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Canadian Music Industry Seeks Copy Tax On Memory Cards

An anonymous reader writes "The Canadian music industry's copyright collective is demanding the creation of a new copying tax on all memory cards sold in Canada. The Canadian Private Copying Collective has filed for a tax of up to $3 per memory card to compensate for music copying on SD cards. If approved, the tax could cost consumers millions of dollars." Makes no less sense than the current levy exacted on blank CDs and audiotapes in Canada — and no more sense, either.

5 of 265 comments (clear)

  1. great idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    so once you have paid the copy tax you are free to copy as much music as you like?

    1. Re:great idea by green1 · · Score: 5, Informative

      The current official government position on the existing levy is YES. There are some oddball rules, but yes.

      The law as it stands right now is that you are allowed to copy for personal use providing you have the original legal copy in your possession at the time you make the recording. They don't however deal with how you came to have the original in your position. Seems reasonable enough on the surface, however it gets odd in the implementation, I'll give some examples:
      - I buy a CD, I lend it to you, you copy the CD and give back the original. Perfectly legal.
      - I buy a CD, I copy it and give you the copy. although the end result is identical to the first case, this way is illegal.
      - I buy a CD, I copy it, I keep the copy and give you the original. Perfectly legal.
      - I buy a CD, I lend it to you, you copy the CD and give back the copy. although the end result is identical to the last example, this is illegal.

      Additionally, the Canadian courts have ruled that downloading music IS legal per this situation (uploading however is not)

      Now I still don't like the levy, because it is paid on all blank media, regardless of what you do with said media. which means when I make server backups, the recording industry gets a cut. What may however be an even bigger miscarriage of justice though is that small independent artists, with no affiliation to the large media conglomerates, have to pay this levy on all of their blank media as well, with no hope of recovering any of it. (Large record labels don't pay the levy as they press CDs instead of buying recordable CDs and burning them)

      Of course while all this is going on, the record industry is ALSO working very hard to ban copying for personal use, however I have a feeling they have no intention of having the media levy repealed when they succeed (and I say when, not if, because it has been before parliament at least twice so far, only failing due to a fall of the minority government, since the recent election the Conservatives now have a majority, and this is one of the bills they have promised to pass quickly, so unfortunately I'm pretty sure we will lose all fair use rights very soon)... and I really have a problem paying a levy on the assumption that I will do something that is illegal.

  2. if you can no longer compete by nurb432 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Get legislation enacted to guarantee your revenue stream.

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    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  3. Re:The price we pay for sanity by Tridus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No, in Canada this is the price we pay for "culture" industries being protected and coddled from reality.

    There is no connection between this and music copying, at all. It's a cash grab. SD cards have as much to do with pirating music as video cards do.

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    -- "So they told me that using the download page to download something was not something they anticipated." - Bill Gates
  4. RIAA is stealing from independent artists... by xanadu113 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The RIAA is STEALING from independent artists, with this fair use tax. If a non-signed band uses CD-R's to record their music onto, they are paying a fair use tax.

    The same people who claim we are stealing from bands by downloading music, are getting paid by bands who didn't sign any agreement with the RIAA or any record labels. Now WHO is stealing from bands...?

    What's next, bailouts for record labels...?

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    -Myke