Canadian Politicians Demand DMCA 195
An anonymous reader writes "Michael Geist is reporting that a Canadian parliamentary committee has demanded that the government establish a Canadian DMCA. The demand, which comes in a study on counterfeiting and piracy (PDF) released on Wednesday night, recommends ratification of the WIPO Internet treaties, increasing damage awards for copyright infringement, creating new offenses for selling modification devices, and encouraging prosecutors to seek jail time for piracy violations."
Canadian Politicians Demand DMCA (Score:5, Insightful)
I demand new Canadian politicians.
- Canadian Voter
Re:Canadian Politicians Demand DMCA (Score:5, Insightful)
A Canadian version of the DMCA, simply put, will do absolutely NOTHING.
If people are copying software, music and movies now, what makes anybody think that increasing fines, or putting stiffer punishments is going to deter people from doing it in the future?
The plain and simple fact of the matter is just this: Most people who download music, or copy DVD's don't realize that its illegal, or if they do know that its illegal, they simply don't care.
Creating a duplicate law in Canada to mirror the already proven ineffective DMCA in the US is just one step closer to having a more American nation. There are ways to deal with the copying of DVD's or the downloading of music. This is not a good way to deal with it.
Also, for those who didn't RTFA, this "demand" is based on data collected from a study done almost 10 years ago, and even the conductors of the study claimed that the numbers were at best, sketchy. It seems to me that its just more pressure from American corporations to get their laws pushed onto Canadians as well.
Lets see a real study into this... with real numbers. I bet we'll find that:
A: The movie industry is doing just fine! (Spiderman 3 set all time records... I think that says it all.)
B: The piracy problem isn't as bad as they make it out to be. (While they calculate lost profits based on a per file transfer basis, they fail to remove those people that likely wouldn't have bought the movie anyways.)
Off the topic but can (Score:3, Interesting)
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http://www.elections.ca/loi/com2001/Voting/vot10_
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Re:Canadian Politicians Demand DMCA (Score:4, Interesting)
I'm not saying I think it's good (because I don't) but there are valid reasons for bringing such laws to Canada... unfortunately those reasons have very little to do with benefiting the consumer.
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Battlestar Galactica is filmed in Vancouver.
Canadian artists and technicians would be very unhappy indeed if american and other world-traders were to pull media production out of Canada.
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On the one hand, I agree that *some* piracy isn't as bad for the industry as it's made out to be (versus completely unchecked piracy, which would be very bad indeed), I don't see how you couldn't calculate lost sales on a per-file transfer basis. The argument is "they wouldn't have bought t
Re:Canadian Politicians Demand DMCA (Score:4, Insightful)
Seriously, get the fuck out! Laws like this ONLY hurt the "honest" people. Everyone else is going to continue downloading anyway and this won't slow that down one bit.
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Since there's no such thing as uncopyable data, the DMCA has no effect on leeches or thieves. They were violating the law before, and the'll be violating the law in the future. The only effect it has is a negative one on honest people. Not a good day for honest people at all.
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Ideally, they will eventually put you into a rental mode where you will pay a fee every time you play the content and then when the storage goes bad or they change the format (again), you'll have to pay for (not buy-- never buy & own content again) the content again.
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And The Point Would Be...? (Score:5, Funny)
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The Quebecois are fierce; if there isn't a French-also version I imagine they would just burn the warning letters en masse. If there is to be oppression in Quebec at all, it damn well will be in French.
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Apparently, 1985, when the Canadian Supreme Court ruled that every piece of legislation passed in English only (which in Manitoba was every piece since 1890) was invalid. However, there was a short grace period allowed during which the English laws were stil enforceable so that Manitoba could get its shit into French and not descend into total anarchy.
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Pardon me... (Score:5, Insightful)
But who exactly demanded the DMCA-like policies? Politicians pretty much everywhere are ciphers for constituent and special interests, and so it is unusual in the extreme for a legislative idea to come tumbling unbidden from legislators' heads. So, I'm wondering whose doing the demanding such that the legislators are responding.
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Follow the money.
I used my Ouija board.. I'm getting something.. (Score:3, Funny)
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Re:Pardon me... (Score:4, Informative)
Good question, my first instinct was to blame Bev Oda and her unrivalled industry access [michaelgeist.ca]. But she's not even on the committee!
What's also scary here is that, although chaired by a Conservative (from Alberta too), the committee is made up of members from all parties. Have a look at the list [parl.gc.ca], there're Liberals, NDP and Bloc Québécois in there: I have trouble believing someone from the Bloc would go along with this. Do none of them bother to turn up to committee meetings, does everyone just fall asleep and let the chair do all the work, or is this just a horrible case of group think?!
Either way, our legislature needs some education. Time to get letter writing!
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Re:Pardon me... (Score:5, Insightful)
I can tell you who is not demanding this! (Score:2)
Because we all know (Score:4, Insightful)
Give me a fucking break. Can we not come up with a better punishment than jail for non-violent "criminals?"
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-matthew
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What about the citizens? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Frankly, as a cannuck, I hope it passes for the sole fact that it will contribute to demonstrating how f'ing corrupt people are.
Tom
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No, you're thinking of French people.
Canadians want sex, booze, smokes, and money.
Americans want money, booze, smokes, and to watch sex.
And Mexicans have it all, well, except for the money part.
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Re:What about the citizens? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Copyright infringers are the new child molesters (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Copyright infringers are the new child molester (Score:1)
Yeah, just look for the "skull-and-crossbones" flags
Re:Copyright infringers are the new child molester (Score:2)
BTW, Can I copyright the statement you just wrote? I need it to show how the patent infringement is just as serious as copyright infringement. You should have your life ruined for that t
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That depends. What if my girlfriend is in the porn industry?
Are they just stupid or plain dumb? (Score:5, Interesting)
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So all parties are culpable, not just the Conservatives.
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There is liberal, conservative, hard left, hard right and then there are the corporate issues that they all vote on as a block because they have been bought and paid with lobbiest money and they don't give a damn about what is good for the citizens any more.
You can't even find a good person to vote for any more-- the way the game is structured, unless you have 10 million of corporate bri.. donations, the voters never hear your name and worse, the media (leftist sure- but pro-corporate e
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Huh?
Am I the only one who sees a contradiction in that statement? How can the media be left-wing and pro-corporate at the same time? Could you elaborate a little?
Since corporations tend to favour the neo-con right wing agenda, I would expect the media outlets (which are owned by large corporations) would favour the right-wing agenda. The CBC is a notable exception, as it is state owned of course.
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Left and right are outdated and weak philosophies who think they control the debate and struggle for power while it is now in reality controlled by large multi-national corporations and warlords.
Except for a few fringe types like libertarians and ralph nader, we do not even get to vote on congressmen and senators (and presidential candidates) who are not controlled by corporate interests. Even our state representatives often pass sweetheart deals for corporations that include them paying no taxes and b
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NDP (Score:2)
Ironically, the conservatives used to be the only party that opposed the strengthening of copyright law. I guess they ditched that platform, just like the few other policies they had that weren't completely awful.
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Well, a certain liberal idiot may wish to check the members list for the group which generated these suggestions. You may notice that the number of conservatives and liberals is equal, while also including several members of the Bloc Québécois, the NDP, and even an independent.
But where would be the fun in that, right? Knee-jerk generalizations are just SO much more fun!
How does that work exactly? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Mark my words: there is no single democratic country left on this planet. Except Switzerland and even then I have my doubts about this one.
The titles have changed from Count, Duke, Earl, King, Sheik, etc. to Fortune-500 CEO, Prime Minister or President but, let's not fool ourselves: exactly when did the rulers ever represent their constituents? Never. That's when. There might have been episodes when the people felt enpowered, but that was just for show.
Face it: democ
Re:How does that work exactly? (Score:5, Funny)
And without paying for those lessons! Can we sue them under the DMCA?
Licensing (Score:2)
Same Story, Different People (Score:1)
Apparently it's not enough that we're assumed guilty and pay a levy on blank media in order to cover copyright infringement, next it will be to take away fair use.
Now, don't get me wrong.. If the money actually went to the artists I'd have no problem with it, but recording compa
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Not that I care much for the PC either. I despite most politicians. Though I'd still rank PC above liberals, liberals above NDP, and the bloc can blow me.
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[*] Again, not claiming the PC are perfect. Just saying life wasn't perfect during their period either. And frankly, I hate how they MUST disagree on everything. It's so juvenile and a huge waste of time. We should just forgo paying MPs between resolved acts. That way they only get paid fo
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I think you meant to say the NDP.
That's ok, I changed it for you.
At least it wasn't a BQ idea.
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I do have one beef with your post - this isn't the PC party. The PC party is dead, killed by one of Peter Mackay's many lies. This is the CPC, although as far as I can tell they're basically the Liberals who wear blue instead of red.
Tabled for the break by a minority government (Score:2)
As a Canadian Citizen with registered copyrights (Score:5, Informative)
The DCMA won't help Canadians, only multi-nationals that suck the lifeblood of Canadian writers, artists, game designers, and musicians dry.
But, hey, what do I know, I've only flown across Canada for literary and game conventions on Canada Council grants
In Summary: Bad Idea. Very Bad.
Re:As a Canadian Citizen with registered copyright (Score:2)
Les larmes des anges sont dans mes oreilles.
This makes no sense (Score:3, Insightful)
Second, it made some small amount of sense when the DMCA was put in place in the US because it hadn't been tried before. There were no examples of the DMCA in another large, first world country failing spectacularly. I still think that Orrin Hatch is an idiot at best, but at least they had some justification for it.
But these politicians have no such defense. The DMCA was a failure by anyones metric, online piracy is out of control and pirated materials are sold without much problem. How could anyone in their right mind think that more of the same will help anything? How could anyone think that this is in Canada's best interest? This makes no sense.
p.s. This isn't meant to say anything about canada in general or to endorse piracy.
Bryan Adams Conspiracy (Score:1)
Not so bad. (Score:1)
If it is wrong, it has to be punished... (Score:2)
Just trying to set the debate straight here. If it is wrong, and if the current countermeasures aren't sufficiently deterrent, than stricter measures must be introduced.
Is it wrong to copy somebody else's work despite the owner's objections? Stick to this point...
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Just trying to set the debate straight here. If it is wrong, and if the current countermeasures aren't sufficiently deterrent, than stricter measures must be introduced.
Is it wrong to copy somebody else's work despite the owner's objections? Stick to this point...
The point, which you have missed, is not about copying and whether it is right or wrong. The point is - how does Canada benefit from a law designed to protect American business interests?
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That's irrelevant — you are changing the subject, teacher of the people.
If A is illegal, but people continue to engage in A, than either the anti-A laws/procedures ought to become stricter, or it should stop being illegal.
Which of the two options to take is the question, and the answer depends, primarily, on
Nice try, but you're wrong. Off with your head! (Score:2)
If A is illegal, but people continue to engage in A, than either the anti-A laws/procedures ought to become stricter, or it should stop being illegal. ...
This logic is equally true, whether A is murder, marijuana smoking, speeding, or, indeed, copying/sharing somebody else's works.
By this logic, the punishment for "jaywalking" (to which I feel "infringement without gain" is roughly equivalent) would be eventually raised to beheading.
We had a system like this. It's was originally called the "Hammurabi code." As recently as a few centuries ago, there were gallows rows. It's a backwards justice system we abandoned decades ago.
We no longer have a binary "right/wrong" switch in our system any more, because it doesn't make sense, for example, for starvation (and an accompanying bread thef
corrected headline .. (Score:2)
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American Entertainment Companies Demand Canadian DMCA
Government at it best.... (Score:1)
If you live in a country run by committee, be on the committee.
Ah, an "Industry Committee" (Score:5, Insightful)
Just as parliamentarians voted to break for the summer, the Industry Committee issued its report on counterfeiting and piracy, unambiguously titled Counterfeiting and Piracy are Theft.
Ok, two things.
First off, "Industry Committee". A group that, by it's name alone admits that it does not represent the people. It represents business interests.
Secondly, "Counterfeiting and Piracy are Theft". No, they're not. Otherwise you wouldn't need laws against counterfeiting and copyright violation, now would you? Theft was already on the books as a bad thing.
What they are trying to do is to make things that aren't theft equal to theft to support their agenda. Which represents no person - only business interests.
Expected, and probably inevitable (Score:5, Insightful)
As the Americans have discovered, it is difficult to get rid of crappy laws. The lobbyists know this: they just have to have patience and find the right stooges in power to do their bidding, then they're set.
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Wow, that was quick! I changed the sig only about an hour before your post. Fastest Veggie response, ever!
I cycle through bizarre VeggieTales quotes regularly. I continue to be amazed at how many people notice and comment. Thanks.
Do what I want (Score:2)
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no, they're demanding loonies ($CDN) (Score:2)
My MP is Honourable Baird, Minister of Envronment (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:3, Interesting)
Few problems with that (Score:4, Interesting)
#2: Bare Naked Ladies(the band, take your mind outta the gutter). They and the Nettwerk music label oppose these kinds of actions. They also have money and the public ear. As far as a music label goes, Nettwerk is the one without the goaty. Combined with Michael Geist and we have the Canadian version of the Justice League.
#3: We still, thankfully, have a privacy commissioner. So enforcement of this would be a little bunk.
#4: Minority Gov't. Though the Bloc(the balance tipping power that solely is interested within their own province of Quebec is being more then their usual asshole selves towards the rest of the nation, there's no way, as a party, they would let this happen. Neither would the NDP. And the Liberals would smell the blood from miles away. Yes, I know the committee has peoples from all parties, but it doesn't mean the party itself would act on their behalf.
I could be wrong(though I really hope I'm not), but I don't see this swimming.
might be a bit off topic, but... (Score:4, Insightful)
See, these events are the ultimate result of creating a nanny-state. Eventually the government will want to take away ALL your rights, while insisting it's doing it to "protect you". People insist that the US is a police state, while I as a Canadian can be arrested for unpopular speech, have severe limitations on the ownership of weapons, don't have the right to protect my property with physical force of ANY kind, including open-hand control, and now can have my private property destroyed by the government just because I'm suspected of maybe intending to commit a crime. Face it, we lost our rights a long time ago. Those of you protesting against this DMCA act are trying to close the barn doors after all the animals have run off, and the rest of the barn burned to the ground.
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Hell, I need this! (Score:2)
Different name, though (Score:2)
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Re:Write your MP (Score:4, Insightful)
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The list of MP's:
http://www.parl.gc.ca/information/about/people/ho
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But Canadians have to trust the government is there to help them.
Distrust of government workers is a very American attitude.
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Read the Federalist Papers, for more details.
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I stand correct.
Now, go secede and be treated as scum by the Yanks as you know you will be.