Breakthrough decision invites spurious claims – and worse: Copyright Board members

Two of the Copyright Board of Canada’s five members have released their reasons for dissenting with the board’s 2005 decision to grant Breakthrough Entertainment’s use of excerpts from a book on World War Two.

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New channels should help push the industry closer to an all-HD universe

It says a lot about the state of high-definition television programming in Canada when a new broadcaster can launch its first two channels and automatically become the nation’s HD leader. But that’s exactly what happened when High Fidelity HDTV Inc. launched Treasure HD and OasisHD on Bell ExpressVu earlier this month.

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Rethink Cancon regs, copyright tariffs, radio broadcasters urge regulator

With the public hearings on the Commercial Radio Policy still two months away, comments have come at a steady pace from all players in the broadcast radio industry.

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Primus arguing for greater regulation of wireless carriers in WNP context

Primus Telecommunications Canada Inc. has told the CRTC that it should institute winback rules so that the collective dominance of the country’s three national operators can’t thwart competition.

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ROW 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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ROW People

Pierre Blouin, CEO of MTS Allstream Inc., has been appointed to the company’s board of directors.

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ROW Short Takes

Tranzeo demonstrates WiMAX product at CeBIT
British Columbia-based Tranzeo Wireless Technologies demonstrated its future WiMAX products at the annual CeBIT conference, which took place in Germany from March 9 to 15.

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Music and video key ingredients to carriers’ ARPU growth strategy

Canada’s wireless carriers seem to have found a couple of key applications that will help them drive their average revenue per user (ARPU) upwards at a faster rate: music and video. All three of the country’s national operators are offering music and TV services and appear to be banking a significant part of their ARPU future on these services.

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Tech problems to plague voice over wireless LAN technology

Communication service providers might be in a good position to capitalize on voice over wireless LAN (VoWLAN) technology, judging from comments at an IT event earlier this month.

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Wireless devices of the future look the same, but act all new

What will cell phones, PDAs and other wireless devices look like in the future? Judging from comments made at a recent technology conference, they’ll look a lot like the devices on the market now – unless you take the backs off.

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