“Revenue is dropping and expenses are rising. And expenses have risen 22.5% in four years.”

Fair Dealing by Giulia Forsythe (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0) https://flic.kr/p/dRkXwP
Copyright
Access Copyright’s Desperation: From Fair Dealing Allows Everything to It’s Too Risky to Rely Upon
Access Copyright’s response has grown increasingly desperate. First it stopped offering transactional licences to educational institutions in the hope that those institutions would opt for the more expensive comprehensive licences instead. When the practice was publicly exposed, Access Copyright offered a laughable response that transactional licensing creates incentives to infringe. The Canadian educational institutions have filed a complaint with the Copyright Board in a case that will unfold over the summer.
Since the transactional licence gambit is likely to fail, Access Copyright has now released a note designed to scare the institutions away from relying on fair dealing. After months of issuing dire warnings that fair dealing would allow educational institutions to copy virtually everything without limits or compensation during the Bill C-32 debate (including claims that all educational licences were at risk), Access Copyright now ironically argues the opposite – that fair dealing is legally risky and should not be relied upon by educational institutions.
Andreas Schroeder on Counting the Pennies
Andreas Schroeder, one of the creators of the Public Lending Right, comments on how copyright collectives need to carefully examine the cost and benefits of some of its initiatives that yield little economic return.
Access Copyright Backlash Grows: Canadian Poets Pass Resolution Supporting TWUC Motion
The League of Canadian Poets has lined up in support of the recent Writers’ Union of Canada resolution recognizing the lack of control over how licensing revenue is managed and the inability of Access Copyright to represent creator interests. As a result, the TWUC plans to investigate operational separation of […]
Katz Calls for Competition Commission Intervention in Access Copyright Case
University of Toronto law professor Ariel Katz has written to the Copyright Board of Canada asking it to seek the intervention of the Commissioner of Competition in the Access Copyright transactional licence case.