Slashdot Mirror


Canada May Tax Legal Music Downloads

FuriousBalancing writes "MacNN is reporting that Canadians may soon pay a small tax on every legal music store download. This fee is the work of a measure proposed by the Copyright Board of Canada. About two cents would be added to every song downloaded, with 1.5 cents being added to album downloads. Streaming services and subscriptions would also be taxed, to the tune of about 6% of the monthly fee. Most interesting - the tax would be retroactively applied to every transaction processed since 1996. 'The surcharge would help compensate artists for piracy, according to SOCAN's reasoning. The publishing group draws similarities between this and a 21-cent fee already applied to blank CDs in the country; the right to copy a song from an online store demands the same sort of levy applied to copying a retail CD, SOCAN argues. The tax may have a significant impact for online stores such as iTunes and Canada-based Puretracks, which will have to factor the amount both into future and past sales.' The full text of the measure is available in PDF format."

2 of 246 comments (clear)

  1. Condoning privacy? by QuietLagoon · · Score: 0, Troll

    Doesn't this tax acknowledge that privacy occurs and is governmment sanctioned?

  2. The Cure by Quantam · · Score: 0, Troll

    Clearly Canada is working hard to produce a cure for Americans' general feeling of stupidity/inferiority from having Bush as president.

    --
    You have tried to support your argument with faulty reasoning! Go directly to jail; do not pass Go, do not collect $200!