Proposed Canadian MP3 Player Tax Struck Down 36
Sgs-Cruz writes "The Globe and Mail reports that the Canadian Federal Court of Appeal has struck down the Canadian Copyright Board's proposed tax on the capacity of digital music players such as the iPod. The article also makes clear why this won't lead to an end to the levy on blank media such as CD-R in Canada."
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Btw, in the future, it would be much appreciated if you log in when spouting senseless dribble, as I can then filter out your account.
Good and bad? (Score:5, Insightful)
http://www.michaelgeist.ca/content/view/2552/125/ [michaelgeist.ca]
Wow (Score:4, Insightful)
Never mind the fact that the taxes would apply to technology copyright holders rely on to push their content, notably digital audio players such as the iPod.
Re:Wow (Score:5, Insightful)
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Canadians are not committing copyright violations when they make copies for personal use. That's what the private copying right (part VIII of the act) is about. Those are legal copies they're making.
The problem is giving appropriate compensation to the copyright holders for these free copies. The act imposes the levy to pay for it, but lots of people don't use levied media to store the
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By the way, it is unlikely to be applied to generic hard drives, just as it doesn't apply to recordable DVDs: the levy is only placed on media where the main use is to hold music. Currently that's audio cassettes if they are 40 minutes or longer, CD-R, CD-RW (and the Audio versions of those), minidiscs. There was a proposal to extend it to the media in music players; that's what was overturned, ba
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1. Yes, CDRs are becoming obsolete as the medium for storing music. That's why the levy should have been applied to MP3 players.
2. Why is using DVD-R's for backups funny? That just seems rational. The levy is supposed to apply to media that are mainly used for music. That's still true about CDRs, but has never been true about DVDs.
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Some AC wrote: That is blatantly false. The levy is also charged for media that is used primarly for backup and distribution of data and other non-music content. Like Linux for example. Every time I burn an ISO, I have to pay the levy with no benefit to the producers of the content in the ISO.
I wasn't talking about your personal use, I was talking about the overall use by everyone, in the view of the Copyright Board. Read the Cop
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You should read the Copyright Act. That's not what it says.
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Bad news (Score:1, Interesting)
Also its impossible to argue that mp3 players are used legally.
I have an iPod 80gig. From iTunes if i bought music there it would cost over 10,000$ to fill it easily. I seriously doubt anyone is willing to pony up that kind of cash for an mp3 player.
Re:Bad news (Score:4, Insightful)
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The Canadian Songwriters Ass.'s proposal (Score:4, Informative)
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I don't get the analogy between songwriting and beer brewing. With brewing you can make something tangible that can only be used by one person at a time, and thus you can sell it. However, a songwriter can create a song once that can be enjoyed by everyone.
The difficulty is in figuring out how to comp
Darn... (Score:2)
Nothing says "fun conversation around the water cooler" like flimsy moral justification for continued song downloading.