CNM Special Edition Update

Tariff 22 leave to appeal ruling expected Thursday

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CNM Editorial

The opinions expressed in this editorial are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of Decima Reports.
 

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CNM People

Lavalife Inc., Toronto, has appointed Bruce Croxon as its new CEO. Croxon is an original founder of the company, and has held the position of executive chairman since the fall of 1999. He replaces former CEO Peter Housley.

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CNM Short Takes

Geist wins Canada Research Chair in Internet law
Michael Geist, a University of Ottawa law professor and Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt LLP technology lawyer, has won $250,000 in funding from the Canada Foundation for Innovation to establish a research chair in Internet and ecommerce law, as well as an ecommerce law lab. The lab, according to a media release, has already attracted the support of technology powerhouses IBM and Entrust Technologies. "Internet governance may sound arcane," Geist is quoted as saying, "but as the Internet has become a fact of life for individuals, organizations and businesses, issues of intellectual property rights, freedom of expression, privacy and business practice have become more and more important. There is a lot of work to be done to resolve these issues."
Research chair funding follows hot on the heels of an earlier announcement by Geist that he’d won $500,000 in funding from Amazon.com and the Ontario Research Network for E-commerce to establish a new Internet law clinic with the universities of Ottawa, Carleton, Queen’s and McMaster (CNM, Jan. 23/03).

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Online games industry to be worth billions: In-Stat/MDR

In-Stat/MDR finds that the online games industry is just beginning to take off. It notes that even if a moderate number of gamers, or 10% of the game consoles, play for short periods of time such as five hours a week, they would consume more than 5% of all the American backbone traffic by the end of 2003. Further, roughly 9% of the traffic sent back and forth over the U.S. backbone in 2002 was due to online gaming.

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Arts institutions offered new kiosk concept

Prominent arts journalist Laurie Brown and veteran new media producers marblemedia inc. have teamed up to rehabilitate the image of kiosks in an initiative to create a network of interactive displays in arts institutions across the country. Last week at the Canadian Arts Summit in Banff, the duo, along with the National Arts Centre, the Harbourfront Centre and the Banff Centre for the Arts, presented their concept for arts and culture kiosks designed with relevant and engaging content first and foremost in mind.

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Supreme Court finds against Earth Future Lottery in online lottery case

The Supreme Court of Canada has dismissed an appeal by the Earth Future Lottery and the Attorney General of Prince Edward Island to legalize a proposed Internet-based lottery (CNM Update, Mar. 11/03; CNM, Jan. 23/03). The court apparently heard nothing new in the arguments presented by Earth Future and P.E.I. counsel during a short morning hearing March 11 and dismissed the case after a brief recess for the same reasons as an original determination by the Appeal Division of the Supreme Court of Prince Edward Island. The court dispensed with hearing from the respondents, a coalition of provincial lottery companies, or from interveners.

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Toronto startup to tap MPEG-4 market in Europe with specialty programming

Toronto startup TVHello hopes to exploit emerging MPEG-4 television encoding technology to begin broadcasting a new digital specialty channel aimed at Europeans sometime this summer. The technology, which TVHello partner Rui Pereira says delivers the promise of true web television, flies beneath the regulatory radar of the CRTC, leaving the small company the flexibility to use inexpensive content to attract advertising dollars.

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OMDC offers business development program tailor-made for new media

New media producers are welcoming a new business development and funding program, Pioneering Content, now being offered by the Ontario Media Development Corp. (OMDC). The initiative, announced March 7, offers support in the form of consultation and access of up to $70,000 in cash grants to six project teams to create prototype collaborative, innovative media projects. The six projects will be chosen by May.

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Quebec company vies for Canadian Heritage rights management support

A small Quebec rights management company has begun a public relations push to find federal support for a Canadian cultural content portal that would ensure artists get paid for digital distribution of their works. On March 10, Montreal-based Reeves Communication Inc. announced support from several well-known Canadian arts groups for its digital rights management (DRM) technology. The effort is intended to pave the way for new partnership agreements with copyright collectives in advance of another crack at the Canadian Heritage funding pot.

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