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European Copyright Madness: Court Strikes Down Law Allowing Users to Rip Their Own CDs

: Originally Posted On: EFF Deep Links

Today the High Court of the United Kingdom handed down an excellent decision—excellent because the result is so unreasonable, so out of touch with reality, and so divorced from the needs and expectations of ordinary users, that it provides a textbook illustration of the need for urgent reform of the outdated and unbalanced European Copyright Directive. In a nutshell, the…

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“The Sunday Times” Cries “Copyright Infringement” Over Reporter’s Critique

By: Taylor Moore : Originally Posted On: Public Knowledge

Last weekend, The Sunday Times, a UK newspaper, released a front-page article entitled “British Spies Betrayed to Russians and Chinese.” The article claimed that Russia and China accessed the classified files leaked by Edward Snowden. The article went on to state that UK intelligence agency MI6 was forced to remove agents from active operations in Moscow because of this leak….

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The Controversial Ancillary Copyright for Press Publishers Takes Two Big Hits

By: Heather Greenfield : Originally Posted On: CCIA

Brussels, BELGIUM – Today, news-publisher-backed legislative proposals often called “ancillary copyrights” took major blows in both Brussels and Austria. Also referred to as a ‘snippet levy’, these laws aim to make online services like search engines and news aggregators pay for the display of hyperlinks and short snippets (pieces of text). First, the European Parliament’s Legal Affairs Committee voted down…

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How Copying Promotes Creativity

By: Jonathan Band : Originally Posted On: Project Disco

On Wednesday, NPR ran a story on composer Michael Giacchino that highlights the importance of fair use copying to the creative process. Giacchino won an Oscar in 2010 for his score for the film Up, and he has written the score for many other films, including the just-released Jurassic World, Tomorrowland, Mission Impossible 3, Dawn of the Planet of the…

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Bill to Amend Canada’s Copyright Act in Preparation for Accession to the Marrakesh Treaty Tabled in the House of Commons

By: Krista Cox : Originally Posted On: ARL Policy Notes

On June 8, 2015, proposed amendments to Canada’s Copyright Act were tabled in the House of Commons. These amendments, contained in Bill C-65, the Support for Canadians with Print Disabilities Act, would amend the Copyright Act in order to prepare for implementation of and accession to the Marrakesh Treaty to Facilitate Access to Published Works for Persons Who Are Blind,…

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Free trade doesn’t have to be secret trade

By: Molly Schwartz : Originally Posted On: R Street

Secrecy around the conduct of international trade agreements has been tightening, in what amounts to a disturbing and counterproductive trend. This lack of transparency gives additional fodder to groups motivated to fight globalization and puts off groups who, in other circumstances, would be vocal supporters of the cause of free trade. Texts of the ongoing Trans Pacific Partnership negotiations between…

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The Public Costs of Private Distribution Strategies: Content Release Windows as Negative Externalities

By: Matt Schruers : Originally Posted On: Project Disco

In a Bloomberg Businessweek interview last month, Megaupload founder Kim Dotcom talked extensively about copyright and business models.  Dotcom, who has been criminally charged in the United States in relation to copyright infringement, was asked by the interviewer if he “believed in copyright.”  Dotcom replied that he did, but argued that he did not believe in “copyright extremism” – a…

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Canadian Author’s Collective, Access Copyright, Dealt Major Blow; Future Uncertain

By: Krista Cox : Originally Posted On: ARL Policy Notes

*This is a guest blog post by Bobby Glushko, Head of the Scholarly Communications and Copyright Office for the University of Toronto Libraries* On May 22, 2015, the Copyright Board of Canada certified a surprisingly low tariff for copying undertaken by the full time professional staff of provincial governments, such as legislators, aides, and other provincial employees. The tariff, 11.56¢ per…

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Solicitor General drops the ball in Oracle v. Google copyright case

By: Mike Godwin : Originally Posted On: R Street

You probably already know it’s baseball season, but you may have missed some particularly interesting inside baseball going on in the world of copyright law and policy. The most recent example: the U.S. Solicitor General’s Office has recommended the Supreme Court deny certiorari  — that is, refuse to review — to a Federal Circuit Court decision earlier this month that reversed and…

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