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Canadian Music Industry Calls For Internet Regulation, Website Blocking

An anonymous reader writes "Canadian law professor Michael Geist reports that the Canadian arm of the RIAA is calling for new Internet regulation, including website blocking and search result manipulation. While the Canadian music industry experienced increased digital sales last year (sales declined in the U.S.) and the Ontario government is handing out tens of millions of tax dollars to the industry, the industry now wants the government to step in with website blocking and ordering search companies to change their results to focus on iTunes and other sales sites."

198 comments

  1. Drowns CRIA in poutine. by Chas · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So, basically a gun to people's heads while the other hand rifles through their pockets.

    Greed. The one thing that's in truly infinite supply.

    --


    Chas - The one, the only.
    THANK GOD!!!
    1. Re:Drowns CRIA in poutine. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      You've just described government as a whole. All government is a gun to your head with a hand in your pocket.

    2. Re:Drowns CRIA in poutine. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And now the government is being used to give out welfare to scummy corporations that wouldn't succeed in a real free market where you can't have monopolies on ideas. What a surprise!

    3. Re:Drowns CRIA in poutine. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Please. There is no such thing as a legal free market in any of the industrialized nations.

    4. Re:Drowns CRIA in poutine. by graphius · · Score: 1

      Please. There is no such thing as a legal free market.

      Fixed that for you.

    5. Re:Drowns CRIA in poutine. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Fortunately there are a few independent ISP's out there that possess their own howitzers. We were approached by certain law enforcement agencies first to invite us to participate, then stupidly they tried threatening us. Fortunately for us, we are the ONLY internet connection for most of our customers, we specialize in under served and unserved communities (~15k households). Our response to this threat was to send a letter to our customers that unless the government backs off, we will have no choice but to shut down, please call (insert number here) to let them know what you think of loosing your connection to the outside world.

      it took 8 hours for them to back off.. never bothered again.

    6. Re:Drowns CRIA in poutine. by deviated_prevert · · Score: 0

      So, basically a gun to people's heads while the other hand rifles through their pockets.

      Greed. The one thing that's in truly infinite supply.

      Hey it is called CCR, you see we here in the Great White North have always had red necks its called scarf burns, And we created CCR not some bunch of rockabilly yahoos from south of the Mason Dixon line..EH?

      Naturally you realize that CCR is not what most people believe it to be. It is really a Canadian band that at one time consisted of the Guess Who, Terry Jacks and Edward Bear played endlessly on FM radio. The band was subtitled CCR or CANADIAN CONTENT REGULATIONS.

      Nothing has changed except the only one of the bunch that was worth listening to was the Guess Who and every once in a blue moon, just for old times sake I put on a ripped copy of them in FLAC because MP3 audio is for idiots and earbuds! EAT MY SHORTS YOU HALF DEAF MORONS in the entertainment industry. GOOD MUSIC and QUALITY RIPS STILL EXIST REGARDLESS OF CCR or the idiots of today that try to kill music for the listener. NOW GOOD NIGHT AND GO TO HELL WHERE YOU BELONG. SONY, CCR, RIAA, CRIA and the other idiots that are trying to kill music you will loose PERIOD. BARF CHUNDER PUKE FART, HAND ME a shotgun and that big fat reefer, I think I need a toak of some good stuff man.

      --
      This message was not sent from an iPhone because Peter Sellers really was a deviated prevert without a dime for the call
    7. Re:Drowns CRIA in poutine. by rogoshen1 · · Score: 1

      off topic, but CCR was from southern california :) that whole "born on the bayou" thing was a fraud.

    8. Re:Drowns CRIA in poutine. by rueger · · Score: 1

      That's OK, parent was offtopic too. And hasn't the slightest clue about what Canadian Content Regulations were, or the impact that they had.

      Then again, who needs intelligence or knowledge when you can write (scribble?) "BARF CHUNDER PUKE FART, HAND ME a shotgun and that big fat reefer, I think I need a toak of some good stuff man."

    9. Re:Drowns CRIA in poutine. by doccus · · Score: 1

      Can you come here ,please ;-)

    10. Re:Drowns CRIA in poutine. by doccus · · Score: 1

      So, basically a gun to people's heads while the other hand rifles through their pockets.

      Greed. The one thing that's in truly infinite supply.

      Hey it is called CCR, you see we here in the Great White North have always had red necks its called scarf burns, And we created CCR not some bunch of rockabilly yahoos from south of the Mason Dixon line..EH?

      Naturally you realize that CCR is not what most people believe it to be. It is really a Canadian band that at one time consisted of the Guess Who, Terry Jacks and Edward Bear played endlessly on FM radio. The band was subtitled CCR or CANADIAN CONTENT REGULATIONS.

      Nothing has changed except the only one of the bunch that was worth listening to was the Guess Who and every once in a blue moon, just for old times sake I put on a ripped copy of them in FLAC because MP3 audio is for idiots and earbuds! EAT MY SHORTS YOU HALF DEAF MORONS in the entertainment industry. GOOD MUSIC and QUALITY RIPS STILL EXIST REGARDLESS OF CCR or the idiots of today that try to kill music for the listener. NOW GOOD NIGHT AND GO TO HELL WHERE YOU BELONG. SONY, CCR, RIAA, CRIA and the other idiots that are trying to kill music you will loose PERIOD. BARF CHUNDER PUKE FART, HAND ME a shotgun and that big fat reefer, I think I need a toak of some good stuff man.

      Guess you were in a Rush to eat yer BTO sandwich, although I know the guvermint here thinks they can Make Me Do Anything You Want, but the CCR band had a few more Rocker boxes in that list..

    11. Re:Drowns CRIA in poutine. by deviated_prevert · · Score: 1

      That's OK, parent was offtopic too. And hasn't the slightest clue about what Canadian Content Regulations were, or the impact that they had. Then again, who needs intelligence or knowledge when you can write (scribble?) "BARF CHUNDER PUKE FART, HAND ME a shotgun and that big fat reefer, I think I need a toak of some good stuff man."

      You is taking this FAR too seriously. I am well aware of what CCR did and all the bands that got air time because of them. Currently too busy studying some of Miguel Llobet's Canciones Populares Catalanas to even consider the insult. Some people actually play instruments and music others comment upon the music industry and have not got a freaking clue which is only to be expected on Slashdot. My comment was a really old school JOKE EH

      --
      This message was not sent from an iPhone because Peter Sellers really was a deviated prevert without a dime for the call
    12. Re:Drowns CRIA in poutine. by doccus · · Score: 1

      That's OK, parent was offtopic too. And hasn't the slightest clue about what Canadian Content Regulations were, or the impact that they had.

      Actually, in the beginning, that was the typical response to the CCR..the radio jockey and some of the press relly dissed it. It was just us plebes that cooiuldn't get any airplay that noticed the good side. Fact is, if it weren't for the CCR, I woulda NEVER got any. I formed an indie way before indies ever got popular.. on a shoestring (called "Purple City Records" and recorded at "99 cent studios" ;-) Purple City, of course, was Victoria's nickname, back in the old double blotter days us kids would stare at the lights at the Empress and everything was purple for hours !.. And a couple of bands survived because of these regs, after being the second lead singer for Sweeney Todd, I doubt anyone would have taken Brian seriously, but they aired his solo album anyways because of the CCR regs, and it really broke through..you could say Brian Adams got *pretty* big..

    13. Re:Drowns CRIA in poutine. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anonymous Coward?!?! WTF!!! I'm toastedmonkee. The CMI can kiss my ass. Mp3 aren't worth d-loading. They sound terrible, with about as much ambience as white noise. Check out archive.org for countless free d-loads. Many in FLAC format. Mp3 is a joke, and any musician with a decent ear knows this. Greed, plain and simple. My message is...release a decent sounding recording, and people may purchase it. Till then, it's FLAC all the way.

  2. Hmm by ADRA · · Score: 1

    Google: buy back to black

    Seems that search engines somehow work without out already... who woulda thunk it.

    --
    Bye!
  3. What about youtube? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I get most of my mp3s here: http://www.youtube-mp3.org/

    1. Re:What about youtube? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The quality is so eeeeeeeeeewwwwwwwwwwww! Better off using cassette tapes.

  4. Buying music? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do people really still do that? All the music I listen to is 100% free to download.

    1. Re: Buying music? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pirates that are PAYING for streaming services are somehow afoul of the law? Let me know how this legislation works for you... noone could possibly visit a site that isnt listed in Google right?

    2. Re:Buying music? by SirGeek · · Score: 2

      Sorry, but your argument is wrong.

      Most "Owned" Bands (i.e. on a Major Record Label) do NOT make their money on the CD Sales. They make a pittance. They make most (if not ALL their money) on tours.The reason we have things like JB, is they sell their souls to the music industry and allow them to be totally manipulated and peroform cookie cutter music that you can't tell from the other 20 performers of that style of music.

      As for the "ugly" comment, You're telling me that a performer like Ted Nutgent.. I mean Nugent can't sell tickets ? Sadly he does.

      If you want REAL musicians, Look up an Indie artist. There are a bunch. And some are even geeky. You have Marian Call, The Double Clicks, Molly Lewis, Jonathan Coulton, Paul and Storm, and others.... Support them and support their music.

    3. Re: Buying music? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's implied that if they are pirates, they aren't paying.

    4. Re:Buying music? by tepples · · Score: 0

      If you want REAL musicians, Look up an Indie artist.

      I was under the impression that doing so required either A. having Internet in your car ($$$ per year) or B. having the time to sit around on your computer and find indie artists that FM radio won't play.

    5. Re:Buying music? by Merk42 · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but your argument is wrong.

      Most "Owned" Bands (i.e. on a Major Record Label) do NOT make their money on the CD Sales. They make a pittance. They make most (if not ALL their money) on tours.

      Isn't that what GP is saying? Since they make the majority of money on tours, studios focus on bands who "put on a good show, but do little else"

    6. Re:Buying music? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I never said anything about pirating music. I'm talking about the plethora of artists now uploading their music to sites like soundcloud. You can listen to it, and download it for absolutely no charge. In fact, most times they aren't even SELLING their music, just giving it away.

    7. Re:Buying music? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, yes, if you don't want to be spoonfed shit from the radio, then you'll have to invest the time to find less-promoted artists that you enjoy. If I've got the choice to listen to top-40 or to spend a couple hours a month finding more obscure music that's more to my tastes, then I know which choice I'm making.

      From the other side, I'm already paying $$$/year to have the phone I like, since that phone isn't available from any carrier without a data plan. I may as well use it, since I'm paying for it anyhow.

    8. Re:Buying music? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope. Studios make the money from record sales. They would prefer musicians that never left the studio.
      The artists seldom make folding money from onything other than touring and merchandise sales.

    9. Re: Buying music? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I went to the bank just to get a little money
      When he told me their requirements I started feeling funny
      He said "You ain't got a house, you ain't got a plot"
      I ain't got a window and I ain't got a job
      But it takes a lotta blue-backs to satisfy my honey
      If I could get my hands on some f-oldin' money

    10. Re:Buying music? by cayenne8 · · Score: 2

      In the past, a band could look ugly as all get-go, but they didn't have to exist by how they looked or how they played on stage. They went to the studio, cranked out an album, and they could exist on the proceeds.

      Err...the rock bands of yesteryear would tend to argue with you. They did albums sure, but their concerts were legendary:

      Rolling Stones

      The Who

      Pink Floyd

      Led Zeppelin

      And none of those guys were all that much to look at really....

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    11. Re:Buying music? by tepples · · Score: 1

      Well, yes, if you don't want to be spoonfed shit from the radio

      First one has to discover in the first place that there's an alternative to being "spoonfed shit from the radio".

      From the other side, I'm already paying $$$/year to have the phone I like, since that phone isn't available from any carrier without a data plan.

      You appear not to understand thrifty people. A thrifty person will suffer with a phone other than the phone he likes because the phone he likes has a prohibitive total cost of ownership. For example, instead of buying and carrying an Android phone, he might buy and carry a flip phone and a Nexus 7 tablet.

  5. I call for by easyTree · · Score: 2

    a magic pony that lays gold eggs.

    1. Re:I call for by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can get your magic pony that lays gold eggs. Unfortunately is vanishes as soon as you wake up, along with all the gold eggs.

    2. Re:I call for by easyTree · · Score: 1

      Then I will lobby to make it illegal to not provide me with a magic golden-egg-laying pony each time I wake.

  6. Good luck with that by sandbagger · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They get a tax subsidy in Canada, new copyright legislation protecting broken-in-principle DRM and now they want search engines -- which make more money than them -- to be subservient to their industry. Wonderful.

    --
    ---- The above post was generated by the Turing Institute. Maybe.
    1. Re:Good luck with that by Dunbal · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No one is buying blank cassette tapes or CD-ROM/DVD's anymore. Waaaaa we need more money!

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    2. Re:Good luck with that by Sockatume · · Score: 1

      Don't they get money for MP3 player and memory card sales? It strikes me that nothing will make people think piracy is okay, like being billed for the music in advance through a tax on the device they buy.

      --
      No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
    3. Re:Good luck with that by Guspaz · · Score: 1

      According to the CBSA: Yes, there is a tax on iPods. Or a tariff, more precisely.

    4. Re:Good luck with that by Em+Adespoton · · Score: 2

      Don't they get money for MP3 player and memory card sales? It strikes me that nothing will make people think piracy is okay, like being billed for the music in advance through a tax on the device they buy.

      The point is, if you're paying the tariff in advance and it's legal to copy, it's not piracy; it's legal copying of music available under copyright law to citizens of the country (and is already paid for through kickbacks to ASCAP et al). The people who lose out are the indy artists who aren't signed up to get a cut of the tariff -- because their material IS being pirated, but nobody realizes it. Of course, these are the groups who usually give away their music for free and make money in other ways.

    5. Re:Good luck with that by Jason+Levine · · Score: 4, Funny

      Don't you see? Any money you don't spend on new music from them is a lost sale. Those lost sales mean you must be pirating music instead because you wouldn't be using the money for food or something nonessential when you could use it to buy more music. Lost sales like that will cause the record executives to starve to death (after they go through their caviar stockpile). How dare you not open your wallets and empty the contents into the recording industry's bank accounts!

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    6. Re:Good luck with that by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      The people who lose out are the indy artists who aren't signed up to get a cut of the tariff

      At last count, all of the artists. I mean, they can sign up. They just have to go down to the basement in one of the store-rooms in the back of a locked filing cabinet in a locked lavatory with the "Beware of the Leopard" sign... and fill out the appropriate form (Sorry Douglas...)

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    7. Re:Good luck with that by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      No one is buying blank cassette tapes or CD-ROM/DVD's anymore. Waaaaa we need more money!

      If no one is buying those forms of media anymore how is the collection arm still raking in money hand-over-fist? They've got one hell of a pile just sitting there from the last year.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    8. Re:Good luck with that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I generally buy my music direct from the artist or as close to the artist as possible. I must be pirating.

    9. Re:Good luck with that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The people who lose out are the indy artists who aren't signed up to get a cut of the tariff

      At last count, all of the artists. I mean, they can sign up. They just have to go down to the basement in one of the store-rooms in the back of a locked filing cabinet in a locked lavatory with the "Beware of the Leopard" sign... and fill out the appropriate form (Sorry Douglas...)

      Actually, it's not terribly hard to sign up for it. (There's a similar program that takes photocopier money and funnels it to authors).

      The catch is that they distribute the money proportionally to sales. So if you're a small indie artist, you're not going to make any real money from the MP3 tariff anyway - it all goes to Celine Deon and Tragically Hip.

  7. another colony of the corepirate nazi band of 85 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    2nd choice promised land candidates? again the ordinary folks have no notion of what the crown royals are up to? another colony of the corepirate nazi band of 85? honest abe; http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=honest%20abe&sm=3

  8. They need to keep teens apart too by hawguy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    If they are really worried about piracy, they need to keep teens apart -- one of my teenaged relatives has a half dozen or so usb drives laying around with songs he's traded with various friends -- She's got a music library of over 10,000 songs (though oddly, she only seems to listen to 10 of those, over and over again). They trade entire music libraries at school, thousands of songs at a time. So no matter how tightly they lock down the internet, music will continue to be traded.

    I'm a lost cause, the mainstream industry isn't likely to get much of my money no matter what they do. I'm well out of my teen years, and about the only albums I buy are for small regional artists, and I usually get them at concerts or direct from the artists. I already own several hundred CD's from the groups I listened to in my teens and 20's, and rarely hear a mainstream group I want to buy a CD from today -- Pandora and Spotify are good enough.

    1. Re:They need to keep teens apart too by wasteoid · · Score: 2

      They should eat graham crackers to quell their unhealthy carnal urges.

    2. Re:They need to keep teens apart too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      And if she is Canadian, sharing that music would be perfectly legal in accordance with the Copyright Act, so long as you are not providing for "distribution". They charge a fee on media to compensate.

    3. Re:They need to keep teens apart too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I've said this years ago. As hard disk space increases sneakernet will eventually outpace the Internet once again. It's amazing how we went from

      Sneakernet because Internet connections were too slow

      to

      Internet because Internet connections became faster

      back to

      Sneakernet because disk space is dirt cheap now and trying to search for your songs one by one is inconvenient vs just copying thousands of songs from your friends and having them copy all your songs onto a portable USB flash drive you take around with you anyways.

      Now a days you can buy a 128 GB USB flash drive for a few bucks and stick more music on it than you would ever want to listen to. and this problem will only get worse. There is no stopping music piracy, the future will destroy copy'right' in this regard even if the law is still around as a mere formality. The cost of appreciably enforcing these laws to any reasonable extent will be far greater than the benefits gained. You can't put everyone in jail.

    4. Re:They need to keep teens apart too by ButchDeLoria · · Score: 1

      American here, we're 1/9th of the way there.

    5. Re:They need to keep teens apart too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What if the police start launching sting operations against sneakernet pirates? The problem with the sneakernet is that there's no anonymity.

    6. Re:They need to keep teens apart too by bitt3n · · Score: 2

      If they are really worried about piracy, they need to keep teens apart

      This idea has promise. After all, keeping teens apart has long been used to stifle a more primal kind of information transfer. Indeed, hasn't some part of the human genome been patented yet? Why haven't the fundies tried to crack down on fornication using copyright law? A limited-license agreement could be written into marriage contracts.

    7. Re:They need to keep teens apart too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What if the police start launching sting operations against sneakernet pirates? The problem with the sneakernet is that there's no anonymity.

      Yeah, in contrast to the Internet, where you are completely anonymous. /s

    8. Re:They need to keep teens apart too by lister+king+of+smeg · · Score: 1

      What if the police start launching sting operations against sneakernet pirates? The problem with the sneakernet is that there's no anonymity.

      What are they going to do shake me down on the street and demand the password to my external harddrive so they can check that there is no contraband... Oh wait they already do that at the boarder.

      And since the TSA can violate you... I mean the TSA can violate your constitutionally protected right up what was it 100 miles from the boarder (http://rt.com/usa/court-upholds-laptop-border-searches-041/) and oceans and airports count as boarders so where isn't within the 100 miles of a boarder ocean or airport, they could legally search your electronic anywhere, to keep us safe from kiddy porn wielding terrorists illegally immigrating with drugs hidden in their bum of course.

      --
      ---Saying gnome 3 is better than windows 8 not so much a compliment as it is damning with light praise.
    9. Re:They need to keep teens apart too by easyTree · · Score: 1

      There is no stopping music piracy

      Indeed - the piracy is way more enjoyable than the music - I suspect that the industry has realized this which explains the recent decade of shitty 'music' which is present merely to be pirated rather than audibly consumed :D

    10. Re:They need to keep teens apart too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What if the police start launching sting operations against sneakernet pirates? The problem with the sneakernet is that there's no anonymity.

      Not a problem. As you say, there is no anonymity. I know that my friends aren't cops.

  9. Those canucks are really pissing me off now by bazmail · · Score: 1

    As broken as Americas copyright law is, Canada seems to be engaging their retard-afterburners and are really going for it.

    1. Re:Those canucks are really pissing me off now by Nemyst · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Don't put us all in the same basket please. There's the Harper government and the idiots who elected them, and then there's the rest of us who just want them to fuck off and leave the country alone before we turn into the US but worse. There was a time where Canada was a leader in diplomacy, environment, science, copyright, social policies and much more. Now we're slaves to whatever industry Harper is licking the butt of at the time, any other consideration (such as the well-being of the citizens under his charge or the reputation of Canada outside of his cabinet) be damned.

    2. Re:Those canucks are really pissing me off now by gstoddart · · Score: 2

      You know, we're not exactly happy about it either.

      It's the Canadian copyright lobby, which is an arm of the US copyright lobby, petitioning government for a pony.

      Once in Canada they get their pony, they can then go back to the US or to other countries and demand the same kind of pony.

      Since US foreign policy and trade policy largely lets industry writes the briefings and the legislation (often quite literally), this is essentially US industries writing laws for their own benefit.

      So, from our perspective, the US copyright lobby is really pissing us off, and it's another example of a business friendly government giving industry sweetheart deals stacked in their favor, and acting like it's a benefit for consumers and a win for the free market -- when in fact it's neither.

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    3. Re:Those canucks are really pissing me off now by TWiTfan · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Now you know how U.S. Americans feel when everyone lumps us all together, as if we're all cool with the corporatist pricks who get elected these days.

      --
      The cow says "Moo." The dog says "Woof." The Timothy says "Thanks, valued customer. We appreciate your input."
    4. Re:Those canucks are really pissing me off now by Dixie_Flatline · · Score: 2

      It's slightly easier to bag on you because of the differences in our electoral systems. ~65-70% of the people that voted didn't vote for the current Conservative government. The Parliamentary system coupled with first-past-the-post voting means that highly contested ridings can go to someone that only got 30-40% of the vote.

      But being lumped together isn't any fun, I'll grant you. Good luck.

    5. Re:Those canucks are really pissing me off now by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 1

      Are you sure you're a Canadian? You don't sound very polite.

      --
      Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
    6. Re:Those canucks are really pissing me off now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now you know how U.S. Americans feel when everyone lumps us all together, as if we're all cool with the corporatist pricks who get elected these days.

      Not really. The popular meme is that both major US parties are full of corporatist pricks, only different industries

      So even if you didn't elect one bunch of corporatist pricks, chances are you wanted to elect the other bunch.

    7. Re:Those canucks are really pissing me off now by johnnys · · Score: 2

      At least have the decency to mention the important thing the Harper government got RIGHT: Limiting the scope of how hard the CRIA can screw the individual downloader. We see HUGE penalties in the USA for poor people getting nailed for "copyright infringement" but at least in Canada Harper has limited that to $5,000CDN for "all infringements involved" so no-one has to lose their house over downloading a few songs to listen to at home. That is a HUGE benefit and protection to the average person here in Canada who just wants to listen to music. It also forces the music labels to leave the music lovers alone and go after the commercial infringers, since they can't exploit individuals as a "cash cow".

      Also note that these copyright changes are all REQUIRED under international agreements that Canada is party to, so you can blame Harper all you want but no-one else could have done any different. IMHO, I think he got the best deal possible out of a crappy situation!

      See: http://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca...

      (b) in a sum of not less than $100 and not more than $5,000 that the court considers just, with respect to all infringements involved in the proceedings for all works or other subject-matter, if the infringements are for non-commercial purposes.

      http://www.theglobeandmail.com...

      --
      Sometimes the "writing on the wall" is blood spatter...
    8. Re:Those canucks are really pissing me off now by Em+Adespoton · · Score: 1

      It's slightly easier to bag on you because of the differences in our electoral systems. ~65-70% of the people that voted didn't vote for the current Conservative government. The Parliamentary system coupled with first-past-the-post voting means that highly contested ridings can go to someone that only got 30-40% of the vote.

      But being lumped together isn't any fun, I'll grant you. Good luck.

      Plus, in the US, taking up arms in revolution against corrupt government is enshrined in the constitution -- in Canada, we have to ask the Queen of England to intervene.

    9. Re:Those canucks are really pissing me off now by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      Then do your duty to humanity and don't give them a pony.

      > US copyright lobby is really pissing us off

      Us too.

    10. Re:Those canucks are really pissing me off now by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      > U.S. Americans

      I hadn't really thought of it before, I'm so used to just Americans as the inhabitants of the USA, but you are right - there are also Canadian Americans, Mexican Americans, Costa Rican Americans, Panamanian Americans, Bolivian Americans etc as well all living in their respective countries.

    11. Re:Those canucks are really pissing me off now by Nerdfest · · Score: 1

      It's true, the recent changes were not completely bad, although they removed some fair use and made digital lock circumvention illegal.

    12. Re:Those canucks are really pissing me off now by TWiTfan · · Score: 1

      So even if you didn't elect one bunch of corporatist pricks, chances are you wanted to elect the other bunch.

      Most people (that I know) don't particularly want to elect either. We choose the lesser of two evils because that's what we get stuck with. The Primaries are bought by the corporations (who can flood the airwaves with ads) and dominated by the crazies. And the rest of us get stuck with whatever two pieces of shit come out the other end.

      --
      The cow says "Moo." The dog says "Woof." The Timothy says "Thanks, valued customer. We appreciate your input."
    13. Re:Those canucks are really pissing me off now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not sure how that will work out, a bunch of Americans with handguns/riffles and the army with cool toys like the 50-cal to "re-establish law and order".

      Flip side they might suffer from "Tienanmen square syndrome" where the local army refused to open fire on its own citizens so they had to bring in the army from another region.

      How many times has the US "taken up arms in revolution" vs taking whatever was given?

    14. Re:Those canucks are really pissing me off now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry about that!

    15. Re:Those canucks are really pissing me off now by Holi · · Score: 1

      please quote the part of the constitution that makes overthrowing the government (revolution) legal.

      --
      Sorry, teleporters just kill you and then make a copy. A perfect, soul-less copy.
    16. Re:Those canucks are really pissing me off now by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      So I'm not following you, are you saying that FPP is bad because the conservatives got elected, or are you saying that FPP is bad in general? If you look back in political history the political party with the greatest control of canadian politics has been the Liberal party. And let's be realistic, there's plenty of flaws including the day that Trudeau effectively broke the government in the 70's, by calling a parliamentary vote after everyone went home--breaking the notification rules because he wanted to be PM that badly.

      As it is, I'm fine with FPP and having been a delegate for the liberals and the reform party, both use the system to it's full advantage. The weakest part of politics like anywhere else in the western world is getting people out to vote.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    17. Re:Those canucks are really pissing me off now by Em+Adespoton · · Score: 1

      Not sure how that will work out, a bunch of Americans with handguns/riffles and the army with cool toys like the 50-cal to "re-establish law and order".

      Flip side they might suffer from "Tienanmen square syndrome" where the local army refused to open fire on its own citizens so they had to bring in the army from another region.

      How many times has the US "taken up arms in revolution" vs taking whatever was given?

      Actually, I think you'd find that most of the US millitary would refuse to open fire on citizens -- and you'd likely find that a large number of the people taking up arms were actually associated with the military in one way or another (national guard, vets, etc.).

      Still -- history paints a detailed picture of how it would work out, and it's not a pretty one.

    18. Re:Those canucks are really pissing me off now by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      the US copyright lobby is really pissing us off

      Oddly it's not just them, there's also the environmental groups doing the same thing. There's a massive crackdown going on by the CRA against all foreign interest via lobbying and donations of money.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    19. Re:Those canucks are really pissing me off now by easyTree · · Score: 1

      As broken as Americas copyright law is, Canada seems to be engaging their retard-afterburners and are really going for it.

      LOL-tastic :D

    20. Re:Those canucks are really pissing me off now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      But - but - Canada cannot copy U.S. copyright law. That would be infringement . . .

    21. Re:Those canucks are really pissing me off now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you'd find that most of the US millitary would refuse to open fire on citizens

      I think you haven't been around many GI's.

    22. Re:Those canucks are really pissing me off now by camperdave · · Score: 1

      in Canada, we have to ask the Queen of England to intervene.

      No. This is a common fallacy. We have to ask the Queen of Canada to intervene. The fact that she is the same person as the Queen of England is irrelevant.

      --
      When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
    23. Re:Those canucks are really pissing me off now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As it is, I'm fine with FPP and having been a delegate for the liberals and the reform party, both use the system to it's full advantage. The weakest part of politics like anywhere else in the western world is getting people out to vote.

      The fact that you don't see how those are connected is baffling.

      2 Words: "Wasted Vote"

      If you must vote for candidate A in order to prevent candidate B from winning instead of voting for candidate C who "can't win" but is the one you actually like then people get understandably disillusioned and consider voting to be (rightly) pointless since you can't actually change anything for the better, merely slow the fall.

    24. Re:Those canucks are really pissing me off now by Em+Adespoton · · Score: 1

      I just knew someone was going to point that out... I didn't feel like going into a long explanation as to the Queen's various titles. Thank you for doing it for me.

      Of course, Queen of Canada isn't quite correct either -- we really have to ask Elizabeth II, by the Grace of God of the United Kingdom, Canada and Her other Realms and Territories Queen, Head of the Commonwealth, Defender of the Faith, par la grâce de Dieu Reine du Royaume-Uni, du Canada et de ses autres royaumes et territoires, Chef du Commonwealth, Défenseur de la Foi for permission. It's in her role as Head of the Commonwealth that we have to ask her to intervene.

      And yes, there is no "Queen of England" -- she's Queen of the entire Queen/Kingdom, of which England is but one state.

    25. Re:Those canucks are really pissing me off now by dk20 · · Score: 1

      Continuing the thread.
      I mentioned the possibility of them refusing to fire on citizens but you know that failure to obey a lawful order carries a VERY harsh penalty in the military right?

      Obviously IANAL but there are two interesting thoughts here:

      If the people taking up arms are associated with the military they face a serious conflict of interest. Swarn to follow military orders, and trying to defeat the US gvt at the same time?

      While the US has the right to bear arms it also has a treason law in the constitution:

      Treason against the United States, shall consist only in levying War against them, or in adhering to their Enemies, giving them Aid and Comfort. No Person shall be convicted of Treason unless on the Testimony of two Witnesses to the same overt Act, or on Confession in open Court.
      Wouldn't revolting be treason?

    26. Re:Those canucks are really pissing me off now by dk20 · · Score: 1

      As i posted above, i think the constitutions definition of "treason" would prevent it.

      Might be hard to overthrow and not "levying War against"

    27. Re:Those canucks are really pissing me off now by camperdave · · Score: 1

      Elizabeth II, by the Grace of God of the United Kingdom, Canada and Her other Realms and Territories Queen, Head of the Commonwealth, Defender of the Faith, par la grâce de Dieu Reine du Royaume-Uni, du Canada et de ses autres royaumes et territoires, Chef du Commonwealth, Défenseur de la Foi

      Elizabeth II of Canada Queen
      Elizabeth II Reine du Canada

      The title in English is a bit "Yoda-esque" in its phrasing and is lacking proper punctuation, but like I said: She's Queen of Canada.

      --
      When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
    28. Re:Those canucks are really pissing me off now by dryeo · · Score: 1

      Remember Canada was formed in response to the American Civil war. The Fathers of Confederation well saw the problems with arms being taken up in a democracy.
      The Queen of the UK who I think you meant can't intervene after we repatriated our Constitution back in '82. We're left with the Queen of Canada who is currently the same person but doesn't have to be. Legally if George has a girl then a boy we'll have a King while the UK will have a Queen, unless the Constitution is amended.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    29. Re:Those canucks are really pissing me off now by dryeo · · Score: 1

      Be nice to stop the Chinese from interfering in the Provincial and Federal elections but I doubt that it'll happen.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    30. Re:Those canucks are really pissing me off now by Em+Adespoton · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't revolting be treason?

      Only if they lose.

  10. Private Copying Levy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Canadians still pay a 24 cent fee (used to be higher) on each CD-R sold (not per spindle) because of a private copying levy the CRIA lobbied for. In theory the levy is paid out to musicians as compensation for the assumed music piracy that every CD-R will inevitably be used for, and the CRIA gets to pick who those musicians are. This fee doesn't apply to DVD-Rs, ironically making them a much cheaper alternative. Fortunately their multiple attempts at getting a fee for MP3 players didn't go through.

    1. Re:Private Copying Levy by Guspaz · · Score: 1

      Fortunately their multiple attempts at getting a fee for MP3 players didn't go through.

      Yes and no: a 5% tariff on MP3 players is currently in place, to be effective as of 2015. Luckily the exception is pretty large; if the MP3 player can be connected to a computer, they're exempt from the tariff.

    2. Re:Private Copying Levy by mark-t · · Score: 1

      As you note, the levy is for private copying. However, thanks to the most recent copyright legislation which was pushed through by our current government, Canadians are now paying that levy for something that they can no longer legally do if the work they wanted to copy utilized any kind of technological protection measure which might prevent it from simply being copied too casually.... since such measures are becoming increasingly prevalent as content increasingly moves towards an all-digital format, the levy will end up being for something that Canadians are no longer practically able to legally do, since the laws regarding TPMs do not contain any exception for private copying (even though the government that proposed the bill before it became law was repeatedly asked to insert such an exception into the bill by its opponents).

    3. Re:Private Copying Levy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are smart phones exempt? I haven't bought an pure mp3 player in many years. A good sounding smart phone and decent software gets the job done.

    4. Re:Private Copying Levy by rogoshen1 · · Score: 1

      that.. is completely nonsensical? if an MP3 player can be connected to a computer it's exempt? shouldn't it be the other way around? :) (it's nonsensical for other reasons, but that's the one that caught my eye.)

    5. Re:Private Copying Levy by Guspaz · · Score: 1

      Something to do with there being a tariff exemption for "devices that enhance the operation of a computer" or something like that. I don't remember the text of the exemption.

  11. What's wrong with the Canadian music industry? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    One word: Bieber

    1. Re:What's wrong with the Canadian music industry? by Farmer+Tim · · Score: 1, Funny

      You’re being unreasonably kind to Celine Dion and Bryan Adams.

      --
      Blank until /. makes another boneheaded UI decision.
    2. Re:What's wrong with the Canadian music industry? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He's far more famous in the US where he currently resides then he is here.

    3. Re:What's wrong with the Canadian music industry? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      .. and Nickelback. Don't forget them (or rather, please DO forget them).

    4. Re:What's wrong with the Canadian music industry? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We'd like to send him back to be famous there. He can live next door to you.

    5. Re:What's wrong with the Canadian music industry? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One word: Bieber

      thank you usa for taking him off our hands

    6. Re:What's wrong with the Canadian music industry? by PPH · · Score: 1

      in the US where he currently resides

      Not for long if he's found guilty of felony vandalism.

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
  12. Cute to see the CLUELESS trying to hijack laws ... by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 3, Insightful

    From the Fine Article ...

    Music is becoming a hobby, not a career.

    Translation: "We can no longer buy popularity with pop music and no longer manufacture the latest fad of boy-bands or girl-bands. These indie bands can do it cheaper, and that cuts us, the middle man, out of the picture! We don't get our fair share from YouTube, etc."

    "Oh Noes! People are using this internet to freely share things and we aren't getting our cut ! Must maintain artificial scarcity of the source else we can't over-charge for numbers! Suckers! Er, mean, 'customers'."

    Never mind the fact that the easier it is for people to find music, video, that is akin to free advertising.

    Nah, let's shit on our potential customers and treat them like pseudo-thieves because "How dare they share something they value with someone else!"

    Only cowards use censorship

  13. Kiddie porn to porn to IP by TWiTfan · · Score: 1, Insightful

    It was the plan all along. First you establish the ability to block and censor. Then you find an excuse no one can NOT support (stopping kiddie porn). Then you move on to the obvious next level (we must protect our children from porn in general!), then intellectual property (it's illegal!!).

    Next up, blocking whistleblower sites and newspapers that publish whistleblower revelations.

    Soon enough, all political speech that challenges or threatens the government status quo.

    --
    The cow says "Moo." The dog says "Woof." The Timothy says "Thanks, valued customer. We appreciate your input."
  14. Canada? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wait, I thought we were only allowed to shit on the US around here. I know Canada isn't the land of milk and honey that we all know Europe to be (practically perfect in every way!), or does Canada get dragged down because of their geographic proximity? Please help me: I feel I'm dropping out of the hive mind around here.

    1. Re:Canada? by compro01 · · Score: 1

      We get dragged down because the Conservatism pandemic jumped the border back in 2006.

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    2. Re:Canada? by maliqua · · Score: 1

      Wait, I thought we were only allowed to shit on the US around here.

      We still are shitting on the US, its the Canadian arm of the RIAA an American creation. How is this not america's fault? Canada is the victim of the US in this story.

  15. Not a Canadian... by Voyager529 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ...but I thought that the Canadian RIAA had a tax tacked onto blank storage media that was supposed to help pay for the pirated tracks. Did that disappear?

    1. Re:Not a Canadian... by gstoddart · · Score: 1, Troll

      Of course not. They want their cake, and to be able to eat it to.

      Actually, they want our cake, and they want the government to entrench their business mode, and generally spoil the internet to benefit them.

      This is buggy-whip makers trying to get laws passed which says the roads need to be taxed and regulated to support their business model.

      And, history tells me, it's US lobbying companies footing some of the bill for this, and 'helpfully' writing the wish-list of things they'd like to see. And, then once they've forced someone else to adopt it, they go back to US lawmakers and say "see, we're lagging behind on regulations like everybody else".

      The power of political lobbying is the problem here, because wealthy organizations pay for better access to politicians than the rest of us get.

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    2. Re:Not a Canadian... by Nemyst · · Score: 0

      Nah, but they didn't manage to get a tax on internet connections too so they're pissed.

    3. Re:Not a Canadian... by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 1

      Just the people buying blank CDs. Blank CDs are a pretty niche thing anymore and certainly not normally used to trade music. Regardless, it's a give an inch take a mile mentality.

      --
      Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
    4. Re:Not a Canadian... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you mean 'They want to eat their cake, and have it too.'?

  16. Sad, petty individuals undeserving of attention by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why do these people think they deserve to be treated so specially? They're not the only ones who have their work "thieved" (hell, they're considered thieves by a lot of the people they're supposed to represent), and every concession we've made for them in Canada hasn't been enough. At some point you have to accept reality, and stop trying to control it.

    1. Re:Sad, petty individuals undeserving of attention by Em+Adespoton · · Score: 2

      Why do these people think they deserve to be treated so specially? They're not the only ones who have their work "thieved" (hell, they're considered thieves by a lot of the people they're supposed to represent), and every concession we've made for them in Canada hasn't been enough. At some point you have to accept reality, and stop trying to control it.

      Look at it the other way... they keep asking for another pony, and more often than not, they get it. Why would they want to stop asking?

  17. Just make music trading paraphernalia illegal by denis-The-menace · · Score: 4, Funny

    Just make music trading paraphernalia illegal

    This is the TRUE solution. CD/DVDs, USB sticks and drives, computers.
    All of if has to go. Shutdown the libraries. Burn the contents.

    We MUST go back to the 50s where all music came from the good old music labels. They know good music and how to make it.

    The church of Profits commands you!
    It for the good of unborn artists in the future. /S

    --
    Obama's legacy: (N)othing (S)ecure (A)nywhere and (T)error (S)imulation (A)dministration
    1. Re:Just make music trading paraphernalia illegal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We MUST go back to the 50s where all music came from the good old music labels. They know good music and how to make it.

      And in a world where everyone has the storage and processing power of a supercomputer in their pockets, mandate that all content must be streamed from the cloud.

    2. Re:Just make music trading paraphernalia illegal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, please A simpler saner solution is to forbid all Digital Analog convertors. There's a digital world and there's an analog world and am no censor.

  18. hobby? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From the article itself: "Music is becoming a hobby, not a career." Music has become a consumer goods, not an art.

  19. RIAA = pig stuck in mud, dying by acidradio · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The recording industry, the biggest bunch of middleman thieves ever, is finally losing its free ride. You don't NEED a record company anymore, you can be your own! If they didn't think they were dying they wouldn't be violently throwing tantrums everywhere - lobbying for really radical unilateral changes to the law, suing regular everyday people for "piracy" to the point of bankruptcy, hassling bars/restaurants (usually mom and pop operations, barely making it as it is) into paying commercial licensing fees for music, etc.

    A band now can cut their own album and sell it on iTunes, Amazon or a host of other music sites and retain a lot more of the proceeds. Back in the day even large, famous acts were getting stiffed by the record companies! Thanks in part to the way that record companies have pushed musicians up against the wall now for many years the market is now to a point where the artists don't even make money on the albums themselves. Instead they make the money at concerts, both on tickets and on merchandise. An artist now almost has to *give away* the music (many seem to - look on Youtube for all of the "full album" videos) as the loss leader in hopes of getting people to their concert. Artists can post samples on Youtube (at no cost) to drive sales and exposure. The record company middleman has less and less importance in a marketplace like this.

    I'm glad to see that more and more musicians are standing up for themselves and taking advantage of the offerings that don't involve RIAA-related entities. If the entity doesn't add value they shouldn't have a role in the marketplace anymore.

    1. Re:RIAA = pig stuck in mud, dying by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

      I still think there's a future for labels, but it's a much reduced one. Instead of the label being the end-all-and-be-all for the band, it will be a glorified advertising agency that a band contracts with. All copyrights will remain with the band and the band will be able to leave for another label and retain their old music. The label will make money as the band makes money. Of course, they won't make nearly as much and this means many record label executives will lose jobs. Excuse me while I mourn their loss... ok, that's enough.

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    2. Re:RIAA = pig stuck in mud, dying by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      They still have to kiss Clear Channel's ass if they want any kind of national exposure or airplay.

    3. Re:RIAA = pig stuck in mud, dying by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In theory that's great. In reality, how many popular acts can you name that aren't with a music label? Can you name a single one? And it's been very, very easy to self-record and self-distribute and self-promote your music, for about 10 years now.

      Again, please respond with a single popular music act who has foregone record companies in the way you describe. Even touring indie acts still sign to a label, just a smaller one. Nothing has changed except there's no money left in the system.

      Well, except youtube and "mixtapes" are a way for Justin Beiber or Angel Haze to make their big break, before immediately signing on to a label and becoming successful.

    4. Re:RIAA = pig stuck in mud, dying by lsatenstein · · Score: 0

      The recording industry, the biggest bunch of middleman thieves ever, is finally losing its free ride. You don't NEED a record company anymore, you can be your own! If they didn't think they were dying they wouldn't be violently throwing tantrums everywhere - lobbying for really radical unilateral changes to the law, suing regular everyday people for "piracy" to the point of bankruptcy, hassling bars/restaurants (usually mom and pop operations, barely making it as it is) into paying commercial licensing fees for music, etc.

      A band now can cut their own album and sell it on iTunes, Amazon or a host of other music sites and retain a lot more of the proceeds. Back in the day even large, famous acts were getting stiffed by the record companies! Thanks in part to the way that record companies have pushed musicians up against the wall now for many years the market is now to a point where the artists don't even make money on the albums themselves. Instead they make the money at concerts, both on tickets and on merchandise. An artist now almost has to *give away* the music (many seem to - look on Youtube for all of the "full album" videos) as the loss leader in hopes of getting people to their concert. Artists can post samples on Youtube (at no cost) to drive sales and exposure. The record company middleman has less and less importance in a marketplace like this.

      I'm glad to see that more and more musicians are standing up for themselves and taking advantage of the offerings that don't involve RIAA-related entities. If the entity doesn't add value they shouldn't have a role in the marketplace anymore.

      The RIAA reminds me of Kodak corp. Kodak Corp was ill equiped to move from film to digital. And today we know that even our dental xrays or other xrays are being digitalized.

      So, RIAA, realize you are a Kodak Corp. Your days are numbered, We really know that change is difficult for you to accept, but, thats life. Do you require other examples of businesses that have died because of technology? One that is gone is the carbon ink ribbon manufacturer, the typewriter for which it was manufactured, line printers and more.

      Now to tackle e-books....

      --
      Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
    5. Re:RIAA = pig stuck in mud, dying by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What are they supposed to do? Dissolve their company? Move into an entirely new industry? Nobody's come out with a superior model of recording/releasing/promoting their music, much less make money at recording/releasing/promoting music. There's just an industry that sells less, and a bunch of people who make illegal copies of the diminishing amount of music getting released. Big new acts are fewer and fewer, and popular music has stopped advancing and is basically in a 10 or 15 year rut.

    6. Re:RIAA = pig stuck in mud, dying by darnkitten · · Score: 1

      Can you define "popular" in such a way that it doesn't mean/imply "promoted by a major label?" In my circles, Jonathan Coulton is "popular," and unsigned; he is also not mainstream.

    7. Re:RIAA = pig stuck in mud, dying by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What are they supposed to do? Dissolve their company? Move into an entirely new industry? Nobody's come out with a superior model of recording/releasing/promoting their music, much less make money at recording/releasing/promoting music. There's just an industry that sells less, and a bunch of people who make illegal copies of the diminishing amount of music getting released. Big new acts are fewer and fewer, and popular music has stopped advancing and is basically in a 10 or 15 year rut.

      They, the RIAA, are obsolete. RIAA, sell whatever assets the RIAA have and disappear. That is the tragedy of not being open and the advent of the internet that obsoleted their business model. Why give the RIAA 95% commission? Artists are putting up their own websites, and will eventually collectively form marketing groups.

      Want a second example of obsolescence? Take your local shoe store. We went there to buy shoes, to get shoes repaired, dyed, stretched, and more. Where are the shoe makers today?

    8. Re:RIAA = pig stuck in mud, dying by stoatwblr · · Score: 1

      Future music consumers arewn't listening to much broadcast radio anymore.

      Or that matter a lot of current ones aren't either.

      Most of the people who listen to broadcast radio don't buy music - and they never did. The ones who matter to the industry, jumped ship a long time ago.

      Case in point: Country music. Outside the USA, stations which play it are few and far between, yet it's still one of the most popular forms of music sold worldwide (sales far outstrip "pop" music as a general rule.)

  20. What about highways? by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If Canada feels it's important to block public access to the internet because a few commit illegal acts, then why wouldn't they block public access to the highways for the same reason?

    If we start/continue to block/disallow everything that can be used for unlawful purposes, pretty soon, everything will be blocked/disallowed.

    1. Re:What about highways? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If Canada feels it's important to block public access to the internet because a few commit illegal acts, then why wouldn't they block public access to the highways for the same reason?

      Oh, they would.

      Unfortunately the "read what someone is thinking from their expression" mind reading cameras are not ready yet. You can bet your ass that toll gates will stop you from entering the highway if you're on a blacklist eventually.

      Welcome to the future; with the technology to free everyone from mundane and tedious activities, we will create a panopticon to make everyone's life worse than it was before all these labour saving technologies were invented. Why? Because humans are dicks that are more interested in getting more shit (stuff, control, sex) for their self than risking getting an unfair deal when sharing wealth.

  21. Discovering free to download music by tepples · · Score: 1

    All the music I listen to is 100% free to download.

    How do people usually find out about these recording artists who offer their own professional-quality music for download at no charge? Virtually none of the music played on FCC-licensed U.S. FM stations is free as in speech or free as in beer, and I doubt CRTC-licensed Canadian FM stations differ.

    1. Re:Discovering free to download music by Em+Adespoton · · Score: 3, Informative

      All the music I listen to is 100% free to download.

      How do people usually find out about these recording artists who offer their own professional-quality music for download at no charge? Virtually none of the music played on FCC-licensed U.S. FM stations is free as in speech or free as in beer, and I doubt CRTC-licensed Canadian FM stations differ.

      Well... there you have it. People who are still limiting themselves to FM transmissions are missing out.

      For the rest of us, new music is promoted through social media and "if you listen to this, you might also like...." on streaming radio. Just using Google does amazingly well too.

      And then, of course, there's the fact that CBC Radio 2 picks up a lot of independent music, and provides links to the band's websites on their site, along with a historical playlist so you can find the songs/artists you listened to earlier in the day on FM, if you're into that.

    2. Re:Discovering free to download music by pr0fessor · · Score: 2

      I've not purchased anything from a major recording label in years mostly because I can hear it on the radio or stream services {not really free you have to put up with advertising but no cash out of my pocket}

      I have purchased music from indie artists or local band that I wanted to support. I also listen to them much more frequently than radio or major label bands. Most of the major label acts don't appeal to me.

      Even if piracy stopped today I don't think their sales would go up, those people pirating music are probably not going to be their customer anyway. They'll just flip through the channels on the radio or ad supported streaming services until they find something that fills the time.

    3. Re:Discovering free to download music by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All the music I listen to is 100% free to download.

      You are a thief unless the artist or band released their music for free downloading / streaming.

      For the rest of us, new music is promoted through social media and "if you listen to this, you might also like...." on streaming radio. Just using Google does amazingly well too.

      And then, of course, there's the fact that CBC Radio 2 picks up a lot of independent music, and provides links to the band's websites on their site, along with a historical playlist so you can find the songs/artists you listened to earlier in the day on FM, if you're into that.

      I have used social media and YouTube which led me to the websites of bands and artists where I could buy their music directly. Yes, the free streaming services are a fantastic source of new and old music.

    4. Re:Discovering free to download music by lister+king+of+smeg · · Score: 2

      All the music I listen to is 100% free to download.

      You are a thief unless the artist or band released their music for free downloading / streaming.

      No he would be a infringing copyright which is not theft it is under a entirely different section of the law.

      --
      ---Saying gnome 3 is better than windows 8 not so much a compliment as it is damning with light praise.
    5. Re:Discovering free to download music by darnkitten · · Score: 1

      Have you tried the BBC's Introducing podcasts? All-new music, a variety of styles. Tom Robbins does a highlights "mixtape" each week, that usually has me wasting hours looking up bands and downloading or purchasing their music.

    6. Re:Discovering free to download music by mark-t · · Score: 1

      For the rest of us, new music is promoted through social media and "if you listen to this, you might also like...." on streaming radio.

      Do you know of a such a service that is available in Canada?

    7. Re:Discovering free to download music by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jep - I stopped paying one cent to those greedy bastards years ago...

      I make my own music and listen or download from sites like http://www.jamendo.com
      All is completely legal, and even if I have to pay for music (and I am not opposed to that), I rather pay musicians themselves than an bunch of greedy managers.

    8. Re:Discovering free to download music by Em+Adespoton · · Score: 1

      For the rest of us, new music is promoted through social media and "if you listen to this, you might also like...." on streaming radio.

      Do you know of a such a service that is available in Canada?

      Yup: unfortunately, it's called Facebook. There are also YouTube streaming channels for music. There are more streaming services that don't do recommendations, such as music.cbc.ca, Songza, and of course, you can just go to http://www.musiccanada.com/whe... and pick from the list.

    9. Re:Discovering free to download music by sdoca · · Score: 1

      In Alberta, we also have CKUA (Canada's first public broadcaster) which can be streamed on the web for those outside of radio frequency range. It's the best radio station around. Check it out! http://www.ckua.com/

  22. Media Tax by MCROnline · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I assume that if all these governments from around the globe have successfully 'blocked' all these nasty web sites offering pirated content, then it stands to reason that the recording industries tax on blank media no longer would be appropriate or relevant, so we can have cheaper blank media again?

    1. Re:Media Tax by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nothing is as permanent as a temporary tax.

  23. Canadian what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    On my Internet the headline reads "Canadian [blocked] Calls For Internet Regulation, Website Blocking".

  24. I am an artist. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am an artist. I am part of the Canadian music INDUSTRY and I am NOT in favor of what CRIA (Canadian RIAA) is proposing.

    1. Re:I am an artist. by Em+Adespoton · · Score: 2

      I am part of the Canadian music HOBBY and I'm not in favour either. The fact that you said "favor" makes me doubt whether you're really Canadian, but I know many musicians, both inside and outside the industry, who aren't in favour. In general, the CRIA is understood to represent RIAA interests and only represent the Canadian recording industry as a hobby themselves.

    2. Re:I am an artist. by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      Fun fact about Canada, if you live in Southern Ontario the chances of you using the non-OUR version is pretty high, especially if you were educated in the 80's, since the entire edumudcation system was waffling over whether or not it was okay. For those of us who went through that it's been hell ever since.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    3. Re:I am an artist. by Em+Adespoton · · Score: 1

      Fun fact about Canada, if you live in Southern Ontario ... if you were educated in the 80's, ... it's been hell ever since.

      Well, if you live in Southern Ontario, you're south of 49 anyway :D

  25. Approval; gerrymandering by tepples · · Score: 1

    The Parliamentary system coupled with first-past-the-post voting means that highly contested ridings can go to someone that only got 30-40% of the vote.

    First-past-the-post can be made harder to game by simply allowing voters to vote for multiple candidates. Or would you prefer that districts/ridings be constructed such that they're not really contested, as became common with the recent Redistricting Majority Project round of gerrymandering in the United States?

    1. Re:Approval; gerrymandering by Dixie_Flatline · · Score: 1

      I'm not saying there aren't solutions, but the simplistic method that we use is obviously critically flawed. :)

  26. Re:Cute to see the CLUELESS trying to hijack laws by dkleinsc · · Score: 0

    Music has always been more of a hobby than a career. Most musicians are either amateurs who play or sing for fun (or in some cases academic credit), or semi-pros who get paid to perform or teach but can't afford to quit their day job. And most professional musicians' primary source of income is teaching amateur musicians.

    A 3-4 person bar band that is getting at least $2000 a week (and not spending it on booze or drugs or hookers) is more-or-less staying afloat. Everyone else is either broke or has another source of income.

    But on the upside, being a good semi-pro musician will get you laid.

    --
    I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
  27. If hobby music is good enough by tepples · · Score: 2

    If tools have improved such that hobby music can equal the songwriting and production quality of career music, then perhaps the public would benefit if music were to become a hobby.

  28. Two Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    F**k Off

  29. Promoting music; avoiding accidental infringement by tepples · · Score: 2

    You don't NEED a record company anymore, you can be your own!

    If a recording artist is his own label, how would he go about getting his music onto FM or satellite radio or onto the playlists of popular Internet streaming music providers, such as Pandora, Spotify, and foreign counterparts? And how should a songwriter make sure that he didn't accidentally copy parts of a popular song when writing his own? (See, for example, the "My Sweet Lord" lawsuit.) RIAA-affiliated labels add value through promotion and through their affiliated music publishers.

  30. Hooray for state censorship! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is all a round-about way for the Canadian government to gain state-controlled censorship tools over their citizen's view of the internet and nothing more than that. The excuse of 'piracy' is merely that, a rather benign sounding reason to build up these systems of control. I'm sure there's people in the media industry who genuinely believe they are fighting for their own profits and needs, but they're merely pawns for people who have even less respectable reasons than 'we need to stop piracy'. What they really want to stop is unfettered access to information and these organizations provide them a rather convenient excuse.

  31. Streaming in a vehicle by tepples · · Score: 1

    Well... there you have it. People who are still limiting themselves to FM transmissions are missing out.

    Then how should people listen to anything other than FM in a car or bus without having to pay hundreds of dollars per year to a cellular carrier for a mobile data plan?

    1. Re:Streaming in a vehicle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I haven't used FM radio in a decade, and I don't use a data connection for music either. I just have an extensive collection, and it went from CD players to mp3 CDs to mp3-player variants and USB drives in the car deck.

      Sure, then I have to preemptively go out and research and look around for good music that I actually like (*gasp*). I know this isn't for everyone though, as clearly there is a huge market for telling people what they like.

    2. Re:Streaming in a vehicle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      There's a wonderful device, perhaps a decade and a half old, commonly called an MP3 player (although more accurately termed a mobile digital media player (M-DMP), portable media player (PMP), or similar). It's a portable electronic device with which one may store and play back digitally-encoded audio tracks, including music, podcasts, audio books, etc. These devices can store between hours and months of audio, depending on their storage capacity, and can often offer continuous playback for a full day before needing to be recharged (since many are equipped with rechargeable batteries).

      The device will, however, only play tracks that you load onto it, so it's a little weak in terms of music discovery (unless you load it with tracks by artists that you consider candidates for addition to your listening collection). You can use it to evaluate artists recommended to you by your friends, by your "friends", by strangers, by "strangers", or by rutting rhinoceroses, or by any other person, place, thing, or idea with which/whom you communicate, provided you load the music onto the device ahead of time. Because gasp there are other ways to get noise into your ear-holes besides reception of frequency-modulated radio waves or by use of a mobile's data plan. Who'da thunk it?

    3. Re:Streaming in a vehicle by RavenLrD20k · · Score: 1

      Siriusly (sic)? And even if you don't want to pay $10-13 a month for that, is there a problem with listening to Pandora on your computer and clicking the buy link on tracks that you think you might want to listen to in the car? Or maybe you can hop on over to a mall and grab some albums out of FYE, or if you're more rural even Wal-mart has some. Of course, if you're more rural, how many FM stations do you actually get? And what kind of variety can you pull? And if you don't want to have to pay for the music...well I'm sure there's a few pirating options left.

      And personally the FM stations tend to have too many commercials for me to be able to enjoy any real music time on my commute. Generally after every 3rd song there's about 10 minutes worth of commercials, and the way the stations tend to time it, I wind up catching the commercials at the start of the commute, have a few tunes in the middle, and finish up the rest of the commute with more commercials. It's also no sense in listening to FM in the mornings since all the rock stations around here play John Boy and Billy.

      tl;dr: I much prefer the drone of the engine to any of the torture that local FM has to offer.

    4. Re:Streaming in a vehicle by Em+Adespoton · · Score: 1

      One thing to add: FM stations come up against the same barriers as you do: music licensing. As a result, if you listen to FM, you're only going to hear around 1 or 2 new songs/artists per month. You can do better than that via word of mouth, with people humming or singing a catchy tune that others think they might want to google/spotify/etc. Hey... you can do better than that watching American Idol (or knowing someone who does). FM is for listening to a familiar set of music, plus radio jockey, plus ads, plus the odd news tidbit. Or for listening to created content (talk shows, news, traffic, weather, etc). You get a better music mix by taking 5 minutes to do it yourself before you leave the house.

    5. Re:Streaming in a vehicle by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      is there a problem with listening to Pandora on your computer

      Yep. Pandora doesn't work on your computer in Canada unless you're using a proxy or something else.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    6. Re:Streaming in a vehicle by cayenne8 · · Score: 1

      It's also no sense in listening to FM in the mornings since all the rock stations around here play John Boy and Billy.

      Whew...sure am glad I have Walton and Johnson here to listen too. It makes the drive in pleasurable and good for some laughs.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    7. Re:Streaming in a vehicle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i wish i had mod points left to undo that -1 this was fucking hilarious

    8. Re:Streaming in a vehicle by tepples · · Score: 1

      Siriusly (sic)?

      There's still a monthly fee, as you pointed out, and you still have to buy the receiver and an FM transmitter to get it into your car stereo. A lot of cars that I've seen still have neither a line in jack nor a tape deck that accepts headphone-to-tape adapters. Either it's radio and CD only, or the tape deck just ejects the adapter right after it is inserted.

      is there a problem with listening to Pandora on your computer and clicking the buy link on tracks that you think you might want to listen to in the car?

      Yes, there is a problem with that. For one thing, people think Pandora is a jewelry store. For another, I've found that people tend not to want to sit at the computer all day to discover music. They have housework to do.

      All the music I listen to is 100% free to download.

      Or maybe you can hop on over to a mall and grab some albums out of FYE, or if you're more rural even Wal-mart has some.

      We were discussing recording artists that offer their music for download without charge. Places like Walmart and Best Buy tend to carry mostly the sort of major-label music that makes it onto FM radio. Besides, people use discovery means such as FM radio to find what to buy in the first place, as record stores prohibit returns for refund.

  32. Re:Not a Canadian... $800 ipod nano by onkelonkel · · Score: 1

    There is a levy on blank CDs. (I can't remember the last time I bought a spindle of CDs). It used to be about 30 cents a disk, which is insane considering bulk CD-R cost about 25 cents. At least they didn't go full retard and charge for MP3 players. At the time the levy was introduced, MP3 players were about 128 to 256 MB capacity and I can recall fees of $5 to $10 on MP3 players (based on 5 cents/Megabyte) being considered. The music industry would love to collect $800 on a 16GB ipod nano.

    --
    None of them can see the clouds; The polished wings don't care.
  33. and I'm calling for the by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    EXECU.......nah, wait, I'd probably get vanned for that

  34. Block sites? by SilverBlade2k · · Score: 0

    IF ISP's can block certain websites, then why are they now blocking the more disgusting sites out there like child porn sites, or sites similar? I would think that the government would want to eliminate those from the face of the earth before wasting their time on trying to block music and movie pirating sites..

  35. Canadian music INDUSTRY ? Next joke ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anyone in the music biz knows that anything worthwhile
    happens in the US, even when the artists are Canadian.

  36. Blame Canada (USA Putz) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

    In other news, Edward Snowden through his attorney in Moscow has asked Federal Russian Agencies for protection as threats against his life mount.

    Likely, the Obama Junta with DoD, DoJ and DoS backing will use the Sochi Olympic Games as a cover for infiltrating USA Green Beret and Seal Team personnel, through NATO countries Olympic programs into Russia to kill Snowden.

    Each infiltration will have at least one Green Beret or Seal implant who will on arrival leave the NATO Country Olympic Team and rendezvous in Moscow to hunt then kill Snowden.

    President Obama, following his remarks on the NSA disclosures and his proposed adjustments signed a secret executive order directing all USA resources toward the killing of Edward Snowden during the Sochi Olympic Games to be held in Russia.

  37. No spines and no thinking abilities by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Frankly it can't come soon enough that these idiots lose their entire audience by trying to sell crap that's not even as good as what you can get for free online, by treating their paying customers as badly as thieves, and by trying to get everyone to pay to cover for the people who will NEVER pay to begin with.

    Their death can't come soon enough, given how eager they seem to be to kill themselves. Fewer and fewer people I know give a rat's ass about music anymore, unless they're young, drunk, and at a party or club (precisely the kinds of people who don't want to pay these days).

  38. More regulation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I thought corporations believed in less regulation.

  39. Freeloaders by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Their problem seems to be that their pay sites don't get the top rankings in google search. So instead of paying google for "sponsored results" they want to censor all other results.

  40. Re:Cute to see the CLUELESS trying to hijack laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    $2000/week
    - transportation expenses.
    - cost of gear
    / 3-4 people

    = less than working at McDonald's.

    Bootlegging is killing the music industry and making it much more difficult for musicians to make money, and if you look at a golden age of indie music you're probably thinking of the late 80s - late 90s. With the rise of Napster coinciding with the end.

  41. Re:Canadian music INDUSTRY ? Next joke ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ah, the nation born on piracy/IP theft but yet "sees the light" and now puts people in jail/bankrupts them for infractions?

  42. In other news... by slapout · · Score: 2

    ...Canadians are calling for the government to ban music industry associations...

    --
    Coder's Stone: The programming language quick ref for iPad
    1. Re:In other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Canadians are close enough they should be allowed to use the and what do we have to say to that?

      PISS OFF!

  43. Re:Promoting music; avoiding accidental infringeme by khellendros1984 · · Score: 2

    If a recording artist is his own label, how would he go about getting his music onto FM or satellite radio or onto the playlists of popular Internet streaming music providers, such as Pandora, Spotify, and foreign counterparts?

    Information for artists submitting to Pandora

    Information for artists submitting to Spotify

    Getting your music on iTunes

    In short, that depends on the service they want their music on. Different services have different procedures.

    And how should a songwriter make sure that he didn't accidentally copy parts of a popular song when writing his own?

    As you so helpfully pointed out, they don't/can't always. The human mind is prone to subconscious influence; there's no way around that.

    RIAA-affiliated labels add value through promotion and through their affiliated music publishers.

    True, although it's debatable whether the value that they add is greater than the cost that they impose. The artists that they promote are like lottery winners: the lucky few that you can point to as indicators that the system is beneficial to artists and the public as a whole. In a nutshell, they're a great example of a selection bias.

    --
    It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
  44. Re:Cute to see the CLUELESS trying to hijack laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1
    I've been trying to sell my horseshoe and transistor radio business, but no one wants to buy it.

    If you can't make the money in a BUSINESS that you expect to make, get out of the BUSINESS. Don't whine, complain about the technology and demand handouts and concessions from others.

  45. Progresion by DarthVain · · Score: 1, Troll

    They charged a tax on all storage media regardless of if any music bytes were ever spilled on it. However, I would imagine that the sales of CD/DVD media is quickly drying up, they they are not making their pound of flesh. They still get it from devices, but they don't provide the numbers. It was easy to see 5 years ago that everything would be moving to online content both music and movies, and that physical media is pretty provincial. So now comes the next big fight, trying to force legislate profits from the internet. How? Regulation of course. Nothing new here, give us free money.

  46. Awesome! by DarthVain · · Score: 1

    I can finally buy some cheap CD-ROMS! Now I can really use my DISCMAN!

    Gonna turn that BASSBOOST all the way up man! :p

  47. Industry Lobbyists hard at work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's the entire job of industry lobbyists to always petition for more rights and privileges than they have now. So it's precisely the case that no matter what sort of concessions the government gives them in terms of levies, tax breaks, special provisions, or whatever else, it'll never be enough. It doesn't even necessarily mean that they realistically think they'll get whatever they ask for, but they're constantly going to be making the argument that the changing world is unfair and the government needs to intervene further to protect their interests, read profits. It's what they're paid to do. If they ask for something way out there, it pushes the debate further, and maybe what they'll end up getting is somewhere in the middle -- but it's further than what they have now, and that's what matters to them.

    I think the main reason these stories catch people's interest is because we're either savvy or cynical enough to believe that the government just might believe them and do exactly what they ask.

  48. riiight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    just make escape from new york reality and have everyone a prisoner of the state...ya that works cant wait for a prime minister to be names Loius the XIV to appear....won't be long now

  49. So much for Net Nuetrality and Freedomn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And you guys thought the NSA was a bad boy! Good bye Net Neutrality and Freedom to choose! The media industry needs to come in to the 20th Century.

  50. w00t! this is really good! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now we can wipe Justin Bieber and Brian Adams off the internet!

    Oh happy days!

  51. Re:Cute to see the CLUELESS trying to hijack laws by Holi · · Score: 1

    local music scenes are never about albums or cds, they are about the shows. they are hardly being hurt by copying. Hell it may help them when they go on tour.

    --
    Sorry, teleporters just kill you and then make a copy. A perfect, soul-less copy.
  52. Re:Cute to see the CLUELESS trying to hijack laws by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

    Bootlegging is killing the music industry and making it much more difficult for musicians to make money

    Bootlegging has very little effect on the demand for live performances. It's not like a bar can't play recorded music easily enough, and the reason they get live bands in is because a lot of people like listening to live music more than recorded music and are willing to pay a cover charge for the privilege.

    In fact, arguably, bootlegging increases demand for live performances. It certainly didn't hurt the Grateful Dead.

    --
    I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
  53. DRM and search engine manipulation by pouar · · Score: 1

    Isn't DRM and search engine manipulation the reason why sales in the US are declining. I guess they want their sales in Canada to decline too.

    --
    while :;do if windows sucks;then mv windows /dev/null;pacman -Sy linux;fi;done
  54. Global Call to End Music / Movie associations... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Guess which group has more people :)

  55. Bah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Real musicians make music because they love it, not because they get enough money to make a living out of it. If no one would pay me for the work I do, I'd have to find new skills or a new way to make money. What if being a musician, as a full time occupation, simply isn't possible anymore? Do you think people would stop making music? The real musicians still would.

  56. You sound like someone.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    With too much time on your hands.

  57. Join the Club by khelms · · Score: 1

    "...wrote a blog post late last year lamenting musicians' earnings, a situation he blames on the Internet allowing a few to "amass staggering, unprecedented wealth" while musicians toil for tiny incomes."

    Isn't that what's been happening to the rest of us who aren't in the top 1% of incomes?

  58. So where's mine? by Sasayaki · · Score: 1

    I'm David Adams. I write fiction for a living (http://www.amazon.com/David-Adams/e/B006S1GSXI/?tag=wwwlacunavers-20 is me). So where's my money?

    Sure, I'm Australian and not Canadian, but where's my tax dollars handout? I could really use that. After all, I'm a publisher too and not just a writer, so I should surely qualify for some money. My books get pirated after all, they appear on heaps of pirating sites, so where's my share of the tax on blank media?

    Again, let's just pretend that I'm Canadian for a second. It shouldn't be too hard; the RIAA already doesn't recognise international borders when it comes to copyright infringement, so surely they'll be eager to give me my share of that money any day now.

    Any day now.

    Maybe I'll send them another email just to be sure. They seem to have lost the last few.

    I'm sure it's just a mistake. They care about the artists. They said so. It couldn't possibly just be a selfish money grab at the expense of regular Canadians, supporting an outdated business model that just needs to shrink or go away entirely. Surely not.

    --
    Check out my sci-fi book "Lacuna" at http://goo.gl/MVxX8
  59. App for evaluating music by tepples · · Score: 1

    an MP3 player [...] will, however, only play tracks that you load onto it, so it's a little weak in terms of music discovery

    This was sort of my point.

    You can use it to evaluate artists recommended to you by your friends, by your "friends", by strangers, by "strangers"

    Is there an app for that, namely for automatically downloading a playlist of music recommended through similarity or social media and storing it on the MP3 player? How are people likely to discover such an app? And I anticipate that in practice, friends are likely to recommend major-label music. So how would such an app survive a lawsuit from labels in the RIAA/CRIA?

  60. Plan B in case infringement occurs by tepples · · Score: 1

    And how should a songwriter make sure that he didn't accidentally copy parts of a popular song when writing his own?

    As you so helpfully pointed out, they don't/can't always. The human mind is prone to subconscious influence; there's no way around that.

    I've calculated that there are about 105 million possible legally distinct melodies. (If you want, I can show my work.) So if there's no way around eventually being sued for accidental infringement, what can an indie songwriter do to make sure the inevitable lawsuit doesn't bankrupt him?

    1. Re:Plan B in case infringement occurs by khellendros1984 · · Score: 1

      I already said it. I don't believe that it's always feasible for an indie songwriter to defend themselves against a lawsuit for accidental infringement. Even if there's no real case against them, a wealthier artist or label could essentially pay to grind them into the ground.

      --
      It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
  61. Over your head by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think he was being sarcastic....

    You have companies buying off politicians, regulatory bodies, defunct patent systems, all which allow companies to be monopolize. The irony being the system is supposedly a "free market"..

    "the Canadian Government is giving tens of millions of 'tax' dollars to the record industry" welfare for monopolies, that would have collapsed by now "freeing" up an industry..

  62. Are there not already laws against piracy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are already laws on the books against copyright piracy and the black letter criminal and civil penalties are extremely high.

    Big IP already has legal remedies in place in the form of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, which was written, in large part by music and movie industry lawyers and lobbyists and rubber stamped by a compliant, barely witting Congress.

  63. Addendum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Of course, those are US laws, lobbyists and lawyers, and this is a story about Canada. My bad.