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Canadian Supreme Court defends internet innovation--Happy Canada Day Canadian Supreme Court defends internet innovation "despite any incidental effects on copyright owners." Just because p2p like Gnutella (which is mentioned in the ruling) has made collecting royalties harder doesn't mean the ISP's should have to pay. "Don't shoot the messenger." In the unanimous ruling by the Canadian Supreme court Wednesday June 30 2004, ISP's don't have to pay the Society of Society of Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of Canada (SOCAN) for music downloaded in Canada. Here's a catchy paragraph from the ruling: Quote:
Happy Canada Day! [et voilà--the Québec judge The Honourable Mr. Justice Louis LeBel, who provided many of the reasons, also emphasized the importance of home-users' privacy in paragraph 153. Yay! I was also glad too to see that Québec voters kicked out the Minister who "wanted to make changes to our copy right law"] |
Cool :) Happy Canada day to Canadians and happy home moving day to fellow Québécois! (à Stief: glad to see liberals as a minoritary government... and with 54 sieges, le Bloc Québécois did great, as well as the NDP. Well, it was the first good federal election since 1993 :cool: ) |
Seems like a good time to live in Canada... hope or government will get that same sense of sense someday... European council is still trying to allow software patents even though the european parliament already decided on that issue... and not in favor of those patents (the progress bar is already patented in europe... illegale till now, and I hope it will remain illegal. |
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