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Colleges Secretly Test Music-Industry Project

An anonymous reader writes "The music industry is still pushing Choruss, a controversial blanket-licensing scheme, but it is far less innovative than first described. Six colleges are setting it up now, but they refuse to have their names released because the issue is a political landmine — and who wants to be associated with the recording industry?"

2 of 208 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Blanket licensing is never legal by TrancePhreak · · Score: 5, Informative

    Last I heard it was legal in Canada to make a copy of a borrowed CD for yourself, as long as you don't sell it. This was the basis for the CD taxes.

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    -]Phreak Out[-
  2. Re:Blanket licensing is never legal by DeadDecoy · · Score: 5, Informative

    The music industry created a loophole in Canadian copyright laws when it asked for a levy on blank audio media. These $0.21 to $0.24 levies on blank media raised millions of dollars for music publishers, but also legalized copying in the digital age, to the consternation of the music industry. Canadian courts have ruled that consumers have the right to copy any recording from the original copy even those they do not personally own. This consumer right has been extended by the courts to include peer-to-peer downloads.

    Canadian Copyright Law
    So Canadians are allowed to make copies regardless of ownership because they are already taxed for it.