Blog Canada

Charlie Angus during Question Period on the DMCA

Digital Copyright Canada - Thu, 05/15/2008 - 20:03


A link to the above video came directly from Charlie with the following text:

Angus challenges Conservative thinking over digital innovation issues in the wake of comments by Conservative Senate Leader Marjorie LaBreton who said she doesn't understand technologies like facebook and she thinks they are dangerous.

He then challenges Jim Prentice over the U.S. arm-twisting to enact a DMCA-style copyright Act. The Conservatives have pledged that all treaties will be debated in the House of Commons before being ratified. Angus challenges Prentice on refusing to bring WIPO into the House prior to any new copyright legislation.

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Categories: Blog Canada, Net Law

New Orleans: America's Palestine

The Dominion - Thu, 05/15/2008 - 12:34

Once the catastrophe hit it was a long time before people started to understand what was really going on. By then, the world had abandoned the already marginalized communities, leaving them to fend for themselves while being largely displaced and devoid of rights.

Walking through the still devastated neighbourhoods, the poverty is simply striking. Abandoned, barely standing homes are interspersed with a few renovated ones here and there. International and national volunteers converge to pour their efforts into single projects, but what they leave behind is perhaps even more telling than what they've originally found.

As they scrape together the resources to rebuild, others see an opportunity in the devastation. A large evacuation, such as that of the 9th Ward of whose 17,000 original residents 14,000 remain displaced, produces quite a business opening. Cheap real estate has become the market of choice for opportunists as every abandoned plot boasts a "for sale" sign.

Effectively, an ethic cleansing is underway as the predominantly black population of such neighbourhoods as New Orleans East and the 9th Ward has disappeared. In the former, it is actively and aggressively being replaced by suburban, predominantly white residents. In the latter, the destruction is still too significant for a strong gentrification to take place. In the city's centre, public housing projects have decreased by 80 per cent largely thanks to home demolitions.

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Categories: Blog Canada

Lovinsky Pierre Antoine - Still Missing After Nine Months

The Dominion - Wed, 05/14/2008 - 11:03

By: Wadner Pierre and Jean-Ristil Jean Baptiste -

Photos
By:Wadner Pierre

HaitiAnalysis.com

Lovinsky Pierre-Antoine, a prominent human rights worker and Famni Lavalas activist, has been missing since August 12, 2007. He is the founder of Trant Septanm Organizasyon (September 30 Foundation) an organization that assists victims of the coup that took place September 30th, 1991. That coup ousted Haiti's first democratically elected Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide only seven months after his inauguration. According to human rights groups there were five thousand people killed by the military regime of Raul Cedras. Thousands were also raped and tortured by the Cedras regime, and hundreds of thousands driven into hiding.

Pierre-Antoine worked with many national and international human rights organizations to promote the rights of all people, particularly the right to justice. The perpetrators of the 1991 coup (the Haitian elite and their ex-military allies) gradually regrouped and in 2004 managed to overthrow Aristide again - this time with the overt backing of the US, France and Canada. In October 2005, at the first “International Tribunal on Haiti” that investigated the 2004 coup, Pierre-Antoine explained to an audience of hundreds in Washington how he had been arrested, assaulted and expelled from the country by authorities at the U.S. embassy in Port-au-Prince.

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Categories: Blog Canada

Superman Charity vs. Kryptonite Inc.

Digital Copyright Canada - Wed, 05/14/2008 - 10:12

Thomas Denton wanted to raise money for cancer. He did so by enlisting the services of several professional and amateur comic book artists, who drew original artworks featuring famous DC comic book heros, then selling them on Ebay with the proceeds to go to the charity.

But just how wrong was he to do this without the permission of the super hero copyright holders? I argue on DeathByCopyright.ca that he was not at all wrong.

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Categories: Blog Canada, Net Law

May Books

The Dominion - Wed, 05/14/2008 - 00:00
New works by Wickers, Vuong-Riddick, Boyko and Bryan
Categories: Blog Canada

Little Brother library/school donation project update, bacon on your cat

Digital Copyright Canada - Tue, 05/13/2008 - 08:37

A note from Cory Doctorow about how to donate in support of Little Brother:

Last week,I told you about my donations program for my new book, Little Brother. Every time I put a book online for free, I'm inundated by offers of cash "tips" from people who got the ebooks for free. I don't want anyone's money (cutting my publisher out of the loop isn't good for them or me), so I came up with an alternative. I asked librarians and teachers who wanted free copies to step forward and put their names down, and now I'm looking for would-be "donors" to step forward and send them copies of the book.

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Categories: Blog Canada, Net Law

On May 30, celebrate 6 Years of Getting Open Source Logic INto Governments

Digital Copyright Canada - Mon, 05/12/2008 - 11:48

May 30'th, 2008 is the 6 year anniversary of GOSLING: Getting Open Source Logic INto Governments. We are having a party at the Parliament Pub, just in front of the parliament buildings in Ottawa. For details and any changes please see our website where we also ask people to RSVP so we can plan food.

GOSLING started in May 2002 as a couple of informal Friday gatherings after work at the pub, to bounce around some ideas ahead of the first free/libre/open source software event hosted by the Government of Canada. We have been meeting nearly every Friday since. Our weekly gatherings are very informal. While we expect our 6-year anniversary party to be larger than any other GOSLING gathering in the past, it will be equally informal.

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Categories: Blog Canada, Net Law

Entertainment Software Association opposes technology property rights

Digital Copyright Canada - Sun, 05/11/2008 - 08:10

Michael Geist reported that Canadian copyright scholar Howard Knopf squares off against Stevan Mitchell of the Entertainment Software Association on Buisiness News Network's show SqueezePlay. You can read my letter to the show on IT World Canada's BLOG.

Categories: Blog Canada, Net Law

Issue #50

The Dominion - Sat, 05/10/2008 - 13:49
Categories: Blog Canada

Security Now Feedback: "DRM" is policy, not technology

Digital Copyright Canada - Sat, 05/10/2008 - 10:23

As a listener to the Security Now podcast, I sent in the following feedback.

Steve,

I am a long time listener, but two of my complaints came together in your discussion of the RSA show in episode 141.

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Categories: Blog Canada, Net Law

Global IP comparisons

Digital Copyright Canada - Fri, 05/09/2008 - 09:06

Michael Geist's blog today points to a study by Taylor Wessing which compares various national IP laws around the world. No doubt, Canada's laws are judged by the report to be very strong which supports Geist's conclusion that "claims that Canada's international reputation has been harmed by our intellectual property laws are the stuff of fiction."

This is a great study to demonstrate that our laws are strong enough. What is missing, and what I'd love to see next, is a study that compares the fairness various laws.

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Categories: Blog Canada, Net Law

Parliamentary committee deplores abandoning of Coordination of Access to Information Requests System (CAIRS)

Digital Copyright Canada - Thu, 05/08/2008 - 13:54

The Standing Committee on Access to Information, Privacy and Ethics has released a report which includes:

The parliamentary Committee on Access to Information, Privacy and Ethics:

  • deplores the fact that, at the request of Treasury Board, as of April 1, 2008 officials are no longer updating the Coordination of Access to Information Requests System (CAIRS), a central database for all requests filed with the government under the Access to Information Act;

  • demands that the Conservative government reinstate this tool, which promotes transparency and accountability; and

  • encourages the Conservative government to make this database available online and free of charge.

    I agree, and was in fact surprised that a party who campaigned on accountability and transparency of government would abandon rather than expand this important system.

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Categories: Blog Canada, Net Law

Recognizing a policy problem doesn't suggest agreement on solutions

Digital Copyright Canada - Thu, 05/08/2008 - 13:48

A few hours after posting my article on the content industry vs content delivery providers I was sent a link to an article titled "Raging Grannies demonstrate for fair contracts for freelancers" by its author, journalist Shannon Lee Mannion. The contracts that the big media companies are asking freelance journalists to sign are getting worse and worse all the time. I feel really bad about this situation, and I do anything I can in my policy work to help improve the situation for authors -- especially freelance creators given I am one myself with my self-employed business.

I am left with mixed feelings, however, because I believe that the organizations that should be helping authors -- organizations like the Professional Writers Association of Canada (PWAC), The Writers Union, and other members of the Creators Copyright Coalition and DAMIC -- have been promoting policies which will have the effect of protecting or worsening the market conditions that enabled these bad contracts in the first place.

Read full article on IT World Canada's BLOG »

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Categories: Blog Canada, Net Law

Copyright in the mainstream media

Digital Copyright Canada - Thu, 05/08/2008 - 09:34

It's good to see that the copyright issue is still on the radar of the mainstream media. Such coverage will be very important if the coming legislation is going to be as bad as many expect.

Chris Brand was quoted in today's Vancouver Sun on the issue. Way to go Chris!

Categories: Blog Canada, Net Law

Content industry vs content delivery providers: who is the customer?

Digital Copyright Canada - Wed, 05/07/2008 - 14:19

One of the common problems you will see in policy discussions is that many people are focused on their narrow issues, sometimes even tiny edge-cases, and not investing any time looking at the bigger picture of how different policies interact. This leads to the solutions to these edge cases sometimes causing even worse problems for the proponents.

We had one of those moments at CopyCamp when I tried to demonstrate a bigger picture issue by adding in "Net Neutrality" related discussions into a narrow discussion of business models for authors.

Read full article on IT World Canada »

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Categories: Blog Canada, Net Law

Cory Doctorow: Think Like a Dandelion : Reproductive strategies for the Internet era

Digital Copyright Canada - Wed, 05/07/2008 - 10:52

The following is a summary from Cory of a recent feature:

My latest column in Locus Magazine, "Think Like a Dandelion," came out of a talk I had with Neil Gaiman about the bio-economics of giving stuff away for free. Mammals worry about what happens to each and every one of their offspring, but dandelions only care that every crack in every sidewalk has dandelions growing out of it. The former is a good strategy for situations in which reproduction is expensive, but the latter works best when reproduction is practically free -- as on the Internet.

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Categories: Blog Canada, Net Law

BBC not as fair as once thought

Digital Copyright Canada - Wed, 05/07/2008 - 09:54

I came across an interesting article today discussing how the BBC has forced a knitter to take instructions down from her website because of alleged copyright violations. Not for selling knitted objects which resemble BBC characters, not even for the pictures of the creations she made, but for instructions which tell other knitters how to make their own creations in the form of these BBC characters.

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Categories: Blog Canada, Net Law

Shuttleworth sponsors copyright probe

Digital Copyright Canada - Tue, 05/06/2008 - 08:34

An ITWeb article by Leon Engelbrecht starts:

[Johannesburg, 6 May 2008 ] - The Shuttleworth Foundation and the Canadian International Development Research Centre will, for the next two years, fund research in eight African countries on the relationship between copyright and education.

Categories: Blog Canada, Net Law