Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Acitivists Call On Justin Trudeau To Defend Canada's Copyright Regime From TPP Changes

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Oct, 2015 01:09 PM
  • Acitivists Call On Justin Trudeau To Defend Canada's Copyright Regime From TPP Changes
TORONTO — Copyright activists say Canadians could face lawsuits, fines or worse for ripping the latest Justin Bieber CD or uploading an animated GIF of Jose Bautista's bat-flip under a new trade deal, and they're calling on the newly elected Justin Trudeau to act.
 
A major part of the Trans-Pacific Partnership deal finalized Oct. 5 involves harmonizing copyright laws in the 12 Pacific Rim countries — including Canada, the United States, Australia and Japan — that are signatories to the deal.
 
While the final text of the international trade agreement has yet to be published, the website Wikileaks released what it claims is the intellectual property chapter of the TPP on Oct. 9.
 
"Canadians don't realize that the way that they use the Internet every day is going to change dramatically," said Meghan Sali, a spokeswoman for the digital-rights advocacy group OpenMedia.
 
On the campaign trail, the prime minister-designate said he supports free trade and will thoroughly examine the TPP deal, while criticizing the secrecy under which the pact was negotiated.
 
Consumer organizations and outside groups were shut out of the negotiations, and the governments involved have released little information on the back and forth over what has been called the largest trade deal in history.
 
"We're heartened to see him recognize that this process has been not just opaque but inaccessible and undemocratic," said Sali.
 
The Electronic Frontier Foundation, an American advocacy group, has said the TPP threatens to override Canada's copyright regime and promotes the interests of copyright owners and corporations at the expense of the public.
 
Under Canada's current laws, ISPs and other companies that receive copyright complaints are only required to notify their users about the potential breach, and copyright holders must convince a court if they want the offending content removed.
 
Sali said the TPP deal could replace this so-called notice-and-notice system with the U.S. notice-and-takedown system, in which content is blocked or removed as soon as the first complaint is made.
 
"It looks like we're going to be accepting website blocking and Internet censorship through the back door," she said.
 
The TPP could make Canadians liable for criminal or civil penalties for transferring content they own from one device to another and uploading or re-posting highlights from professional sports, she said, adding that the deal could allow authorities to seize and destroy any device used for copyright infringement.
 
The TPP also includes an extension of the copyright term on original works to 70 years from the current 50.
 
 
Earlier this month, Twitter suspended the accounts of two American sports websites for posting animated GIFs of NFL plays, which the league claims are protected under its copyright.
 
Law professor and copyright expert Michael Geist said Canada's copyright laws allow for wider non-commercial use of copyrighted content than other TPP countries.
 
Canada overhauled its copyright regime in 2012 following consultations with industry and consumer groups. One new rule is the so-called mash-up exception, which allows for the creation of a new work from a copyrighted work as long as it is for a non-commercial use.
 
Yet under the most recent draft of the TPP, Geist said, Canadian companies have to comply with court orders to remove content — but it doesn't saying anything about which courts, or where.
 
"It seems to me very possible that you could have something that's legal in Canada that could be required to be taken down based on a ruling in a different TPP country," he said.
 
Copyright lawyer John Simpson said the Canadian government actively decided not to pursue a notice-and-takedown system or expand the penalties for copyright infringement when it amended its intellectual property rules.
 
"The concern is, under the TPP, that a lot of that would be undone," he said. "And that would be very disruptive."
 
Yet Simpson said some of the concerns about the TPP agreement are overblown, adding it's notoriously hard to predict how copyright law will be enforced because of public policy concerns and corporate practice.
 
Even if Canada's copyright laws are changed, he said, it doesn't mean the most draconian of the new measures will be actively and consistently enforced.
 
He cited the example of the cosplay community, where people hold conventions dressed up as their favourite movie and TV characters in flagrant violation of the copyright of the major studios.
 
"People have had visions of (police vans) going around and rounding up a bunch people in stormtrooper costumes and taking them to jail," he said. "That's not going to happen."

MORE National ARTICLES

Police Say Randy Quaid, Wife Taken Into Custody In Vermont Trying To Cross US-Canada Border

Police Say Randy Quaid, Wife Taken Into Custody In Vermont Trying To Cross US-Canada Border
American actor Randy Quaid was taken into custody Friday night while trying to cross into the United States from Canada, Vermont State Police said.

Police Say Randy Quaid, Wife Taken Into Custody In Vermont Trying To Cross US-Canada Border

Politics Behind Harper Ad That Cites Mentally Ill Dad Allan Schoenborn Who Killed Kids: Lawyers

Politics Behind Harper Ad That Cites Mentally Ill Dad Allan Schoenborn Who Killed Kids: Lawyers
In the minute-long radio ad, the Conservative leader references "the tragic story" of Allan Schoenborn, who in February 2010 was found "not criminally responsible" on account of a mental disorder.

Politics Behind Harper Ad That Cites Mentally Ill Dad Allan Schoenborn Who Killed Kids: Lawyers

Man Charged After Alleged Incident At Calgary Campaign Event

Man Charged After Alleged Incident At Calgary Campaign Event
Police allege a man entered the Tuscany Club with his face concealed by a Confederate flag.

Man Charged After Alleged Incident At Calgary Campaign Event

Stephen Poloz Says Slashed Interest Rates Are Saving Economy Long-Term

He makes his remarks on Saturday to an international audience at a meeting of the Institute of International Finance in Lima, Peru.

Stephen Poloz Says Slashed Interest Rates Are Saving Economy Long-Term

Conservatives Ramp Up Economic Sales Pitch With Days To Go In Election Campaign

Conservatives Ramp Up Economic Sales Pitch With Days To Go In Election Campaign
Joe Oliver held an event in Toronto to target Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau's fiscal plan, which includes a pledge to run deficits of up to $10-billion a year for three years to put money into infrastructure projects.

Conservatives Ramp Up Economic Sales Pitch With Days To Go In Election Campaign

13 Indo-Canadian Veterinarians Win Decade-Long Racism Case Against College

13 Indo-Canadian Veterinarians Win Decade-Long Racism Case Against College
"I was not fighting for money, I was fighting for justice. You don't know the hell I have lived through and continue to live through," Hakam Bhullar, owner of Atlas Vet Clinic in Vancouver

13 Indo-Canadian Veterinarians Win Decade-Long Racism Case Against College