O.N. Telcom wins contribution portion of review and vary, loses on other rates

 

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Technology and time frames still separate both sides in third-party access dispute

 

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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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The future of digital rights management

The following is an excerpt from the first of two companion studies prepared for the Copyright Policy Branch of the Department of Canadian Heritage by the law firm Nelligan O’Brien Payne LLP. These studies address a range of policy considerations associated with the use of technological protection measures (TPMs) as a means of applying the law of copyright in digital environments.

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CNM People

Keith Clarkson of Telefilm Canada will be temporarily relocating to the agency’s Halifax office from Toronto for one year as business unit director. His replacement in T.O. will be Agnes Zak.

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CNM Short Takes

CAB decries $6.5-million Copyright Board tariff decision
The Canadian Association of Broadcasters (CAB) is considering an appeal of the Copyright Board of Canada’s March 28 decision to apply a tariff, retroactive to 2001, payable on the reproduction of musical works by radio stations, including when they copy a CD into their internal hard drives. The CAB estimates the impact of the tariff at $6.5 million annually. Said CAB CEO Glenn O’Farrell: "We are disappointed by this decision. While we believe that all creators are entitled to fair compensation for their work, we believe that this tariff is unfair, as there is no economic value resulting from transfer of media and no royalties should be paid for it. Radio broadcasters are simply doing their jobs, getting music to Canadians. They are employing emerging efficient technology. They should not be penalized for that."

He continued: "What we do need is the government to uphold its commitment to amend the Copyright Act to create a meaningful and effective broadcaster exemption, protecting the industry from technology taxes." A media release indicates the lobby is considering an appeal of the decision. The full board decision, with reasons, is available online Reproduction of Musical Works 2001-2004.

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Better-Than-Chocolate Press to offer condensed e-romance novels online

Colourful and controversial journalist Donna Laframboise is set to launch a new web venture selling romance novels online. On March 21, Laframboise, a former Toronto Star and National Post writer, filed a trademark application for the tagline, fewer pages, all the passion. The slogan, she tells Canadian NEW MEDIA, is for her new initiative, Better-Than-Chocolate Press, set to launch in June.

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Obligatory legal deposit proposed for digital newspapers: Library/Archives

The National Library of Canada and National Archives of Canada have issued a list of recommendations to encourage the digitization of newspaper content coming out of an October conference (CNM, Oct. 16/02). Among other suggestions, the two institutions have put out for consideration the suggestion that legal deposit of electronic newspapers be made compulsory.

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GTMA announces latest in string of interactive digital media industry studies

Yet another study of the multimedia industry, this one in the Greater Toronto Area, has been announced by a partnership spearheaded by the Greater Toronto Marketing Alliance (GTMA). The GTMA was recently the recipient of a grant from the Ontario Ministry of Enterprise, Opportunity and Innovation’s (MEOI) Interactive Digital Media Small Business Growth Fund to fund the initiative. GTMA officials say the interactive digital media component of the report, which will be the first part of the project to be launched later this summer, is just one aspect of a broader planned look at the entire information and communications technology community in the Toronto area.

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Chilly Beach joins march of web properties to television schedules

A long wait by the team of the former Infopreneur Inc., now March Entertainment, to find a business model for its Chilly Beach property has finally paid off as it gets set to air the show on CBC Television. The previously web-only animated series is set to hit the larger Canadian audience with 26 episodes starting in September, with animation being done in a new production facility in Sudbury ON.

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