2007
Dec 
10

You Need To Know What’s Happening: Canadian Copyright Law and Political Piracy

Filed under: Canada,Politics — Mike Lawton @ 11:45  

If you care at all about Canadian musicians, writers, TV or film workers, or any other artist… you need to know what is happening.

If you care about your own rights with regards to music you listen to, movies you watch, literature you read, software you use… you need to find out about the new legislation being proposed by the federal government.

If you care about who is influencing our politicians, and who’s interests our laws are being written to protect… you need to think very hard about what this new proposal says.

If you don’t (or even if you do) understand terms and acronyms like DRM, DMCA, EULA, WIPO, P2P, Open Source, Creative Commons, and Fair Use… how confident are you that your politicians understand how they affect you as an individual (as opposed to what they are told about them by those that can afford lobbyists)?

(For a great explanation of what some of these concepts are and what this proposed legislation might mean to us, check out this slideshow by Wellington Grey about what has happened in the US.)

Laws that are written under the influence of foreign parties with commercial interests, and without public input, forced through without proper debate, education, or review, that directly affect nearly every citizen, and are modeled after a foreign act that has been a near total failure on every level… can not be tolerated.

People and organizations that benefit from this type of political piracy depend on a lazy and uninformed public. I beg you, educate yourself, then at least you’ll know why you’re so pissed off!

 

via Boing Boing by Cory Doctorow on 12/2/07


Canadian copyfightin’ law prof Michael Geist has revisited his list of “30 things you can do to stop the Canadian DMCA” — first posted the last time the Canadian government tried to bring down a US-style copyright law. The US’s approach to enforcing copyright in the digital age has resulted in 20,000 lawsuits against music fans, technology companies being sued out of existence for making new multi-purpose tools, and has not put one penny into the pocket of an artist or reduced downloading one bit. The USA stepped into uncharted territory in 1998 with the DMCA and fell off a cliff — that was reckless, but following them off the cliff is insane.

The Canadian minority Tory government is planning to do just that, first thing in the New Year, with a full-court press for a Canadian DMCA that goes way beyond the US counterpart, making it one of the worst copyright laws in the developed world, with extra-strong anti-circumvention rules that prohibit making and using tools that open up locked digital files, even when those files belong to you.

The last two Canadian Members of Parliament who championed a Canadian DMCA lost their jobs. Good things come in threes.

# Write to your local Member of Parliament. Nothing is more obvious or more important. Letters (which are better than email) from just a handful of constituents is enough to get the attention of your local MP. It is often a good idea to ask the MP to forward your letter to the relevant Ministers. Contact information for all MPs is available here. Online Rights Canada also provides an easy way to write to your local MP.

# Write to the Prime Minister of Canada. Contact information here.

# Write to Jim Prentice, the Minister of Industry. Minister Prentice is responsible for the Copyright Act in Canada. Despite the fact that Minister Prentice trumpeted his pro-consumer approach on the spectrum auction issue, the rumour mill suggests that he supports DMCA-style reforms and has little interest in advocating for consumer concerns. Minister Prentice’s contact information is here.

# Write to Josee Verner, the Minister of Canadian Heritage. Minister Verner is one of the two ministers responsible for copyright policy in Canada. Prior Canadian Heritage Ministers have been perceived to be close to U.S. copyright lobby groups and copyright collectives. Ministry contact information here. Minister Verner’s contact information is here….

Link (Thanks, Ryan!)

See also:
Canada’s coming DMCA will be the worst copyright yet
Canadian DMCA: how it might have happened
CBC radio show needs your input for question with Minister responsible for Canadian DMCA

Canadian DMCA rally in Calgary — photos, videos, reports

Filed under: Canada,Copyright,Politics — Mike Lawton @ 11:33  

For all my sermonizing, I found myself woefully unaware of the biggest public action on Canada’s proposed new copyright legislation nightmare, happening right outside my door! I was only a couple hours away too, hiking around a serene (if chilly) Lake Louise with Dreamgirl. Damn. I really would have liked to have been there.

Below is a report from those that were there, and I really hope they had the effect they were looking for!

 

via Boing Boing by Cory Doctorow on 12/9/07



Kempton Lam, who organized Saturday’s anti-DMCA rally at Industry Canada Minister Jim Prentice’s office in Calgary, Alberta, has posted a GREAT couple of articles reporting on the day, which looks to have been an unqualified success. The Minister (who was in Calgary for an open house at his constituency office) is introducing copyright legislation that mimics — and exceeds — the worst elements of the US Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) of 1998, a law that has resulted in lawsuits against 20,000 music fans, harmed free speech and innovation, and failed completely to enrich any artists or prevent infringement.

Minister Prentice has refused to answer any of the 250+ questions that the CBC Radio programme Search Engine compiled from its readers’ suggestions; and he shut Canadian artists, industry and consumer groups out of the drafting of the bill, writing it with the help of US entertainment giants and the US Trade Representative. The Minister’s office says that consumer interests in the bill will come about as the result of a separate committee, the kind of thing that usually takes a decade to come to fruition in Canadian law.

So on Saturday, some fifty concerned people attended the Minister’s open house and asked him some of the questions that the CBC had compiled. Hundreds more wrote and called the office (I tried to leave a message late on Saturday and found that all three of his office voicemail systems were filled and no longer accepting messages).

Word is that the Minister had no idea that this would be such a big deal for Canadians (the week-old Facebook group for fighting the bill just crested 10,000 members and is growing fast), despite the fact that the last two MPs who tried to introduce a slightly better version of the law ended up losing their jobs.

Word is that the Minister and his advisers are scrambling, rethinking the entire matter because of the public outcry. It’s thanks to you all — everyone who wrote and called, and especially people who went to the Minister’s office on Saturday, and especially Kempton Lam, who organised the whole event. (Be sure to check out all the videos Kempton filmed of Canadians putting questions about the proposal to the Minister)

We’ve killed the Canadian DMCA twice now. We will do it a third time, a fourth, a fifth, and forever, until Canada’s politicians start drafting balanced copyright laws that protect Canadian artists, scholars, critics, schools, libraries, and the public interest. Link to Part 1 of Kempton’s report, Part 2 of Kempton’s report

(Photo credit: _DSC0046 from LiminalMike’s Flickr stream)

See also:
O Canada! The Canadian DMCA version of the national anthem
Canadian DMCA introduced
CANADIANS! Tomorrow is your best chance to fight the Canadian DMCA! Event in Calgary, national phone-in
Canada’s DMCA won’t get any consumer rights added to it for a decade
Facebook group for fighting Canada’s DMCA growing fast
Ranting hand-puppet tackles Canada’s DMCA
HOWTO Fight Canada’s coming DMCA copyright law
Canada’s coming DMCA will be the worst copyright yet
Canadian DMCA: how it might have happened
CBC radio show needs your input for question with Minister responsible for Canadian DMCA
Canadian Industry Minister refuses to defend Canadian DMCA in public

2007
Dec 
9

Bacon Chocolate Chip Cookies with Maple Cinnamon Glaze

Filed under: Food — Mike Lawton @ 11:09  

Bacon Chocolate Chip Cookies with Maple Cinnamon Glaze.

Bacon Chocolate Chip Cookies with Maple Cinnamon Glaze.

Do you really need to hear anything else?

Bacon Chocolate Chip Cookies with Maple Cinnamon Glaze.

 


Bacon Chocolate Chip Cookies with Maple Cinnamon Glaze

“Muffin”, the author of the blog Ooh, You Tasty Little Things…, writes:

This whole thing started the other night when my husband and I were having a conversation about what foods could and could not be made better with the addition of bacon. (mike: just for the record, Bacon Makes Everything Better.)

Bacon Chocolate Chip Cookies with Maple Cinnamon Glaze

You can see the end result of said conversation in the photos that accompany this article: Bacon Chocolate Chip Cookies with Maple Cinnamon Glaze.

Bacon Chocolate Chip Cookies with Maple Cinnamon Glaze

She says they taste good — and why not? She’s not the only person who’s mixed bacon and chocolate: consider the bacon chocolate bar created by Vosges, the gourmet chocolatier and heartily recommended by none other than supersexy celebrity chef Nigella Lawson.

Bacon Chocolate Chip Cookies with Maple Cinnamon Glaze

Luckily for those of us with brave culinary spirits, “Muffin” has published the recipe for the cookies and the glaze. Who wants to try making a batch of these with me over the Chrismukkah break?