DMCA

0[1] In the spring of 2008 I slipped out of my hotel in San Jose, and headed over to the mall to buy an iPhone.  I remember the conversation with the clerk vividly.  He offered to activate it for me, and I said “No, I’m going to unlock it for use in Canada.” Shortly after, I furtively downloaded ziPhone in the privacy of my hotel room, and in about five minutes I had an illegally unlocked iPhone.

Illegal, you say?  Yes.  Until this morning, that is, when the US Copyright Office gave an exception to the practice of circumventing locks on cellphones, and a variety of other media in differing circumstances.  This is a huge victory for consumers, and one small step back toward a rational copyright regime instead of the mess that has been created by the DMCA.

Here in the Great White North our government has been forging ahead with Bill C-32, Canada’s own DMCA.  Arguing that this country needs to bring it’s copyright rules in line with WIPO standards, the Conservative Government has introduced even more draconian legislation than the US, especially now that US consumers have been granted exceptions to the DMCA.

In the US, the courts and the Copyright Office are saying that the phone the you bought is yours to use in any way you see fit.  That won’t be the way it is in Canada if C-32 passes. It’s time for Canadians to take a stand.  Visit Speak Out on Copyright today, sign up for your local chapter of Fair Copyright For Canada, and join the National Chapter on Facebook if you have a Facebook account.

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Of course Canada is a digital ghetto!

by alec on November 28, 2008

When CBC’s Jesse Brown asked Is Canada becoming a digital ghetto, my answer was an immediate “Of course”.  Canadians who don’t travel or do business outside of the country would never know this, but the wars being fought and won over consumer digital rights in other parts of the world are simply not news here. Canadians will pay more for phones and televisions because the CRTC has sided with carriers on the crucial issue of network neutrality.  Because of our “Made in Canada” copyright reform, ordinary Canadians who buy and share music with family members will become criminals in their own homes.

My American friends speak glowingly of the convenience of being able to download and watch television using services like Hulu.com.  They enjoy generous flat rate plans for telecom that give them virtually unlimited buckets of minutes and are driving a booming mobile telecom industry.

They have these innovative products and services because the regulator in the US favours the consumer and not the entrenched network interests.

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Squawk Box June 19 with Michael Geist

June 19, 2008

Image by yulbuzz via Flickr The last few weeks have been terrible set backs for personal privacy, and the privileges ordinary people enjoy when they buy and use music, video and other forms of media. Today’s guest was Dr. Michael Geist, an internationally recognized expert in these areas. We discussed Bill C-61 the Canadian copyright [...]

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Special Guest Michael Geist on Squawk Box Feb 1

January 31, 2008

We're going to have a minor celebrity on our call tomorrow in legal expert Michael Geist.  He'll be joining us to talk about the Canadian DMCA which will soon be before Parliament.  It's striking that our politicians are proposing such legislation now, given the acknowledged failure of American efforts.  In any case, it promises to [...]

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One ring to rule them all

May 3, 2007

One Ring to rule them all, One Ring to find them, One Ring to bring them all, and in the darkness bind them JRR Tolkien, Lord of the Rings Trilogy The outrage over the exposure and subsequent attempts by AACS lawyers to suppress the spread of the HD-DVD encryption key continues.  This morning, a NY Times story hit [...]

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Calling the kettle black

February 21, 2007

Writing as a guest for the BBC, Ottawa Law Professor Michael Geist does a good job at poking holes in the latest broadside from the US copyright lobby.   What I am referring to, of course, is last week’s release by the IIPA lobby group of their latest “Blacklist” of international copyright villains.  They accuse Canada, and [...]

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