How Canada Fought Bad Copyright Law: Showing Why Copyright Law Matters
from the sit-back-and-watch dept
You may recall, just about a year ago, there was suddenly a bunch of news over the possibility of Canada introducing its own version of the US's Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). To the surprise of both the entertainment industry (who helped craft the law) and the politicians who were pushing it, the opposition to this law was incredibly successful in getting its message out. Starting with calls on various blogs and Facebook groups, kicked off by law professor Michael Geist, the issue became a big one throughout the media. The politicians who promised the entertainment industry that they would pass this law tried to delay the introduction, assuming that the opposition, while loud, was thin and would fade away. They were wrong. The issue continued to get attention, and when the law was finally introduced, the opposition, across the board, was widespread and strong. It wasn't just a fringe issue among "internet activists." It was something that people from all over the economy saw as a fundamental issue worth fighting for.But why?
For years, copyright (and wider intellectual property) law has been considered to be sort of inside baseball, something that only lawyers and the entertainment industry cared about. But that's been changing. There are a variety of reasons for why this happened and why copyright is considered a key issue for so many people in so many parts of the economy. Michael Geist has now put together a film that tries to examine that question. After first discussing how the issue became such a big deal, Geist interviews a number of Canadian copyfighters to get a sense of why copyright is an issue worth fighting about:
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Filed Under: canada, copyright, michael geist
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How Canada Got Lucky
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Re: How Canada Got Lucky
So, should Harper, or anyone else, seek to reintroduce it it will have to go through the whole route again including in Committee in second reading where the government has less influence than it has in the Commons.
Of course, it would have to make it through the Senate too should the old farts there wake up long enough to realize what's going on. :-)
My guess is that it's as good as dead and buried for some time to come.
ttfn
John
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Ain't dead yet
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Re: Ain't dead yet
NullOp wrote:
Assuming you’re a Microsoft Windows user, the last time you got downloaded software updates from Microsoft (like a new version of Internet Explorer or the latest Service Pack), did you pay Microsoft any money for them? So wasn’t that “free, unpaid distribution” of Microsoft’s “intellectual works”? And was it wrong?
One reason why so many debates about copyright and patent and related issues end up going nowhere is because of the number of people who shoot their mouth off before engaging their brain like this...
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Re: Ain't dead yet
The sale and distribution of music in Canada has never really amounted to a hill of beans compared to south of the border though some artists have been convinced to get on the bandwagon for this. Significantly a larger number of artists, mostly younger ones, opposed it.
So, in fact, did a huge section of the Canadian industrial and service sector as well as the news media on the grounds that there was no safe harbour provision in the proposed act.
Let's not forget the near unanimous opposition of Canadian Universities and other higher learning institutions.
The list goes on and on and on.
As does the significant, if uncomfortable fact, that Canada has not signed onto the proposed treaty that the bill was supposedly responding to.
If the Tories can single handedly ignore the fact that we are signatories to Kyoto why in hell would anyone believe us if we signed onto ACT, piece of junk that it is.
Anyway, I'm starting to doubt we'll see a majority government for the forseeable future, Grit or Tory, so I think this thing is dead and gone.
ttfn
John
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One way to fix all government
I'm so sick of special interest groups dictating how things are done. It's not about "the people", it's all about "the corporation". While people are suffering financially, all these corporations get free money for their screw ups, while no one helps the people.
I'm so sick of governments, in general. The corruption is outrageous these days, because it's not even a secret any more, it's right in our faces. They take a crap right on us, day after day. We need a revolution.
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Re: One way to fix all government
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Re: One way to fix all government
The subject of the absurdity of any kind of legal "special right" is largely ignored. The only rights that anyone actually has are not "inherent or inalienable rights" but the rights granted by the rest of society only.
In the US the founding fathers recognized this "equal rights" versus (special rights, special interests, special privileges, power and corruption) conundrum, that it may only be maintainable by the "right to bear arms" and by revolution. "The Power Corrupts, and Absolute Power Corrupts Absolutely" thing is always there, threat of revolution is the only thing (and not inherent human fairness) that keeps it in check.
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Re: One way to fix all government
ScytheNoire wrote:
Would you lobby for that?
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Weak government is the real reason.
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lobbying illegal
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Hippies do blame things on corporations. Nevertheless, there is quite a bit of government and law out there specifically to stop corporations from doing things that harm the public (financially and physically).
Copyright law is one area where the will of the people is ignored in favor of lobbyist concerns.
The question is would an informed populace (the people) support copyright reform, or is it really the realm of lawyers and insiders?
In Canada the answer is yes, we want less copyright, not more.
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begging the question
This might only be possible if there were laws to outlaw the inherently corrupt idea of copyright.
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Re: begging the question
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Re: Re: begging the question
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bittorrent and isp
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What about if I said your friend isn't allowed to watch the TV at the same time you are. That's free, unpaid distribution.
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DMR canada
AND nasty penitiles
and heavy restrictions on usgae.
only money is better protected.
shall I tell you about the new form of govt they put in place too?
pat
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Re: DMR canada
Anyway, if it's anyone's job it belongs to the RCMP's commercial crime section.
Anyway the act that would have made all this possible died on the order paper when the election was called which ended the parliament that it was introduced in. None of this came to pass.
And money is protected these days? What money? :)
ttfn
John
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Wow
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Conservatives
They always want to play Big Brother and "protect" us with their ridiculous laws.
I really despise the PC party for exactly that. I wouldn't vote for them under any circumstances.
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Nitpick
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let them try
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i.p. stuff
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Re: i.p. stuff
iramosa, you get an A for style, but an F for substance, for you make all the common errors. You equate intangible goods with physical property, and copying with stealing. It's not the same thing at all. You paint a black-and-white picture: either we have very strict copyright laws or there will be no way to make any money from creative works and thus no works will ever be created. It's not that simple. Nobody's suggesting that copyright be abolished altogether.
You conclude that copyright has to "catch up" with technology, i.e. you see technology as a threat that has to be curbed rather than an opportunity. The new playing field may mean that you will have to come up with new strategies. That's how it usually works in a market economy.
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