Monday, January 21, 2008

Copyright should protect and nurture the rights of creators, says coalition paper

No matter what happens, any copyright legislation in Canada has to put the rights of artists and creators first, says the Creators' Copyright Coalition.

The coalition -- an alliance of 16 professional associations of individual creators and performers and copyright collective societies active in the theatre, the visual arts, the applied arts, literature, music, recording and audiovisual (radio, television, film and commercials -- has published a position paper by which it hopes to influence forthcoming, and somewhat delayed, legislation.

John Degen, novelist and Executive Director of the Professional Writers Association of Canada: “I believe Canada can have a strong copyright law protecting the work and careers of all professional creators, while fairly and reasonably addressing the concerns of both corporations and consumers.The CCC statement is meant as a step in that direction.”

The paper asks the government to enact copyright legislation that will:
1) Recognize the central role of authors and performers in innovation and in the artistic and cultural progress of a society;
2) Reaffirm that the principal objective of the Copyright Act is the protection of the moral and economic rights of authors and performers;
3)Reaffirm their right to just remuneration for the use of their work;
4)Reaffirm that the introduction of new technologies should not threaten the fundamentals of copyright, in particular, activity relating to fair dealing provisions
5) Resist the expropriation of rights through the use of exemptions granted users; and,
6) Avoid placing the entire burden of defending these rights on authors and performers, who should not have to go to court or install costly technological protection measures.

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3 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

There is another side to this argument that really needs to be looked at:

http://www.appropriationart.ca

11:35 am  
Blogger John said...

anonymous,

The CCC is familiar with Appropriation Art and how Michael Geist has named this relatively small group as represenatives of all artists in Canada. We represent about 100,000 professional creators, all of whom respect AA's fair dealing rights. We try not to make a distinction between what AA does and what falls within normal creative practice within the limits of the law.

How many members does AA have, and will they offer the same respect of their own limitations under copyright?

Why do so many proponents of this shadowy "other side" choose to remain anonymous in their comments?

11:33 am  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

"Shadowy other side?" Nice comment. You seem a bit touchy, yes? I see no reason why my bringing attention to other issues that are at stake here would make you so defensive?

Oh, um, if you actually visited the website you would see that all its members are listed there.

2:26 pm  

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