Canada to Tax MP3 Players $21/GB of Storage 32
einer writes : "A brief article on some new legislation scheduled to take effect at the beginning of next year. This tax would raise the price of an archos jukebox from roughly $350.00 to $640.00 (American). "Comments and objections are due by May 8, 2002." Looks like I'm headed to pricegrabber." Update: 03/13 19:36 GMT by M : We did a big story on this a few days ago (although people keep submitting it).
*Ahem* (Score:1)
Honestly though, I would hate to live in Canada right now, my iPod would cost about $150 more.
Also, it begs the question are they measuring by 1,000,000 mb or 1,048,048 mb? Not that it makes that big of a deal, I'd just be curious to see.
Re:*Ahem* (Score:1)
Ouch, I think Apple will fight this... (Score:1)
I also think Apple sees this as just a preliminary step. What happens when they try to tax all media storage?
what qualifies as an mp3 player? (Score:1)
Re:what qualifies as an mp3 player? (Score:2)
In fact, this raises a very good point. Moore's law will ensure that handheld devices will eventually reach a very good general-purpose state, much like the PC. In 5 years when the iPAQ can hold 20GB of data, run 30-fps MPEG2 decompression, and play any media file you want in addition to running most general PC software, what then? Will they tax that, too?
This law is simply a knee-jerk cure for a symptom, and not an underlying cause. It'll only get worse.
This could backfire (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:This could backfire (Score:2, Informative)
Re:This could backfire (Score:2, Insightful)
Depends on how you look at it... (Score:3, Interesting)
But, on the other hand, you are paying for a right to store whatever you want on there (mainly copyrighted music).
As a matter of fact, if you own one of these devices, the way I see it, they are saying that it is your duty to use it to store copyrighted music on it, because if you used it for something else, then you'ld get no return on your tax dollars.
Then again, just buy a Rio Volt...it only stores ~1/2 GB, but it is on a CD...
Re:Depends on how you look at it... (Score:3, Insightful)
But, on the other hand, you are paying for a right to store whatever you want on there (mainly copyrighted music).
This would be fine (and I'd support the tax) if there was an AHRA-ish clause exempting users of this media from copyright infringement suits. But I looked at the proposal, and I couldn't find such a clause.
Legalized napster for 13 USD/gig (storage, not download space)? I'd take it in a second.
This is crazy! (Score:3, Insightful)
Someone needs to organize a well-publicized "pirate" day. Buy an MP3 player or some blank CD-Rs, or anything that gets "taxed" in this way. Contact the news media, and say since you've already paid the price for piracy, you're gonna go out in front of some huge media chain and give out copies of a ripped-n-burned popular CD (choose a band you don't like :P) in front of the cameras.
Being hauled off by the police will make great media coverage. Get some womderful group to take the case (EFF?) and fight this up 'till the bitter end and have these laws squashed.
Great idea!! (Score:1)
The Boston MP3 Party (Score:2, Interesting)
We need to have this day whether Canada passes its tax or not. We need to have it in Boston, Massachusetts, at the site of the original Boston Tea Party; ideally we need to find a ship with some pallets of shrinkwrapped CDs on board, and dump them over the side. Call it the Boston MP3 Party, and use it to point out that people are paying the RIAA $20 for music that should only cost around $3.
(And don't start bleating to me about how the RIAA needs $20 per CD to "cover its costs." The RIAA is a bloated, inefficient cartel with a business model that has gone the way of the buggy whip. The DMCA is the recording industry's Endangered Species Act -- it's as if a congress of dinosaurs voted to outlaw mammals and asteroids.)
The Boston Tea Party was a heroic act of civil disobedience against a state-sponsored monopoly -- a monopoly that obtained favorable legislation to preserve its own profit, sought to control distribution, and leveraged its power to drive competitors out of business. 229 years later, here we are again; we just need another Sam Adams (the man, not the beer) to get the ball rolling.
Re:The Boston MP3 Party (Score:1)
The Boston Tea Party was a heroic act of civil disobedience against a state-sponsored monopoly
wow, funny and insightful. there should be extra bonus points for that.
so does the congress of dinosaurs more accurately point out the antiquated hype-crap-to-the-kids business model or the brain-the-size-of-a-pea mentallity of the legislators making laws to protect that business model?
Pure genius (Score:3, Insightful)
A shift to self-upgrading devices? (Score:4, Insightful)
Of course, then all medial will get taxed, then all hell will break loose as the hard drive and memory makers challenege the law into oblivion.
Re:A shift to self-upgrading devices? (Score:1)
Under the new laws, levies on CD media will go up to $0.59 (from the current $0.25 (I think)), and ALL media in MP3 players will be levied $0.021/MB, or $21/GB (yeah, they're ignoring the whole base-2 thing, apparently). Flash cards and other removable media is levied too, so there's no way around it.
I live in Canada, and this sucks.
Re:A shift to self-upgrading devices? (Score:2)
(g) $21 for each gigabyte of memory in each non-removable hard drive incorporated into each MP3 player or into each similar device with an internal hard drive that is intended for use primarily to record and play music. (approx. $13.26 USD per GB)
Simple work around. Sell players (without any storage included) that support commodity computer components for storage, and sell these items next to the players.
Like I said before, if they tax standard hard drives this way, or they tax the device on its potential storage capacity (can accept devices from 1-120GB), then there will be hell to pay for the lawmakers.
Re:A shift to self-upgrading devices? (Score:2)
(d) 0.8 for each megabyte of memory in each removable electronic memory card, each removable flash memory storage medium of any type, or each removable micro-hard drive;
The levy is being raised on commodity components - all CD-R, CD-RW, DVD-R and smartmedia/compactflash items. They don't have to base anything on potential storage capacity; if you buy a player with no storage, like a discman or minidisc player, then you are taxed on the media you buy.
Re:A shift to self-upgrading devices? (Score:2)
Again, to dispel rumours (Score:1)
Re:Again, to dispel rumours (Score:1)
What cave are YOU living in? THERE ALREADY IS!
The current levy (a.k.a. "tax") is somewhere around $0.25/CD-R.
Don't doubt that this law WILL pass... we're talking about politicians, after all.
On the upside, they're essentially making it legal to pirate music, since you're already paying for it.
Re:Again, to dispel rumours (Score:3, Interesting)
As regards piracy, if you do live in Canada, it's quite likely that you haven't actually been pirating music. Canadian copyright law states that copying recorded works for personal use is not an infringement of copyright. It's not even frowned upon. It's totally legal to copy your friend's CDs and make MP3s out of them. It's probably legal to buy a CD, copy it, and return it, as long as the copying is done for personal use.
Re:Again, to dispel rumours (Score:2)
You might be able to use services like this legally, if you can claim that you were only copying for your own use (and not for the purpose of sharing).
The relevant section of the Copyright Act [justice.gc.ca] can be found here [justice.gc.ca].
Re:Again, to dispel rumours (Score:1)
Desktop Computers (Score:2)
Smuggling (Score:2)
Seems fair.
Trivial to circumvent this law! (Score:1)
I bought my MP3 player from a Canadian store (mp3playerstore.com). I purchased the unit with 256Mb of memory, but I had the option of buying it with no memory at all.
So, I don't understand how this law is going to work. Am I missing something here?
Re:Trivial to circumvent this law! (Score:2)
I hope you're right. But consider the fact that removable media like CD-Rs, CD-RWs, DVD-Rs, etc, will also be heavily taxed under this proposed legislation, despite the fact that there are lots of non-music uses for them.
In other words, Joe Consumer or Joe Business buys a pack of pure data CD-Rs (not "audio" labelled) for simple data backup purposes, and they will get hit with a significant tax per disc under this proposal.
Don't burn the parliament bulidings yet... (Score:1)
Government/Music Industry Greed (Score:1)
What about Sony MiniDisc players? They record 80MB and a lot of newsmedia people use it now instead of microcassette recorders. I'd like to see Mr.Reporter's reaction to that!