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Copyright critics promote cause with comic book

Copyright critics promote cause with comic book

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 15 Jun 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

If you’re tuning in late to the Canadian copyright reform debate, the Appropriation Art Coalition has created a free comic book that it says will get you up to speed on the issue

For those who flip to the “funny pages” when they pick up a newspaper, a Vancouver-based copyright reform activist group has created a comic book to voice its concerns on the Conservative government’s controversial Bill C-61.

The 51st State is a free, clickable comic book created by Appropriation Art Coalition artist and co-founder Gordon Duggan. The book chronicles the entire battle over Canadian copyright reform – which it depicts as a battle between the “evil emissaries of American interests” against the “fantastic freedom of expression fighters.” The comic includes hundreds of links to Web sites, articles, and other resources, with every quote bubble clickable as a hyperlink.

“The point of the comic was to try and get as much information in as small a space as possible,” Duggan said about the nine-page comic book. “A lot of this information as been scattered, sort of like the people fighting against this legislation. The cartoon captions are all real quotations, made by the politicians and activists depicted, so if you see something you’re intrigued about you can click on it and read it in more depth.”

The comic book was released online just prior to last week’s Bill C-61 announcement. The long-awaited legislation, which would amend the Copyright Act to prohibit users from removing technical protection measures (TPMs) on software or other digital media, has been referred by industry activists as the Canadian equivalent of the heavily criticized U.S. Digital Millennium Copyright Act.

Vocal opponents to the bill such as University of Law professor Michael Geist, Boing Boing editor Cory Doctorow, NDP MP Charlie Angus, and Barenaked Ladies front man Stephen Page are all depicted as freedom of expression fighters in the comic book. Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, Industry Minister Jim Prentice, and Liberal MP Dan McTeague, and Canadian Recording Industry Association (CRIA) President Graham Henderson are portrayed as supporters for the U.S.-inspired copyright reform movement.

“If the tobacco industry submitted studies to the government that showed it had no damaging effects on health, these statistics would be dismissed,” Duggan said. “But yet when the music and film industry put these studies in front of the government, they ignore their own studies in favour of those industries. This is no different than writing health laws based on stats from the tobacco industry.”


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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.

Comments (2)

sm
by John 6/17/2008 12:00:00 AMThe knee-jerk anti-Amercianism alone was enough to turn me off. I will now support this bill whole-heartedly.
being un-American is what defines Canada
by Derrick 6/23/2008 12:00:00 AMThe majority of Canadians all define themselves by one constant and that is 'Not being American'. If we adopt/import thier copyright laws, what is next, importing their 'right to bear arms' gun laws ? If the general public was truly aware of what this legislation meant to them, there would be a huge outcry. Gramma wouldn't be able to download her favourite Irish Rovers tunes and Uncle Ted would have to stop download recent movies. Canadians rightly or wrongly download more music and movies per capita than any other country in the world. Canadians also rank in the top 5 for buying online. This is why the US industries are pressuring Canada to change its copyright laws
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