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    Documentary "Why Copyright?"

    The continuing fight against Canada's own DMCA has just created  a documentary film titled Why Copyright? Produced by Michael Geist and available as a stream, it is also available as a OGG download version, or a torrent. The film features Red Hat founder Bob Young, sci-fi writer Karl
    Schroeder, and many other voices from across Canada.

     Please spread the message along to anyone you know that is concerned about American policies and politics being brought in to Canada.

    Bill c-61 expected to die

    From slashdot.. 

    The Canadian DMCA Video Competition

    The Canadian DMCA: What You Can Do

    Copyright cock-up

    On the surface of it, Jim Prentice's Bill C-61 spells out a number of
    consumer-friendly provisions like time-shifting, format-shifting and
    exceptions for personal use. But each one has an asterisk attached:
    users will be forbidden from breaking technological locks – sometimes
    called Digital Rights Management, or DRM – to access content.

    This has the funny effect of making it kind of irrelevant how strong a
    digital lock is. The fact that the lock on an iTunes song is fairly
    easy to circumvent wouldn't matter, because now that lock would have
    the force of law behind it. Nor would it matter whether your intended
    use of the material is fair game, even under Canada's woefully
    ill-defined “fair dealing” provisions.

    Link 

    Copyright reform: The 1,000-pound gorilla at the Telecom Summit

    There is a real fear among Canadians that this predicted spread of
    digital content to every device will come to an abrupt halt with the
    digital lock provision in the proposed legislation. Indeed, it's an
    issue many of Canadians want answers to – the copyright protest group
    on Facebook has seen more than 20,000 new members join since the reform
    bill was introduced on Thursday, bringing total membership to 61,000.

    Yet, no one at the summit is talking about it.

    The issue of copyright reform may be raised during Tuesday's
    "regulatory blockbuster" panel session. Perhaps then the gorilla will
    come out of its cage.

    Link 

    Copywrong Protection

    Imagine if the federal government passed a law that would make nearly
    half of all Canadians criminals. Imagine if your Internet Service
    Provider was obliged to report any customers who up/download more than
    20MB per day. Imagine if Canada’s laws were written to protect US
    corporations rather than Canadian citizens.

    Canada's new copyright bill: More spin than 'win-win'

    The worst thing about the bill is that it makes its own balancing
    provisions irrelevant. The bill essentially says that technology trumps
    whatever rights consumers or competitors might have otherwise had. So
    the law no longer matters. People only have whatever rights content
    owners choose for them.

    For instance, if the CD you're now
    allowed to shift to your iPod is technologically locked down, then,
    well, sorry -- you're completely out of luck. Try to circumvent the
    access and copy controls, and the well-publicized provision to limit
    damages to $500 for noncommercial infringements no longer applies.
    You're on the hook for up to $20,000 per infringement, which is
    actually $60,000 per song by the time you account for the composer,
    performer and record label. Multiply that by a dozen or so songs and
    you get a sense of the damage awards really possible if this bill
    becomes law.

    This draconian american style dmca needs to be stopped!

    The Honourable Jim Prentice, Minister of Industry, and the Honourable
    Josée Verner, Minister of Canadian Heritage, Status of Women and
    Official Languages, and Minister for La Francophonie, will deliver
    brief statements and answer media inquiries shortly after the tabling
    of a bill to amend the Copyright Act. Members of the media will
    also be able to attend a technical briefing and lock-up prior to the
    tabling of the bill to amend the Copyright Act.

     Find ways you can help stop this here from previous posts.