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6 - The Canadian Copyright Story

How Canada Improbably Became the World Leader on Users’ Rights in Copyright Law

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 June 2017

Ruth L. Okediji
Affiliation:
University of Minnesota School of Law
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Summary

Abstract

Given the long history of copyright reform battles in Canada that date back to the 1880s, there was little reason to think that when the Canadian government launched a public consultation on digital copyright issues in the spring of 2001 that the effort would mark the beginning of a dramatic shift in approach in which thousands of people would become politically engaged in copyright policy and pressure the government to rethink how it struck the copyright balance. Yet a decade of public debate culminated in copyright reforms that were among the most user-friendly in the world, emphasizing user rights and featuring an expansion of fair dealing, a host of new consumer exceptions, innovative new technology focused exceptions, limitations on liability for noncommercial infringement, and notable safeguards for user privacy in Internet service provider liability rules.

This paper explores the stunning evolution of Canadian copyright law, highlighting how technology, the Internet, and a growing awareness of the wider implications of copyright policy for education, commerce, creativity, and everyday consumer uses sparked a users’ rights movement that helped shape copyright policy long before the better-known digital rights successes involving SOPA/PIPA in the United States and the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement in Europe. The Canadian copyright story demonstrates how individuals were able to leverage social media and a strong scholarly foundation to not only stop legislative proposals, but to proactively forge a positive copyright agenda that placed users at the center of policy development.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2017

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