I wrote to the Toronto Star today.
I don’t think it’ll ever be published, in print or on the web, but I had to say something. I’ve also contacted my MP and the Right Honourable American Biotch, Jim Prentice. This is what I have to say:
No, these proposed changes won’t change a thing. They’ll merely make things that us ground-level Canadians do illegal.
The problem with the bill isn’t that it wants to combat piracy. That’s fine. Piracy is bad. If we want free stuff, we can create it ourselves and release it under a free license.
The problem is that it makes transferring my music (that I bought) or my movies (that I bought) to a device illegal if the content provider has placed any sort of digital restriction on it.
This gives corporations the power over my rights. They can grant me (if they wish) to power to copy, but of course they don’t because they want to sell me a copy for each device I own, not a copy I can copy myself. The legislation purportedly protects these rights, but in fact does an end-run around them.
Of course the law won’t stop copying files. This is what digital media is about: Cheap reproduction. And digital restrictions are fundamentally flawed and will always be circumvented. So Canadians will still be doing what they like with the media they paid for, but now it will become illegal to do so.
This legislation stinks of being written by American corporate and governmental interests. This isn’t the Canada I know, where we simply kowtow to our American cousins. It offends me (as a person who voted for the Conservatives), and if this law passes, I will find somewhere better to place my vote.
Amen.
Tags: canada, copyright, IP




![About the [rmfo-blogs] service. [rmfo-blogs.com]](http://rmfo-blogs.com/images/rmfoblog.png)
Go for it! Prentice is a social liberal, who claims to be conservative yet is inspired by John Stuart Mill (see here: http://tinyurl.com/5kfkqu ). But, as you point out, he, like the rest of the Tories, is ultimately a shill for the business community, esp. American business interests. Too bad most Bible-believing Christians don’t know or care, or worse, enthusiastically endorse such behaviour.
If he really holds to that Mill quote, why doesn’t the sovereignty he claims individuals have over their own bodies and minds extends to goods they’ve purchased? (Of course, as a Presbyterian, Prentice should know better, but then, the Presbyterian Church of Canada having slipped as far as it has, I doubt if he’s even heard of the Westminster Standards, so I won’t blame him for that.)
June 15th, 2008 at 8:05 pm