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Red Hat founder Bob Young speaks out on copyright bill

Red Hat founder Bob Young speaks out on copyright bill

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 05 Jun 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

A new open source software group has added its voice to the opposition against the Conservative government’s impending copyright reform bill. Lulu CEO Bob Young likens the legislation to banning screwdrivers because they could be used by burglars

Young said the proposed bill will cater too heavily to the content industry and not to the engineers and software developers that are going to be most severely impacted by the new laws. The proposed anti-circumvention legislation, he said, is similar to making the use and ownership of screw-drivers and pliers illegal because they can be used to commit crimes such as burglary.

“Software languages are simply a form of expression and it’s neither good nor bad, just like the English language is neither good nor bad,” he said. “But anti-circumvention measures make the actual use of language illegal and not the criminal behaviour. I have no problem with the government working with the RCMP to come up with laws that make it easier to throw the real crooks in jail, but I do have a problem with stopping software developers from innovating.”

But not everybody shares the same viewpoint of the CSIA. In April, copyright reform supporters – which included members of the entertainment industry – got together for a panel discussion on intellectual property rights in Toronto. Featured speakers such as Pickering-Scarborough East MP Dan McTeague, EMI Music President Deane Cameron, and Canadian Recording Industry Association (CRIA) President Graham Henderson, got together to support the government’s proposed copyright plan. Many of these speakers stressed the need for strict copyright legislation to keep the Canadian entertainment and software industries thriving.

“We need to recognize that Canada signed a treaty saying that it would implement World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) treaty,” MP Dan McTeague said. “Canada lags behind many nations in this. It’s an important debate for politicians in this country.”

The WIPO treaty, adopted in 1996, stresses the need for additional copyright protections due to advances (at the time) in information technology. The treaty’s champions the need for including anti-circumvention laws for TPMs.

Other panelists, like Graham Henderson, president of the CRIA agreed: “Intellectual property rights in general are very poorly understood in Canada. We don’t talk, think or write a lot about it. It’s created a missing link in Canada’s innovation agenda.”

But industry executives like Young said that Canadian legislations need to stop being pressured by content producers and international bodies and instead focus on doing what’s right for innovation on its own soil.

“I would step back and look at this issue from a first principles point-of-view,” he said. “What are we trying to achieve? We are trying to throw content pirates in jail, so we should be looking at homegrown Canadians solutions to do this.”










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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.

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