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Delays to Canadian DMCA Could Doom Act 128

Jabbrwokk writes "Michael Geist reports legislation to create a Canadian version of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act has been delayed again, possibly because of massive public outcry, and possibly even because of opposition from the industry itself. Canada's biggest ISPs have banded together to oppose the proposed new legislation and suggest their own solution, which include allowances for expanded fair dealing, private copying, no liability for ISPs and legislation that concentrates its wrath on commercial pirates instead of penny-ante downloaders and seeders.'"
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Delays to Canadian DMCA Could Doom Act

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  • by tomhudson ( 43916 ) <barbara.hudson@b ... com minus distro> on Saturday February 16, 2008 @04:44PM (#22448048) Journal

    ... look to the north for the "land of the free".

    Imagine, proposing laws that might actually be fair and balanced? What will those crazy Canucks do next?!?

    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward

      ... look to the north for the "land of the free".

      Imagine, proposing laws that might actually be fair and balanced? What will those crazy Canucks do next?!?
      Get rid of their Monarchy?
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by kpoole55 ( 1102793 )
        The monarchy is only a figurehead. We control our own constitution now. And, it sounds like the government might actually be listening to the people at times other than when an election is due.
        • by Warll ( 1211492 )
          We're the closets we've been to an election for a while now. With that said when are we not close to an election, its a minority government after all.
        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by calebt3 ( 1098475 )

          And, it sounds like the government might actually be listening to the people at times other than when an election is due.
          I think I figured out why government is so screwed up. Politicians are basically megaphones. What goes in comes out louder. At election time, good ideas go in, good ideas get spewed back out. After the election, BS from lobbyists goes in, and BS comes back out. Now if only we could make them into voice recorders instead...
        • "We control our own constitution now." Not really, any changes to the consitution must be signed by the Governer General (appointed representatve of the Queen).
          • by dryeo ( 100693 )
            And the day the governor-general refuses to sign a law without a very good reason is the day that we become a republic.
            • And the day the governor-general refuses to sign a law
              ...is the day US invades canada like it did Panama to "liberate" canada from tyranny of the Queen.
          • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

            I always thought it was more of a rubber stamp sort of thing.
      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Vectronic ( 1221470 )
        We basically have, the Queen (and/or 'Future King') is a figurehead, and little more...

        The extent of her power is basically just being able to bitch if she wants to, but we dont have to actually listen to her.

        "The Canadian constitution places the Queen as head of state, and all Canadian laws and treaties must be approved by her. In reality, an appointed governor acts as her representative, and for all intents and purposes, decisions made by the Canadian parliament are never opposed. Thus, the Queen exercise
        • If that is the case, then it it even more ridiculous. So instead of having someone in power, you have a "figurehead" that has no power, but gets paid like someone who does.

          Having a powerless figurehead is an idiotic waste.
          • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

            by Vectronic ( 1221470 )
            I Agree, however in this case you are wrong...

            We dont pay the Queen anything, she is simply a Figurehead... consider her the Eagle to the US... you dont pay the Eagle anything, hell you are killing them all... but you still put the damn thing on anything you can find...

            However, we do pay for whatever she needs when she is actually within our Borders, ie: "All Expenses Paid"... transportation, housing, protection, etc, etc.
            • Re: (Score:1, Informative)

              by Anonymous Coward
              We are killing our eagles?

              The population is growing by a large amount, not lowering. It's basically the opposite of what you are saying.
              • lol... even though the population has roughly doubled since the 1970's... its still only about 2 t 3% of what it once was...

                My point was, that you put it on your money, your Coats of Arms, schools, etc its your National Emblem...meaningwhile anhilating the species, doesnt matter if it was now, or 40 years ago... its been your emblem for some 200 years, just like Canda has had a relationship with the British Monarchy for about the same amount of time... but we sure as hell dont assassinate members of the Mon
              • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

                by ls -la ( 937805 )

                We are killing our eagles?

                The population is growing by a large amount, not lowering. It's basically the opposite of what you are saying.
                Now it's growing, but we were the reason they became so endangered in the first place.
              • by Rei ( 128717 ) on Saturday February 16, 2008 @06:30PM (#22448716) Homepage
                Yes, but the Canadians have wisely avoided killing their queens or destroying their habitat. As a consequence, the queen population has remained relatively constant over the years, while our eagle populations fell dramatically.

                When was the last time you saw a queen breeding center make releases into the wild to help restore local royalty populations?
                • Re: (Score:1, Funny)

                  by Anonymous Coward
                  There actually is a Queen Breeding Centre in Toronto, located at Church and Wellesley.
            • by Alsee ( 515537 )
              consider her the Eagle to the US... you dont pay the Eagle anything, hell you are killing them all... but you still put the damn thing on anything you can find

              Yeah, but who the hell would want to put the Queen on a hotdog bun?

              -
          • Having a powerless figurehead is an idiotic waste.

            Oh, I dunno about that. It gives the People somebody to throw beer bottles at when they're pissed off at Government while the real Bad Guys leave town...

          • eh, i wouldn't say it's a waste. being as the GG is the official head-of-state, he/she deals with all the ceremonial stuff (foreign visits, etc.), leaving the PM able to do actual work.
          • Re:Once more ... (Score:5, Interesting)

            by thirty-seven ( 568076 ) on Sunday February 17, 2008 @12:50AM (#22450752)

            Having a powerless figurehead is an idiotic waste.

            I disagree, for two reasons. One is that, as another poster pointed out, a head of state's job includes a lots of things other than exercising power: hosting state diners, doing good-will tours, giving out awards. Why not keep these roles with a specialized non-political head of state, and separate out the head of government roles (making foreign and domestic administrative policy decisions) into a political position with power.

            Secondly, and more controversially, I think that there are great socio-political benefits to having a "figurehead" who represents the state and/or nation. Having spent a fair amount of time living in both the United States and Canada, it is my opinion that the US political culture is actually more suited to a constitutional monarchy than Canada is. There seems to be a sizable group of Americans who have an almost mystical respect for the presidency, treating it as a holy office that must be kept sacred. This can lead to horror and hatred that anyone would question George W. Bush "during time of war" and also to an overreaction to Bill Clinton's sexual affair sullying the presidency. In a constitutional monarchy, such people can worship the office of the head of state without interfering with or polarizing valid political criticism, since the person who gets criticized for making political decisions, the prime minister, does not occupy an office revered as representing the state/nation, in the way that some people view the presidency or monarchy as doing.

            As an aside, a large majority of developed, democratic countries has figurehead heads of state, even though most of these countries are republics, not constitutional monarchies. They have a parliamentary system with a prime minister making most executive decisions, but instead of a monarch they have a president, sometimes directly elected by the people (Ireland), chosen by Parliament (Germany), or elected by an electoral college (India). In these systems the president is mostly a figurehead, with about the same power (or even less) than the Queen has in Canada.

          • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

            by evil_morg ( 801390 )
            Dear Citizens of America,

            In view of your failure to elect a competent President and thus to govern yourselves, we hereby give notice of the revocation of your independence, effective immediately.

            Her Sovereign Majesty, Queen Elizabeth II, will resume monarchical duties over all states, commonwealths and other territories (except Kansas, which she does not fancy), as from Monday next.

            Your new prime minister, Gordon Brown, will appoint a governor for America without the need for further elections. Congress and
      • The Queen of Canada? hahaha. Sure, we keep her picture on the $20 bill, and some of the coins, but that's about it.

        The office of Governor-General is "where the buck stops" nowadays in terms of the monarchy, and while its' a position appointed by the queen, its only after the "advice" of the Canadian government - in reality, its a political sinecure made by whoever's in power at the time. The "queen" would be ill-advised to ignore the "advice."

        Its the same with the "oath of allegience to the queen" tha

        • by alext ( 29323 )
          A trifle harsh? He's been more use than some figureheads we could mention... ahead of the game, even, in his batty way.

      • by gobbo ( 567674 )

        Get rid of their Monarchy?

        Hey, I'm a municipal libertarian-leaning sovereigntist, but I think the ridiculous monarchy situation is kind of cool, given other political circumstances. Among other things, it means:

        • that our nominal head of state is an immigrant black woman [wikipedia.org];
        • that most of our land base [wikipedia.org] is actually public;
        • that our ties to the Commonwealth persist;
        • that immigrants have a weirdly familiar authoritarian structure to cotton on to without real-world effects;
        • that with a bit of folding you can turn the head on our bills of
      • Practise Safe Government: Use a Kingdom!
    • I'm very proud to be Canadian for several reasons, and one of them is our stance on Copyright and fair use. I quiver in fear (as I commented in my blog [mikebabcock.ca] just yesterday) at the thought of us introducing draconian DMCA-like legislation, but I think in general Canadians really do get it more than our American counterparts.

      Most telling is how the ISPs and judges have stood on these issues in the past. A judge in Canada recently compared the use of file sharing software having illegal uses to a photocopier in a
      • Re:Once more ... (Score:5, Interesting)

        by pokerdad ( 1124121 ) on Saturday February 16, 2008 @07:53PM (#22449244)

        Most telling is how the ISPs and judges have stood on these issues in the past. A judge in Canada recently compared the use of file sharing software having illegal uses to a photocopier in a library being usable for illegally reproducing entire books. Do you remove photocopiers from libraries just because they could be used for illegal purposes? Exactly.

        While I agree with you, I think there is an important point to be made about why this is much more possible in Canada that the US.

        In the US 90% of all media are controlled by just six companies; they make virtually all the movies, music, and television seen by Americans. They also have a sizable stake of the ISP business. This gives them both economic motive to accert the kind of control they do, and the muscle to do it (both monetary muscle, and the immense power they can have over public opinion via what they choose to put on the news).

        In Canada the situation is very different. We don't have any media conglomerates comparable to those in the states. Our movie industry, after being practically dead for half a century, exists now primarly as a cheap shooting location for American productions. While we have a music industry, in every measurable way foreign, especially American, music has dominated for a very long time. While we have plenty of home grown television stations, except for cbc they tend to show only as much Canadian content as CRTC regulations require; its quite telling that of the top 20 shows in Canada the past few years only two are Canadian (Hockey Night in Canada and Corner Gas), and before Corner Gas became such a hit HNIC spent something like a decade all alone.

        In a very real way there is a huge irony to the way American media companies have come to hate Canada. The situation in Canada, where we only produce a tiny fraction of the media we view, is entirely because of economic bullying from American content producers; quite simply they drove Canadian companies out of business. So our media companies have practically no stake in the production of content and as such barely care about things like DMCA. The media companies not having a stake means that not only do they not see draconian measures as not helping them, but it would hurt them in so far as it would create expenses for them with little reward.

        On more than one occassion various industry groups in the US have threatened to cut Canada off if we don't do something about copyright infringement. And while I really don't think they have the balls to do it, I think it would benefit us greatly if it did; possibly breathing new life into industries long dominated by American content.

        • Re:Once more ... (Score:5, Insightful)

          by Citizen of Earth ( 569446 ) on Saturday February 16, 2008 @10:33PM (#22450014)

          On more than one occassion various industry groups in the US have threatened to cut Canada off if we don't do something about copyright infringement.

          I double-dog dare them to. They'd be shooting themselves in the foot by eliminating 26-million easily-accessible customers (English-speaking Canadians). But, more importantly, they wouldn't do it because they know that their rhetoric is bullshit.

    • We have been lucky (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Geof ( 153857 ) on Saturday February 16, 2008 @06:13PM (#22448612) Homepage

      I am tremendously proud of Canadians for standing up in the thousands to let it be known they do not support the adoption of the failed copyright regime suffered by citizens the United States. Our action has been essential to preventing the adoption of this law - so far.

      But we have also been very lucky. The previous government introduced a bill (admittedly not as bad as what is reported to be in the current plans). An election was called before it could become law. Timing may again be on our side: the current minority government is likely to fall in the near future. If so, the clock would probably be reset.

      For us to really win this, we need meaningful consultation (i.e. where we not only talk, but the government listens) to ensure the views and interests of all Canadians are taken into account. Very few politicians understand why most Canadians would care - I suspect many of them are not quite sure what to make of the current outcry. Until recently, media stories seldom even reported that the issue had another side. Until our politicians acknowledge the significance of copyright and the public passion over the issue, we must keep fighting.

      • by p0tat03 ( 985078 ) on Saturday February 16, 2008 @06:38PM (#22448772)
        I think the main reason for the saner laws in this parliament is due to the minority. If any party has a majority we'll get some pretty crazy bills passed through the House. IMHO we should just keep minority governments around forever - it keeps legislation sane and relatively nonpartisan.
        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          Yeah minority governments scare the shit out of the politicians. The Trudeau and Clark minority governments were better than any majority ones. It forces even a dangerous authoritarian bushite neocon like Harper to try to appear human, which he finds very painful.
      • by Rei ( 128717 )
        Well, we in the US try to do our part. For example, just last week, I got opposition to the DMCA, restoration of the public domain, and other similar planks added to the Johnson County Democratic Party platform (we're the fifth largest county in the state, out of 99 counties). It's not much, but it's a start; in a couple months we'll be trying to carry it over to the state platform.

        Ordinary people can do their part, however small it may be.
    • In Soviet Canukistan ISPs lobby for rights for YOU!
  • by usul294 ( 1163169 ) on Saturday February 16, 2008 @04:45PM (#22448056)
    I know you've been lobbying for years to get me to move up north. The nice people, clean air, beautiful outdoors, universal healthcare, and now apparently a somewhat more laissez-faire approach to copyright law. Look, maybe if you rig the election to put Hillary Clinton in the White House, I might consider moving.
    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward
      Sorry no can do, but we'll throw in a case of real canadian beer.
    • by tomhudson ( 43916 ) <barbara.hudson@b ... com minus distro> on Saturday February 16, 2008 @05:02PM (#22448174) Journal

      I know you've been lobbying for years to get me to move up north. The nice people, clean air, beautiful outdoors, universal healthcare, and now apparently a somewhat more laissez-faire approach to copyright law. Look, maybe if you rig the election to put Hillary Clinton in the White House, I might consider moving.

      We're a mite peeved at the US right now - you were supposed to KEEP Celine Dion! It was a win-win ... we got rid of her, and she kept your old people indoors at the casinos, feeding their Social Security checks to the one-armed bandits.

      And you've gone and devalued your dollar to the point where Canadians earning the Canadian minimum wage can afford to vacation in the US ... or buy a foreclosed house as a vacation home ...

      What next - reimpose the draft so we'll be flooded with asylum-seeking draft-dodgers? What's up with that, eh? Are we going to have to burn down the White House again?

  • Its the beer stupid (Score:3, Interesting)

    by zappepcs ( 820751 ) on Saturday February 16, 2008 @04:49PM (#22448078) Journal
    or I wish it was that simple, then we could all chip in $10 and get D.C. flooded with the stuff. Something in Canada seems to be affecting their politics. If we could bottle it I'm certain that an American entrepreneur could make money off of it. Whatever it is, the US desperately needs some of it... well, lots of it.

    I've been pleasantly surprised how the Internet has been affecting politics in the US lately, and I hope that it's a long term ongoing effect. I hope that WHATEVER it is in Canada is something that spreads southward like those geese they have, or something.
    • I think the only real dividing difference, is that our Government (with an obvious slight bias) listens to its people as a primary consideration, not as an afterthought.

      Plus, we have had 2 Minority Governments in a row... which just amplifies it.
      • by dryeo ( 100693 )
        While true lately, mostly due to the minority governments, often the government doesn't listen at all. The best example I remember was Mulroney's government pushing through NAFTA and the GST.
        Unluckily a majority government isn't much different then a dictatorship excepting having to call an election sometime in the next 5 yrs.
    • by Telvin_3d ( 855514 ) on Saturday February 16, 2008 @05:27PM (#22448310)
      Biggest difference in Canada? We have a habit of tossing out political parties that piss us off. We can get away with it because there are 4-5 major parties active at any one time, so easy enough to out with the old and in with the new. And there is always a couple parties that have to compete to be the new big dogs.

      And when we get rid of a party, they are gone. In 1993, one of the Conservative parties passed unpopular tax laws. They went from controlling 57% of the seats to controlling .6% (2 out of 295). Do that once or twice and your politicians will get the message.
      • I think that is exactly what we need in the US... more than two parties. Sure, there are more than two, but everything is fixed so that only one of the two parties can prevail without something that approaches the scale of blow back that marie antionette experienced.

        There are those of us who hold out hope that the Intarwebtubetrucks will help bring on that scale of blow back, but history is a stern teacher, and bribery is addictive.

        Perhaps the founding fathers had more foresight than anyone gives them credi
        • by p0tat03 ( 985078 )

          Actually, it's less about having multiple parties... and more to do with parliamentary procedure. In Canada, if the ruling party proposes a bill and is defeated, the entire government MUST RESIGN and an election is held. It only takes ONE bill to bring down the government and give the other guys a shot. The logic is that if the ruling party tables a bill that fails to pass, then clearly the ruling party is no longer in favor with the people. This has a tendency to keep out the most insane of laws.

          And whil

          • by Telvin_3d ( 855514 ) on Saturday February 16, 2008 @07:29PM (#22449078)
            Just to note, the only bills that can bring down the government are budgets. They can also designate other bills as a non-confidence bill when they want to signal that the other parties better be serious if they want to oppose it. No one is going to bring down the government and trigger an election over a minor bill.
          • by aniefer ( 910494 )

            In Canada, if the ruling party proposes a bill and is defeated, the entire government MUST RESIGN and an election is held. It only takes ONE bill to bring down the government and give the other guys a shot.

            This is true and has always been the case historically. What I don't understand is the complaints from the current opposition whenever the government declares that a vote will be a confidence matter. Every vote used to be a confidence matter.

            Actually, I lied when I said I don't understand it. Th

            • by dryeo ( 100693 )
              Actually I'm pretty sure that only monetary bills ( or motions of confidence) can bring down the government. If every minor vote could bring down the government they would fall a lot more often.
              Here is an article about the last government refusing to call an election after losing a vote. http://www.cbc.ca/story/canada/national/2005/05/10/confidence-vote050510.html [www.cbc.ca]
              Right now I think what is happening is that all sides want to blame the other side for causing yet another election. Historically the voters get p
      • by yesteraeon ( 872571 ) on Saturday February 16, 2008 @06:59PM (#22448916)
        I certainly agree that we're not quite as bad off as the U.S. with their two party system, but you've overstated the case quite a bit. First of all, at the federal level there are only 3 national parties that actually win seats in the House (I'm not sure where you got 4-5 from). Secondly, only two parties -Liberals and Conservatives- have ever controlled the federal government. Lastly, as much fun as it was to watch the Conservatives implode in 1993, that event left us with only the Liberals having a realistic shot at winning elections. As a result, we basically had a ONE party system from 1993-2004. Which, as far as democracy goes, is pretty bad.
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by Telvin_3d ( 855514 )
          Well, right now we have the Conservatives, the Liberals, the Bloc and the NDP. That makes 4. In the past decade or so, there was the Reform party and the Alliance. If you go back into the 80s and 90s I think you can add another one or two that had seats in parliament. Heck, the Green party tends to come close to a seat or two each election. Also always a few independents with seats.

          Yeah, and look what happened to the Liberals when they got comfortable. I don't think the number of parties in control ma
        • As a Canadian, I would respectfully ask the moderators to please mod the parent post up.

          Thank you kindly.

          - RG>
        • First of all, at the federal level there are only 3 national parties that actually win seats in the House (I'm not sure where you got 4-5 from).

          4 Actually [wikipedia.org]:
          Conservatives
          Liberals
          NDP
          Bloc Québécois

          Unfortunately, we blew our chance to fix the system [wikipedia.org]. So we're stuck with a system where a party that got 10.5% of the popular vote has 16.5% of the seats while one that got 17.5% of the votes has less than 9.5% of the seats (not to mention the Greens with 4.5% of the votes and zero seats).

      • Yeah, I know this is a second reply to yours and probably no one will read it, but I just found something that stopped me in my tracks. Having multiple parties in a democratic society has a point of diminishing returns. My initial thinking on this is that the returns begin to diminish once you have more than three sides or parties. If each is capable of taking roughly 30% of the vote, you have a reasonable chance at finding reason and logic in society. Beyond that, the returns begin to get 'squirrely' and u
  • Dear RIAA (Score:5, Funny)

    by syousef ( 465911 ) on Saturday February 16, 2008 @04:57PM (#22448126) Journal
    Your bribe isn't large enough. Please supply more money and we'll find reasons to fold on our constituents.

    Regards,

    Canadian Parliament
  • by mangu ( 126918 ) on Saturday February 16, 2008 @05:00PM (#22448140)
    Don't they have a tax on all blank media to somewhat "compensate" for illegal copies?


    If the law were fair, making a copy of any copyrighted work on media bought in Canada would be totally legal.

    • Yes. (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Hamster Lover ( 558288 ) * on Saturday February 16, 2008 @05:10PM (#22448228) Journal
      Yes, a copyright levy is collected on CD-Rs and other media to compensate artists for personal copies of musical works, which is permitted under the Copyright Act. If I borrow a friend's music CD and copy that CD on to media purchased under the levy then I have broken no law. The caveat is a person must make the copy for themselves; you cannot make the copy for a friend and then give it to them. Of course, there is absolutely no way of determining this.
      • Retail Stores (Score:2, Informative)

        by Jon.Laslow ( 809215 )
        I remember when the levy first came out - a lot of larger retail stores, like "London Drugs" and Staples figured it would make people stop buying blank media, so they started paying it for the customers. In my area, blank media is priced about the same as it is in most stores across the border, so I don't think the stores ever stopped paying the levy.
      • If I borrow a friend's music CD and copy that CD on to media purchased under the levy...

        There's no requirement that you copy onto levied media. You can make a personal copy onto any audio recording medium. See the Copyright Act [cb-cda.gc.ca], it's not that hard to read.
      • by Alsee ( 515537 )
        The caveat is a person must make the copy for themselves; you cannot make the copy for a friend and then give it to them. Of course, there is absolutely no way of determining this.

        I hear the RIAA is working right now on a fix for that. Something about legislating DNA extraction devices into all new recordable media.

        -
    • " ... Don't they have a tax on all blank media to somewhat "compensate" for illegal copies?

      If the law were fair, making a copy of any copyrighted work on media bought in Canada would be totally legal. ..."

      May as well get the nit-picking out of the way. It's not a criticism of your post, but for readers of the thread, we may as well get it right.

      " ... a tax on all blank media ..."
      I think it's fashionable to refer to it as a tax, but it doesn't meet my definition. The Federal Government collects the money on
      • For trying to get it right, you got a lot of it wrong.

        The Federal Government collects the money on behalf of CIRA [equivalent to RIAA in the US] who distributes it as they see fit to artists.

        The RIAA equivalent is the CRIA, not the CIRA, and they're not in charge of distributing the levy. It's the CPCC that gets the money. Record companies get a small portion of it.

        If you were to live in Canada and own a "legal copy", it would be easy to describe:
        A copy you, and only you, made personally for your own personal use. You and only you must have operated whatever equipment was used to create the copy, and you must keep the copied version in your possession or destroy it.

        You're talking about a private copy. You're also allowed to buy copies from a store, and those might be legal. But there's nothing in the law that says you have to keep the private copy in your possession. You just made that up.

        Some of the examples you list have a grain of t

        • " ...
          Copying for Private Use

          80. (1) Subject to subsection (2), the act of reproducing all or any substantial part of

          (a) a musical work embodied in a sound recording,

          (b) a performer's performance of a musical work embodied in a sound recording, or

          (c) a sound recording in which a musical work, or a performer's performance of a musical work, is embodied

          onto an audio recording medium for the private use of the person who makes the copy does not constitute an infringement of the copyright in the musical work, th
          • I can read section 80(2)(b), and it says I'm not allowed to copy for the purpose of distributing. It doesn't say that after I've copied for some other purpose I'm not allowed to do what I like with the copy.

            Since I don't believe there are any cases where someone has "gone to jail" for giving a private copy to someone else, I am not sure which are the "usual legal decisions" to search to find examples. Can you point to even a single one? I'd be astounded to see a case where someone has even been fined or
  • Imagine if Americas politicians listened to massive public outcry.

    http://www.copyrightreform.us/ [copyrightreform.us]
  • by Frosty Piss ( 770223 ) on Saturday February 16, 2008 @05:06PM (#22448196)

    Canadian version of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act has been delayed again, possibly because of massive public outcry...
    Wishful thinking. Unfortunately, the reality of practice is that the "public" has no say in these matters. More likely is that different big-money factions haven't yet decided how to portion the money up.
    • by Gorshkov ( 932507 ) <AdmiralGorshkov@[ ]il.com ['gma' in gap]> on Saturday February 16, 2008 @06:07PM (#22448562)

      Wishful thinking. Unfortunately, the reality of practice is that the "public" has no say in these matters. More likely is that different big-money factions haven't yet decided how to portion the money up.
      Actually, NOT wishful thinking. One of the major differences between Canada and the USA is how parties & campaigns are financed. Personal donations ONLY are accepted - corporate & organizational money is strictly verboten. And in practical terms, the limits on campaign spending are so tight that pretty well any candidate with a hope in hell of winning is able to raise all the money they're allowed to spend from the voters in their riding.

      A lobby group my have more "access" to the lawmakers, by virtue of the fact that they have their offices in Ottawa .... but they can't really buy, or even rent the politicos .... their only weapon is persuasion. Because the politicians know that at the end of the day, the ones who WILL fund their campaign, and/or vote for them, are the people in their riding. Period.
      • The Canadian system sounds incredible, I wish I lived there. But actually I was talking about the distribution of money between the ISPs and the media owners. The synopses says...

        Canada's biggest ISPs have banded together to oppose the proposed new legislation...
        Maybe the media owners just haven't offered a big enough cut to the ISPs?
        • by Gorshkov ( 932507 ) <AdmiralGorshkov@[ ]il.com ['gma' in gap]> on Saturday February 16, 2008 @06:23PM (#22448670)
          And they couldn't possibly, I don't think. Governments here are a lot more inclined to regulate than they are in the US, and the ISPs are very, very well aware of that. If something like that went through, the ISPs are know damned well all the regulation, requirements, and red tape they'd have to deal with .... and all on their own dime.

          Free markets are a good thing. But sometimes, even just *presence* of a government willing to interfere is enough to make everybody play nice.
      • I think your description is somewhat idealized. There are plenty of ways to use money to influence politicians. I believe several have left public office for plum jobs in industry, for example - often with businesses connected to their job in government. For them, reelection didn't matter.
        • I think your description is somewhat idealized. There are plenty of ways to use money to influence politicians. I believe several have left public office for plum jobs in industry, for example - often with businesses connected to their job in government. For them, reelection didn't matter.

          Simplified, but not idealized - I was trying to make a point in a paragraph, not give a treatise on political organization in Canada.

          Of course there are going to be ways to influence - but the jaws surrounding elections

        • by sjames ( 1099 )

          I believe several have left public office for plum jobs in industry, for example - often with businesses connected to their job in government. For them, reelection didn't matter.

          While that's not preferred, at least it only happens once per crook. ours in the U.S. can sell out over and over.

        • by perlchild ( 582235 ) on Saturday February 16, 2008 @08:38PM (#22449482)
          I think the fact that Canadians actually have a law to make it illegal to engage institutionalized bribery doesn't make it impossible to influence government through money... It just means the US have been needing such a tool for years, and managed not to get it.

          Having the tool won't remove ALL bribery... But without the law, it just means the bribery(ahem "Lobbying") is legal... I just wish I understood why most US citizens have been so convinced their system is superior for so long that when someone shows them an idea they can use, they refuse to even consider the matter...
          • I'm not trying to excuse the U.S. I'm just skeptical of my own country's virtue.
            • I'm Canadian too, but I keep having conversations that go nowhere with Americans about this, they're TERRIFIED of even adding one party to the mix.
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        Personal donations ONLY are accepted - corporate & organizational money is strictly verboten.

        This is the case at the federal level - provincial legislation is still a bit of a patchwork. My home province (Saskatchewan) still allows campaign contributions from corporations, trade unions, etc. - it's my understanding that many other provinces either ban (Quebec, Manitoba) or restrict (Ontario, New Brunswick) non-personal contributions.

        • This is the case at the federal level - provincial legislation is still a bit of a patchwork. My home province (Saskatchewan) still allows campaign contributions from corporations, trade unions, etc. - it's my understanding that many other provinces either ban (Quebec, Manitoba) or restrict (Ontario, New Brunswick) non-personal contributions.
          Agreed - but the discussion is about federal jurisdiction and practice, not provincial.
      • Personal donations ONLY are accepted
        ...for candidates that may be selected democratically, but can be replaced by a candidate of the party leader's choice.

        Also, while the campaign financing restrictions are a Good Thing, they are fairly recent.

        - RG>
        • Also, while the campaign financing restrictions are a Good Thing, they are fairly recent.
          Restrictions on organizational contributions are new, yes - but there have always been very strict limits, since at least the early '80s, when I first became active. But that's besides the point - the discussion is about the current situation.
    • It's a bit too cynical to assume that no politician goes into politics because they want to make the world a better place.
  • Was it DMC and they added the A?
  • Before that law was passed, not many people cared too much about copyright. Not even geeks. But the law was so badly designed, and so biassed in favour of the media cartels that suddenly everyone took an interest. Copyright is a major matter to quite a few people. Every time any change in copyright is suggested that is in any way similar to DMCA, there's huge opposition.

    Kind of an unintended consequence of the law the media cartels wanted.
  • A DMCA-like law won't work up here.

    There is an additionnal factor in Canada that is extremely different from the US, and which may very well trigger a massive civil disobedience for an eventual CDMCA: multiculturalism (that is, no "melting pot").

    Immigrants are encouraged to retain their culture; there is no definite effort to force immigrants into making them into WASPs. So, ethnic communities are not something marginal (go see the chinatown in Toronto for a good example).

    When all those people will be

    • Yup, there are definitely similarities between the US and Canada. This CDMCA NOT being one of them. But, having racists like this jackass certainly is. Though, from what I've seen, it is rather not tolerated here (or at least as much as in the US).
      • There is no racism in not liking people whose only difference is being fucked in the head because of their religion. They are religious only by their own volition, not because of their birth. And they can choose to dump their religion any time they want.

        So it's not racism.

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