Another Stab At a Canadian DMCA
whisper_jeff writes "News has come out that Prime Minister Stephen Harper is planning on bringing the DMCA to Canada. As a Canadian, this disgusts me. Watching Harper sell out Canadians in favour of US lobby groups is an affront. I am hopeful that enough Canadians write to Harper and their MPs to voice their disapproval of this effort."
Wouldn't that be "Another Stab At a Canadian DMC'eh?"
eh?
Would it be ok if they were selling you guys out to Canadian lobby groups?
I am the richest astronaut ever to win the superbowl.
I'm quite disgusted also. I've been emailing the office of the prime minister for over two months in regards to the ACTA. It is quite pathetic they cannot even take the time to address an issue in the active public eye. Even a generic spin would be nice. All I've been asking for is some information on the stance of my own government.
We as Canadians should lobby. This is a disgust that the Harper government is not taking into account the will of the people whatsoever.
Along with writing your MP, you could also get involved in the Canadian Pirate Party.
I hope our US congress claims copyright over the DMCA and files a takedown notice on you Canadians. Stealing our horrible draconian legislation? You wish!
My webcomic
Upset with your prime minister, protesting policy change.... hmmm... sounds slightly American-ish.
Of all the things I've lost; I miss my mind the most. - Mark Twain
Watching Harper sell out Canadians in favour of US lobby groups is an affront.
If it makes you feel any better, watching our own Congress sell out all of us who live in the United States to US lobby groups was just as bad.
This ain't rocket surgery.
Make sure to stab it in the heart, with a wooden stake. Otherwise, the hundred-year-old copyrights will continue to live.
Ok, looking at what the US DMCA has done, can you really say its improved the US in any way? Lets see here, thanks to the DMCA we now have judges wasting their time on victimless crimes, record companies still screwing artists and a rush of high-tech jobs out of the US.
The DMCA hinders education, harms jobs and makes developing in China and India even better. Why Canada would even consider such a terrible piece of legislation is beyond me.
Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
Dear Mr. Prime Minister;
Please immediately cease and desist any activities which might imped our ability to leech off the American entertainment industry...
A concerned Canuck
In America - we take to the streets, create mobs with mob mentality, and burn shit down. In Canada - they talk about talking about protesting, and threaten by saying " I guess it's physical letter writing time".... careful canada, you guy's are dangerous.
Of all the things I've lost; I miss my mind the most. - Mark Twain
Canada has always fascinated me. If Americans were to close his/her eyes then open them when in Canada, they would not notice that much of a difference. Exceptions would be in the currency and the way they spell some of their words like "neighbour".
But on a serious note, none of the big tech companies in the USA launch their products across the border.
Heck, setting up an online store to charge Canadians the full price of say the HTC Incredible would not hurt the vendor. All costs/risks etc could be met by the purchaser...but big store companies will not even take orders from Canadians!
Why? You would wonder...why? Can a Slashdotter explain? Is it Canada's fault that the situation is this way?
The ACTA will do that anyway.
That Anonymous Coward guy is pretty annoying. Can we have the government censor him or something?
a deceptive, plagiarized report on the digital economy that copied text from the International Intellectual Property Alliance (the primary movie, music, and software lobby in the U.S.), at times without full attribution. The report itself was funded by copyright lobby groups (U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Canadian Chamber of Commerce, Canadian Anti-Counterfeiting Network, Copyright Collective of Canada which represents U.S. film production) along with the Ontario Ministry of Research and Innovation. The role of the Ontario government obviously raises questions about taxpayer dollars being used to pay for a report that simply recycles the language of a U.S. lobby group paper.
You can't take the sky from me...
I became aware of this while reading Michael Geist's blog this morning (http://www.michaelgeist.ca/) - a good resource for information about copyright law, privacy matters and so forth. I'm in the process of composing a letter to my MP right now, and I encourage all of the Canadians here to follow suit. Only by voicing your concerns can you be an agent of change.
It's unlikely to do any good lobbying Harper. Harper's unfulfilled dream is to be President of the U.S.A. He's as much big business, especially big oil business, as any American President could be. Further Harper's modus operandi demands he serve the wishes of the copyright lobby. His use of the media to cast his opponents in the worst possible light is his guiding star as a politician. He's a consummate sophist, seemingly utterly without any philosophy, other than to win and hold onto power. He has done cameos in various popular TV shows in slick, self deprecating clips. A politician who relies as heavily on superficial, mass media self promotion as does Harper will cut a wink 'n nod, tacit deal with big media companies. I think it's critically important to note the heavy use politicians in all countries make of mass media to further their political agendas. In the U.S.A. a loop is closing around the American citizenry. Big government, the military industrial complex and big, mass media corporations comprise an unholy trinity. In Canada the military industrial complex is missing but the possible crippling of the rights of individual citizens remains as much of a threat as corporations are given greater entitlements while being able to shield themselves from just punishments for their wrong doings. Two main problems come from the need to create jobs and compete internationally. Politicians need job creation programmes to bring home the bacon to their constituents and big business can deliver massive job creation programmes as well as threaten massive job losses. Further the majority of advanced, industrialized countries seemed to have opted for promoting mega corporations as a new, privileged class akin to medieval knights whose resources better ensure successful international competition.
ideopath @ play
I'm not Canadian, nor is most of the internet. However, I feel the internet can have big influence. Slashdot culture is well aware of this. So I ask, how can I (and others) get involved? There is a world of literate people who will get involved.
I guess this would mean the end of isohunt? a great canadian torrent tracker
Eh here I'm gonna go and shatter your frost-induced illusions. It won't change a thing because the DCMA already apply to canadians for actions done against US interests. Since most of the companies DCMA apply for are US based you can already be tried and extradited to the US. Also the law isn't even passed - laws are like a lawsuit - just because you bring one up doesn't mean you will win/get it passed. So why should you listen to me ? I get sued a lot under the DCMA, so I know a bit how the DCMA works.
- John Doe
On this side of the border, the Feds would be all over you by now, for advocating violent overthrow of der government.
1) Please keep in mind this needs more than the conservatives' votes to pass, i.e. you need to make sure all MPs understand we will not stand for it
2) History has shown that other parties aren't immune to this pandering.
For example, showing a 1 second part of a movie in a classroom isn't considerer fair use.
Canadians users pay a levy on each things that could be used to circumvent copyrights such as ipods, blank medias, cd players, dvd players etc... so the law assume you are guilty before you even start to use your hardware. You have to pay a royalty on the books used in education in addition to their base cost (about 6 US$ per student in high school) just so you can have a course based on the contents of that book (refering to the book as in see example 3.12 on page 156 require payment... it's not considered faire use in Canada). Canada has a full-time copyright board. Canada has copyright "collectives" (ie: lobbyist) who receive subsidies from the federal government. Canada has a well established royalty system - and most of them go to the artist - for example a small public performance cost for a song is 346$ and most of it go to the author of the song. Canadians don't have a parody exception for copyrights - the courts have confirmed that several time. Terms for copyrights are much longer in Canada than in the US (ie: life + 50)
Sorry if it was too long and you didn't read!
For those Canadians that visit Slashdot, I'd suggest writing to Stephen Harper and letting him know of your stance on DMCA. I'm sure there is more informed people on this site than in his cabinet. Voting him out is a long term solution, but letting them know what you think is something you can do right now.
Here is his contact information:
Email Address
pm@pm.gc.ca
Mailing Address
The Right Honourable Stephen Harper
Prime Minister of Canada
Office of the Prime Minister
80 Wellington Street
Ottawa, ON
Canada
K1A 0A2
Phone Number
(613) 992-4211
Fax Number
(613) 941-6900
The DMCA DRM provisions are pernicious (though not as powerful as most here seem to believe). The DMCA "Safe Harbor" provisions are not. Takedowns would exist without them. However, without "Safe Harbor" they would not have to follow a prescribed form, there would be no counter-takedown procedure, there would be no 30 day deadline for filing for infringement, and most important of all, service providers would be liable even if they complied with takedowns. The DMCA Safe Harbor does not expand the rights or powers of copyright owners in any way. On the contrary, it reduces them. Without the DMCA there would be no YouTube.
Unfortunately from what I have seen the DMCA-like statutes proposed in other countries seems to only expand the rights and powers of copyright owners without providing any additional protection for users. Don't let them pass. If that puts you in violation of TRIPS, tough. Withdraw from the damn thing: it's crap. If you must enact a local DMCA, at least make sure it goes no farther than the US one does (and insist that it create a fair use right if you don't already have one and does not reduce it if you do).
Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
Harper is an idiot, behead the fucker
The Prime Minister is not elected directly, he's simply the head of the party that got the most seats.
Currently the Conservatives are the government, but they don't hold a majority of seats in the house of Commons, so to get anything passed they need to convince at least some representatives of the other parties that it's a good idea.
The Conservatives were largely elected because of a happen-stance of how electoral boundaries are drawn. For instance, I myself live in the city but my electoral district includes a lot of rural area. The rural area tends to vote Conservative, so my own vote for _any_ other party is basically worthless.
What the heck happened to all the public feedback they got in the last year via the copyright consultations? There were thousands of comments. Was it not clear enough that we don't want copyright to be the way that it was implemented in the U.S.?
Time to write another letter to my MP and Tony Clement (Minister of Industry).
To the contact provided on this web link and I bet this will put a fat dent in it coming to fruition:
Mr. Harper,
Speaking as an American citizen, I'm glad you are selling out to our interests. I love having more slaves indebted to our system and YOU especially make a rather appropriate addition to our collection of sockpuppets with no real power or intelligence.
Keep up the good work, and bring me more slaves to do our bidding!
Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
Harper is just a totalitarian freak, 99% of the last round of comments on Bill C-61 were against it in one way or another...
http://www.michaelgeist.ca/ has been awesome at covering this and not letting it all go under the carpet but he can't save Canada alone!
Sounds like Stephen Harper has been taking a few of those American style Corporate Millions. Sure can change you legislate eh Stephen?
If you did not know why Canada needs The Pirate Party of Canada before today, I imagine it is becoming clearer to you. http://www.pirateparty.ca/
In B.C., our fascism is green.
So I guess they will remove the Levy Tax on recordable media?
I've got better things to do tonight than die.
One of the most disgusting things about this situation is that assholes like Harper can just keep introducing DMCA-style laws over and over again. Didn't make it through the legislature? Too much public opposition? No problem! We'll give it 6 months then we'll just start all over again. Eventually they will succeed in sneaking it through, and once it's through it's pretty much there for good.
Sometimes I just hate the world we live in.
Murphey's fighting Occam, and we're in the stands.
No confidence would bring down the government Brac Apartments
I thought it was good news and that canadians just were homophobic until I stopped reading it wrong.
"News has come out that Prime Minister Stephen Harper is planning on bringing the YMCA to Canada. As a Canadian, this disgusts me. ..."
Rise my Canadian comrades!
I'm sure this is just one of the items on the roadmap of those pushing for the NWO. Certain things need to be in place before North America starts using the 'Amero' currency.
Had a nice lecture on TVO (TV Ontario) last week on Copyright. I watched the whole thing.
I couldn't find the lecture, but I did find the interview:
http://www.tvo.org/TVO/WebObjects/TVO.woa?videoid?50148434001
One branch of our government works hard to ensure Canadian content. They are charged with ensuring that we are not overwhelmed by the colossus that is the US media industry. They fear that our culture could be eroded when all that's available in the public media forum is someone else's culture.
Another branch of government is bowing to pressure from the US: "Adopt our style of enforcement or we will stop supplying your people with vast quantities of 'entertaining' material that extols the obvious virtue our culture." (Notice that I neglect to even address how this supply is designed to make money flow from other countries to the US.)
I see such a simple solution here: keep a nice, free copyright environment here in Canada that encourages new, creative and vibrant work, which is the stated purpose of copyright in the first place, and let the US worry about not overwhelming us.
Win-win.
(YMMV, IANAL, and other disclaimers apply)
-Eldurbarn
I would give plenty of money to it. I suppose I'll have to settle for the Pirate Party of Canada.
Personally I advocate throwing the party leaders out on their collective asses.
And once the parties elect new leaders, then what?
I don't think policies are bad because politicians are bad, because all politicians are bad. I think policies are bad because the system that makes the policies is a bad system.
Democracy worked well when everybody met at the marketplace in Athens. When you have to take a day off from work and travel for several hours to meet your national politicians (if you live in a small place), only the well-off will be able to show up personally and pressure their politicians.
See also the fall of the roman empire: when the provinces got too far away from Rome and didn't have any real political influence, they didn't really stick. Similarly when the US detached itself from English rule: the citizens were too far away from and had too little influence on those who were making policy.
But now we can all talk over long distances without moving our bodies (by tube, truck or pipe). I think maybe---just maybe---participatory democracy might give the people more sane policy. It's said (somewhat derogatorily) among economists that in a democracy, you get the policies the average voter can understand. I think this is true for a participatory democracy, but this is much better than the pork what's-the-word policies you get when the politicians are hidden away from the public view.
I think this would be a better system, not one composed of better people (who are few and far between).