Fair Dealing by Giulia Forsythe (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0) https://flic.kr/p/dRkXwP

Fair Dealing by Giulia Forsythe (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0) https://flic.kr/p/dRkXwP

Copyright

Toronto Star Calls for Copyright Bill

On the heels of the National Post's warning against a copyright bill, the Toronto Star has published a masthead editorial calling on Industry Minister Jim Prentice to introduce a new copyright bill.  The Star reported that several copyright lobby groups met with the editorial board in late January to discuss […]

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March 3, 2008 4 comments News

LAC Digitization Strategy Respondents Call For Stronger Copyright Position

Library and Archives Canada has released the public responses to its 2007 Canadian Digital Information Strategy.  The consultation generated a significant number of responses with many submissions urging the LAC to adopt a stronger position on copyright reform.  Key issues include: freeing up orphan works removing restrictive crown copyright provisions […]

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February 28, 2008 20 comments News

Liberals Argue Prentice Should Step Aside on Copyright

The Liberals argued during Question Period today that Industry Minister Jim Prentice should step aside on the copyright file in light of Conservative Party infringement issue.  House Leader Peter Van Loan responded that the issue has been settled.

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February 27, 2008 Comments are Disabled News

Prentice Faces Questions on Conservative Copyright Infringement

Industry Minister Jim Prentice faced questions yesterday (transcript, video) during Question Period about the allegations of copyright infringement by the Conservative Party.

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February 27, 2008 1 comment News

Debating the SAC Proposal

My posting yesterday on the SAC proposal resulted in several emails that essentially asked – if you are against DRM and against levies, what do you propose to do?  That's a fair question, though I did not think that the post was meant to bash levies but rather those that dismiss alternative proposals as distractions.  I did note that I think the SAC proposals suffer from some significant flaws.  To reiterate and expand:

  • There are always competing policy priorities.  Given the importance of broadband access for commerce, communication, culture, and education, I think that any proposal must not unduly undermine the policy goal of universal access.  I think that a $5 monthly increase would represent a sufficiently significant price increase such that it might drive some away from broadband.
  • The SAC proposal only addresses music.  I expect that others – video, software, and cultural groups – will also demand their piece of the pie. In fact, that's already happening with the proposal for ISPs to contribute 2.5 percent of profits for creating Canadian new media content.  I think that any proposal must comprehensively deal with P2P and this one does not.
  • The $5 monthly fee strikes me as absurdly high given the revenues of the music industry.  Music continues to generate significant revenues and this additional billion in revenue bears little relation to any possible revenue decreases that might be attributed to P2P (which is itself debatable).
  • I am not convinced that this model requires government intervention at this time.  These are still early days and there is the possibility that the market could adopt this model – either by a voluntary consumer fee or a negotiated ISP license for its customers – without legislative intervention.
  • There are some doubts whether the proposal is consistent with Canada's international copyright obligations.
  • There are some doubts about the fairness of the distribution of a levy. 

Notwithstanding the doubts, I am not an absolute critic of levies. 

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February 26, 2008 28 comments News