{"id":334,"date":"2008-06-12T19:43:07","date_gmt":"2008-06-13T00:43:07","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/unitstep.net\/?p=334"},"modified":"2008-06-13T07:06:22","modified_gmt":"2008-06-13T12:06:22","slug":"bill-c-61-gets-a-reading-are-dmca-style-laws-coming-to-canada","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/unitstep.net\/blog\/2008\/06\/12\/bill-c-61-gets-a-reading-are-dmca-style-laws-coming-to-canada\/","title":{"rendered":"Bill C-61 gets a reading: Are DMCA-style laws coming to Canada?"},"content":{"rendered":"
This Thursday, Minister Prentice tabled Bill C-61, otherwise known as “Canadian DMCA”. This move was widely expected as well as the contents of the bill. Though there have been provisions added for some “fair use”, the details reveal<\/a> DMCA-style rules that may leave consumers in legal limbo when it comes to making personal copies. In fact, these rules are even more stringent than the US DMCA, and for a bill that’s been paraded as “Made in Canada”, there’s been a frighteningly small amount of feedback that the Federal Government has taken from its citizens. Add to this the rumours that Prentice met with<\/a> “U.S. trade representatives and entertainment industry lobbyists to discuss the legislation,” and you have to wonder just who<\/em> wrote this bill.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n The biggest offenders in the bill include severe penalties for tampering with “digital locks”, such as DRM. (Digital Rights Management, or as some like to put it, Digital Restrictions<\/em> Management) These are the restrictions put on certain media\/content that you’ve purchased that may limit you to listening\/viewing the media on only one device\/computer. Though Bill C-61 fully allows private copying among multiple devices – as it should – the point is rendered moot because of the provisions banning the circumvention of digital locks. So, though you are technically allowed to copy music you own to your MP3 player\/iPod, the actions that you may have to take to accomplish this perfectly legal action may themselves be illegal. For example, if you want to rip a DVD you own for watching on your iPod, you would be breaking the law because you’d have to use tools to circumvent the copy protection on the DVD.<\/p>\n This effectively puts you at the mercy of the content distributor, who may choose to limit your listening options. If you’ve purchased any content that can only play on one device because of DRM, there is effectively no legal way to copy it to other devices you own because breaking the DRM to accomplish this benign goal is against the law in and of itself. It’s like being told it’s “okay to eat cookies,” but then locking all of them in a box and adding, “so as long as you don’t touch any locks.”<\/p>\n There are some exemptions for uses like research but it remains to be seen how these exemptions will hold up in court should the bill pass, especially since it’s expressedly forbidden to use or produce the tools that circumvent digital locks. (You cannot distribute these tools, or else you face the possibility of a steep fine) The big worry here is that the laws against digital lock circumvention will be used to stifle research; such ideas are not far-fetched as the US DMCA has already had a chilling effect on research<\/a>.<\/p>\n