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Proposed Canadian Laws to Nix P2P Music Sharing

limber writes "During this past weekend's Juno awards (a vapid Canadian music industry shindig) Canadian Heritage Minister Liza Frulla brought up proposed new legislation that would make downloading music on the Internet without paying for it illegal. High (or low) lights of the legislation include: forcing 'ISPs to monitor individual customer Internet connections for suspicious activity,' and giving the music industry and songwriters 'the tools to sue' illegal downloaders. Frulla further noted she 'wanted to persuade children that downloading music for free is wrong.'

2 of 60 comments (clear)

  1. Music Levy Repel by 9mm+Censor · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Ok, so if its going to become illegal to download music and let the record industy sue people, is the tax on media going to be repeled?

  2. Innovation massivelly stifled by jamienk · · Score: 4, Interesting

    * Connect 2 iPods with a Firewire chord -- iShare

    * IMDB links -- "download now!"

    * On-demand TV, for real, any TV show ever made

    * Level playing field for musical artists -- disincentivize massive investment in ad campaigns, encourage band competition through P2P blogsphere

    * Encourage competition in the following fields:

    - Attribution.com -- tries to authoritatively attribute chain of creative credit for original/derived work...

    - Who can sell "IP" at the lowest price? Can the USA compete with China? 1cent books, anyone?

    - What are TRUE value adds when "IP" is (almost) free? e.g., purchased CD comes with concert tickets; $500 purchase buys you a free Bar Mitzva concert...

    etc... More to come...