales of older titles), events over the past month have provided the clearest indication yet that musicians and music sellers are charting a new course that is leaving the major record labels behind.

In the mid-1990s, the industry focused on retaining its core business model by emphasizing two strategies.  First, it relied on copy-control technologies, supported by additional legal measures, to curtail unauthorized copying.  Second, it lobbied for the establishment of a private copying levy on blank media to compensate for the copying that technology could not control.

Ten years later, that strategy is now in tatters.  

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October 16, 2007 7 comments Columns

Music Industry Needs A Dose of Innovation, Not Intervention

Appeared in the Toronto Star on October 15, 2007 as Music Industry Needs Innovation Not Intervention Appeared in the Tyee on October 16, 2007 as Music Biz Wants Crackdown In the weeks leading up to tomorrow's Speech from the Throne, several music industry lobby groups have urged the government to […]

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October 15, 2007 7 comments Columns Archive

The DRM Free-Fall

As Bell unveils a DRM-free music store and Yahoo says it won't invest any more money in DRM-based music stores, the DRM free-fall continues, yet CRIA and its allies puzzlingly continue to focus on legal reforms tied to DRM as their primary legislative objective.

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October 9, 2007 2 comments News