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Copyright law amendment aims at digital users

Copyright law amendment aims at digital users

By:  Greg Meckbach  On: 11 Jun 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Bill C-61 would change existing federal legislation, making it illegal to circumvent technical protection measures though software developers and IT security researchers would be exempt. A lobbyist says the exemptions don’t go far enough

News of the Bill C-61 also made waves at this week’s Infosecurity Canada conference, where IT security professionals expressed their concerns over the impact the laws prohibiting circumvention of TPMs might have on their future research projects.

Brian O’Higgins, CTO at Third Brigade, said research techniques such as reverse engineering obfuscated and encrypted malware or applying patches to TPM-enabled software are just a few of the challenges security researchers can expect to face.

“I worry about a heavy hand in regards to TPMs,” he said. “Government oversight on security research doesn’t feel like a good thing. One of the biggest unintended consequences of the U.S. DMCA was that it caused a research chill in that country.”

O’Higgins said that if Canada needs to adopt the WIPO treaty, it should do so with minimal interference with research and technology.

“The U.S. DMCA hasn’t done anything to stop peer-to-peer file sharing and when the U.S. does go after these offenders, they’ve used the countries existing copyright laws,” he said. “Security research is in the public’s best interest and we don’t want to have the delays we now see the U.S. where companies need the clearance of lawyer to keep doing this.”

With files from Rafael Ruffolo










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Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach is editor of Network World Canada and has worked for ComputerWorld Canada, Communications & Networking and Computing Canada.

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having a chance for a quick read of bill c-61, i can say that it will likely be decades before we fully understand how this bill will be interpreted by the courts. contrary to what the minister claimed, this bill reduces certainty in the marketplace, not increases it.the largest portion of this bill is a canadian dmca, which is
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