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Charlie Angus private copying levy bill

p2pnet view P2P | Politics:- NDP MP Charlie Angus (right) has “shaken up the copyright reform process today with a pair of proposed measures” blogs Michael Geist.

The first is a private member’s bill “that would expand the scope of the private copying levy to include digital audio recorders (DARs) such as iPods”, he says, going on >>>

Bill C-499 comes as a response to earlier court cases that ruled that DARs are beyond the scope of the current law.  The second is a motion (M-506) that calls for support to reform the Copyright Act’s fair dealing provision by adding the words “such as” to make the current list of fair dealing categories illustrative rather than exhaustive.  In addition, the motion codifies the six criteria discussed in Canadian caselaw for determining whether a particular use of a work qualifies as fair dealing.

I’m certainly supportive of Angus’ effort to push copyright issues into the spotlight.  I’m particularly supportive of the motion on fair dealing.  The motion states:

Fair Dealing Provisions within the Copyright Act

That, in the opinion of the House, the government should amend section 29 of the Copyright Act in such a way as to expand the Fair Dealing provisions of the act; specifically by deleting section 29. and inserting the words,

29. Fair dealing of a copyrighted work for purposes such as research, private study, criticism, news reporting or review, is not an infringement of copyright.

29.1 In determining whether the dealing made of a work in any particular case is fair dealing, the factors to be considered shall include,

(a) the purpose of the dealing;
(b) the character of the dealing;

(c) the amount of the dealing;

(d) alternatives to the dealing;

(e) the nature of the work; and

(f) the effect of the dealing on the work.

This approach is precisely what thousands of Canadians supported during last summer’s copyright consultation.  It strikes the right balance – it’s fair dealing, not free dealing – and it is based on current Canadian jurisprudence.  Greater fair dealing flexiblity benefits creators, innovators, educators, and the broader public.  The motion deserves strong support from all parties.

The attempt to expand the private copying levy in Bill C-499 is more problematic. I am not as opposed to private copying as some, but I think expanding the system in this manner raises real concerns.

  • First, I think we need to work on fixing the system before we work on expanding it.  There are ongoing concerns about distribution of proceeds, copying vs. making available, and overbroad coverage of the levy that should be addressed.
  • Second, the bill expands the levy to audio recording devices, defined in C-499 as “a device that contains a permanently embedded data storage medium, including solid state or hard disk, designed, manufactured and advertised for the purpose of copying sound recordings, excluding any prescribed kind of recording device.”  This covers everything – iPods, iPhones, Blackberries, Androids, iPads, personal computers.  While the CPCC (the private copying collective) may not target all of these devices, there is nothing in the bill that prevents them from doing so.
  • Third, the bill deals solely with sound recordings, but there have already been calls to extend to video and other forms of content.  Expanding the levy in this manner without addressing those issues leaves open the prospect of an even bigger levy in the future.
  • Fourth, the competitive concerns associated with levies on devices cannot be ignored.  The last attempt to place a levy on iPods led to charges as high as $75 per device.  That market distortion leads consumers to purchase outside Canada, which means no levy, no sales taxes, and lost retail sales.
  • Fifth, we need to think about the interaction between private copying and anti-circumvention rules.  The industry is pushing for anti-circumvention rules that would prohibit Canadians from picking the digital lock on copy controls found on CDs.  If Canadians have paid for the right to copy via the levy, surely those rights should not be trumped by the use of DRM.  Yet that is precisely what both Bills C-60 and C-61 proposed.
  • Sixth, the industry cannot have the levy and continue to claim that Canada is an illegal downloading haven.  Canadians have paid more than $250 million in fees associated with the levy and the Angus bill would ratchet that up dramatically.

Angus’ comments in the House of Commons this morning are posted below:

Mr. Speaker,

I rise today to submit a bill  to update the Canadian copyright Act, which extends the Private Copying Levy to the next generation of devices that consumers are using for copying sound recordings for personal use.

The private copying levy is a long-standing Canadian solution that has compensated artists for some of the enormous copying that is taking place.
At the same time, updating the levy will provide legal certainty for fans to copy songs onto an i-Pod or MP3 player.

The levy is a compromise that works. In a world of endless downloading and copying, it provides a monetizing stream for the artists who create such phenomenal cultural works.

Mr. Speaker, there are two dead end roads on the copyright debate. The first dead end is the belief that digital locks, predatory lawsuits and zero tolerance on access can push consumers back in time.

The other dead end is the belief that all the great works of film, music and art can be looted at will.

If we are going to move down the right road we must get serious about securing a monetizing stream for creators.

Canada has a chance to strike the right balance:
No. 1: artists have a right to get paid. This is why I am bringing forward the bill on updating copying levy.

No. 2. Consumers, educators and researchers have a right to access those works – which is why I will be tabling a motion on defining fair dealing to protect those rights.


Mr. Speaker, the New Democratic Party will continue to work to ensure that copyright laws are updated to protect artists while ensuring access to these amazing works.

‘Why is this good?’

In a second post, “MPs from the Liberals, Bloc, and NDP today all supported a motion at the Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage to extend the private copying levy to devices such as iPods”, says Geist, adding:

“The motion, proposed by Bloc MP Carole Lavallée, provided:

“That the Committee recommends that the government amend Part VIII of the Copyright Act so that the definition of ‘audio recording medium’ extends to devices with internal memory, so that the levy on copying music will apply to digital music recorders as well, thereby entitling music creators to some compensation for the copies made of their work.

“Interestingly, the committee was split – 5 in support ( Charlie Angus, Carole Lavallée, Roger Pomerleau, Scott Simms, Justin Trudeau) and 5 against (Rod Bruinooge, Dean Del Mastro, Royal Galipeau, Nina Grewal, Tim Uppal).

“That left it to Conservative Chair Gary Schellenberger who voted in favour of the motion.

“That is seemingly at odds with comments today from Canadian Heritage Minister James Moore and Industry Minister Tony Clement who were strongly opposed to measure.”

But, “Why is this good?” – wonders Nelson in a comment post to the second item.

“I am confused as to why preemptively applying fines against consumers for a crime they have the ability to commit is a good thing”, he says, continuing:

“I don’t pay a libel levy on blank paper, a home invasion victim binding levy on lengths of rope, or a bus stop glass breaking levy on hardware store hammers. I never thought I’d say these words, but today, I think I agree with Tony Clement. Dr. Geist, what is the benefit of this levy?”

Says WEBmadman:

“Yet again I get to pay others for my own freaking music!!!!

“I burn CDs of my own music (stuff I create) as well as artists who release their music under CC licenses (artists who give me permission for non-commercial copying and who I know will never get a dime of this money),and get to pay major label artists for the pleasure. Yes, I know there’s some red tape trail I could follow that would cost me more in time and stamps then it’s worth to “reclaim” some of that.

“Now this crap is spreading into other media as well? Unbelievable!

“I can’t believe I’m siding with Dean Del Mastro over Charlie Angus on this!”

Geist is the Canada Research Chair in Internet and E-commerce Law at the University of Ottawa.

Stay tuned.

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First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win ~ Mahatma Gandhi

Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has ~ Margaret Meade.

Michael Geist – Angus Introducing Private Copying Levy Bill, Flexible Fair Dealing Motion, March 16, 2010
second post
– Liberals, Bloc, and NDP All Support Motion To Extend Private Copying Levy, March 16, 2010


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10 Responses to “Charlie Angus private copying levy bill”

  1. Reader's Write Says:

    Howard Knopf also has a post up about this.

    Same camp different views?

  2. Devil's Advocate Says:

    You lost me at “levy” (again).

    …Sorry, Charlie!

  3. Reader's Write Says:

    All I know is I drove my Chevy to the levy but the levy was dry . . .

  4. Robert Says:

    Flaw:
    “that the levy on copying music will apply to digital music recorders” this INCLUDES those that do NOT copy and instead use a computer, or portable device with internal memory, to CREATE their OWN works!

    So essentially, when I purchase a portable recorder for my live shows (eventually I’ll do that) I’m paying some other “artist” (actually some corporate schmuck) for creating my OWN fucking work!

    How stupid are these “experts” ? The world may never know!

  5. Steve Says:

    Although I don’t really agree with paying a levy, if I could pay $75 per device I purchased and then be legally allowed to download content to my heart’s content, never have to worry about becoming a “criminal” for copying a CD or DVD that I purchased to my MP3 player, etc. I would do so in a heart beat.

    My biggest concern is that the music industry may be successful in pushing through a Canadian DMC law, similar to the US, making it illegal to transfer any content I purchase to any other device I own. This would be a total nightmare IMO. Literally every single person I know, including myself, would immediately become a “criminal” and this is a totally rediculous situation. I am more than willing to pay a fee to make this all go away, especially if I could then download and view TV shows, music, movies, etc. legally. The industry and artists do need some way to be paid for their content and I am not aware of a truly “ideal” solution anywhere.

    When I look at the other options and consider how they may affect us, (up to) $75 per device doesn’t seem all that bad.

  6. Devil's Advocate Says:

    I don’t understand this move from Charlie.
    Either copyright’s application on digital content is simply wrong, or it isn’t, so imposing any levies can’t and won’t decriminalize filesharing.

    And what of the countless IP holders from the movie/software/publishing industries? Are we to believe they’re all just gonna sit back and let only “music” be compensated??

    And what about all the other storage devices – Flash drives, computers, external harddrives, game consoles, etc.? Are we to believe these will not only be next, but “necessary” to include in the levy??

    And what about all the people that don’t download anything? Doesn’t this kind of move punish everyone “in advance” for an infringment only a small percentage of the population are committing (according to the data we keep seeing from all these “industries”)??

    Let us not forget that filesharing is NOT a crime, and that sharing copyrighted material is simply a civil infringement!
    ______________________________

    @Steve:

    “$75 per device doesn’t seem all that bad”

    So, let me get this straight…
    If you were to purchase, for example, 3 iPods for your family (could be 1 for yourself and 2 for a couple of the kids, whatever), you’d have no problem with being asked to fork over an additional $225?! (That’s enough to buy another one, isn’t it?)

    Not sure I get your logic.

    What if, down the road, they decided that your computer is to be included (sounds like a perfectly logical extension of the principle). Or your XBox. Or your next flash drive. Still gonna be okay with that $75?

    What if you don’t even download music?
    Is it okay to expect you to pay this kind of extortional fee?

  7. Robert W Says:

    Levies are stupid. We don’t need yet another tax for this country’s government to abuse.

    And I also shudder at the thought of a DMCA-like law where I wouldn’t be allowed to transfer content from one device to another… which is totally retarded, seeing as how I can only listen to or watch one file at a time anyway.

  8. Robert Says:

    The sad part, people will flock to indie releases but those will be choked because corps want your $$ more than creativity. Guaranteed they intend to give you no alternative but their “content” (aka rehacked versions of what was once creative).

    And it looks like the spineless government employees will do exactly as paid to.

    My hope, voters will wake up and vote people in who are not bought and paid for, if they even exist. That would learn the politicians a lesson, well not really because they know they’ll be out so they collect the cash from corps + tax dollars and run. Hmm… well maybe we can take it back by cutting their pensions by 75%, that might fix things ; )

  9. Reader's Write Says:

    A2F2A.COM

  10. Monkey D. Luffy Says:

    @Steve

    I for one would NOT “gladly” pay $75.00 per device to the extortionist pigs in the RIAA. As has been pointed out, the other rights holders will be all over this for their piece of the pie. Another point, not ALL mp3 players are iPods, despite what mac heads may think. I just checked at newegg, the cheapest mp3 player they had there was $13.00 including shipping. Add the $75 RIAA levy and it’s now $88.00. Now we tack that same $75 tax on to DVDR/CDR’s, hard drives, any “device” capable of recording sound; KA CHING, KA-CHING, KA-CHING $$$$$$, it’s happy days are here again for the same assholes that have been suing fans and now want to disconnect people from the internet. Oh yeah, hookers and coke aren’t getting any cheaper, and the record company execs need to keep that lifestyle going.

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