Canadian Government Says DRM Circumvention Not Related To Copyright 119
An anonymous reader writes "Michael Geist has followed up a recent
release of internal government talking points on copyright with the full, internal clause-by-clause analysis of Bill C-32. A new copyright bill is
expected as soon as this week and the government document confirms there is no defense to violations of the digital lock rules, noting 'a contravention of this prohibition is not an infringement of copyright and the defenses to
infringement of copyright are not defenses to these prohibitions.' The government's own words on the digital lock provisions confirm that they may be unconstitutional since they fall outside the boundaries of copyright."
Basically, if you break DRM even without violating copyright in the process you can still be held liable, and from this any defense based on copyright law (fair use, etc.) is not valid in such cases. On the flipside, several legal experts think that makes those provisions of the law less likely to stand up in court.
Re:Victory against the MPAA and RIAA (Score:5, Informative)
The MPAA, RIAA and fair use don't exist in Canada
CMPDA (Canadian Motion Picture Distributors Association) ~= MPAA
CRIA (Canadian Recording Industry Association) ~= RIAA
Fair Dealing ~= Fair Use
Not the same, but not exactly different either.
Fair Dealing in Canada I'd argue is actually superior to fair use in the States.
The Canadian Supreme court clarified in one of its rulings: