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ISPs await new version of copyright act

ISPs await new version of copyright act

By:  Howard Solomon  On: 19 May 2010 For: Network World Canada Creator

Providers are on alert after a report says the amendments will come in weeks, but won’t go further than obliging providers to pass on warnings to alleged pirates. However, the head of one ISP association wonders what the rush is

Internet service providers are watching Ottawa carefully after a report that the government is about to re-introduce copyright legislation virtually unchanged from the 2008 version.

ISPs want to see if the provisions affecting providers, which they are largely willing to go along with, stay the same or whether the law will be toughened.

Their antenna were raised after University of Ottawa Internet law professor Michael Geist said sources have told him the earlier bill, called C-61, will be the heart of the legislation that will be brought to Parliament next month.

That bill include the so-called “notice and notice” warning provision the industry has voluntarily been following for some time, under which content creators alert ISPs about suspected copyright violators, who then pass on the notice to subscribers. The hope is that with a warning the customers will stop alleged illegal acts.

If that provision stays the same it’s “good news, bad news” for providers, Geist said in an interview Wednesday.

On the one hand “notice and notice” has been used for some time by ISPs and therefore gives them some certainty about how to deal with the law. It’s a balanced approach, he said. By comparison, some content creators are demanding “notice and takedown” rights, similar to those in U.S. law, in which a copyright holder can compel an ISP to take down an offending subscriber’s Web site or connection.

However, he believes hope is gone that Canada will adopt a so-called flexible fair-dealing approach to copyright by allowing digital copying and transfer over the Internet of videos and music for personal use. It is also likely the government will follow the U.S. and enforce the right of content creators to put digital locks on videos, music, books and other materials, he said.

This will hurt ISPs by limiting their ability to bring new, innovative services to market, Geist said.

The Conservative government withdrew C-61 and held a series of public consultations last year after a number of consumer groups protested that the proposed act favoured the film and recording industry. However, recently the U.S. has put pressure on Canada to toughen its copyright law. On Wednesday the Congressional antipiracy caucus, made up of 70 members of Congress, said five countries including Canada are causing "serious problems" for American content creators.

 

"What is stunning is that piracy isn't just emanating from countries like Russia and China, but also from Canada and Mexico, our largest trading partners," complained Senator Orin Hatch of Utah.  "Now is the time for policymakers to come together to tackle this global threat that cripples economic growth and stifles the innovation that has made our nation great."


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Howard Solomon Howard Solomon Howard Solomon is assistant editor of Network World Canada covering network infrastructure and communications issues. An IT journalist  since 1997, he has written for several of IT... more

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