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Industry Canada disappoints anti-TPM petitioners

Industry Canada disappoints anti-TPM petitioners By:  Rafael Ruffolo On: 29 Aug 2007 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Digital Copyright Canada makes little headway in its campaign to prohibit the use of measures that would protect technology from interference, even for the purposes of security research



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The federal government ignored key elements of a petition asking for protection of IT property rights, according to the lobbying activist group who says Ottawa is protecting legacy business models.

The petition, which was brought to the government by Digital Copyright Canada earlier this year, called for a prohibition on technological protection measures (TPMs) that are used in hardware devices without the consent of the device’s owner. It also asked for Parliament to recognize the citizen’s rights to control their own communication devices and have the freedom to choose any software they wish.

According to the lobbyist group, the government’s response – signed by former Industry Minister Maxime Bernier – avoided technology property rights issues and instead focused exclusively on copyright issues. Industry Canada said the government is continuing to review Canada’s Copyright Act to weigh effective deterrents to copyright infringement versus the legal realities which innovation, research and consumer choice.

“The government will be mindful of the perspective raised by the petitioners as it considers copyright amendments to address the Internet and new technologies, including the use and application of technical protection measures to copyright content,” the Industry Canada response read. “The government wishes to thank the petitioners for drawing attention to these important copyright issues involving technological protection measure and their use, and looks forward to hearing from Canadians, whether rights holders, intermediaries or users of copyright material, as it moves forward with copyright reform.”

Russell McOrmond, an Internet consultant and head of Digital Copyright Canada, said he was frustrated by the government’s off-topic response. He said the petition was primarily concerned about locks being put on hardware devices, rather than on merely copyrighted content.

“If somebody put a lock on my house and said that I’m not allowed to enter it without somebody else’s permission, most people would think that’s illegal and some would go as far to suggest that’s theft,” McOrmond said. “So, why is it that if a lock is put on our iPod that it isn’t theft? Well, it’s actually the same thing because it’s somebody other than the owner putting a lock on it.”

McOrmond considers TPMs, which is defined as the use of technological tools to restrict the use of a digital work, to be counterproductive in protecting copyrighted content. He said the idea of using technology to protect content is absurd and works to sacrifice tangible property rights for the sake of protecting business models.

“If you look at the platform of pretty much every conservative party all over the world, usually platform plank No. 1 is the protecting of private property rights,” McOrmond said. “And in this case, they’re saying, ‘Well, we have some high powered lobbyists that have come in and for the sake of protecting they’re outdated business models, we’re essentially going to eradicate private rights.’”


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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo joined ComputerWorld as a staff writer in June 2007 and was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism. He is interested in government IT, copyright, virt... more

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Comments (1)

onsumers, not corporations, need protection
8/30/2007 12:00:00 AMYou'd think that the software copy protection of the 1980s would have taught people something. Instead we find people doing the same things today. Then there is the Sony root-kit case. Why were there no criminal charges laid? And why do our DVDs have 'regional encoding'? Often called copy protection, it actually does no such thing. Anyone can make a perfect copy of a regionally encoded DVD, but they can only play them on a player set for that region. If you move to another region, you either have to buy an expensive multi-region player or get all new DVDs. All of this pales in comparison to the horror of DRM on various MP3 players however. When you upgrade your player to a newer model, you may find yourself unable to move the music you paid for onto the new player. Of course, none of these schemes actually work in practice. At worst they slow the crackers down by a few days. Meanwhile consumers everywhere are inconvenienced and treated like criminals for doing things that are their right as license holders. Our governments should follow the example of some other states and make it illegal to employ anything that interferes with the consumer's right to legitimately use the products they paid for.
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