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Behind the Scenes of Canada's Movie Piracy Law 186

An anonymous reader writes "Michael Geist's latest Toronto Star column features a behind-the-scenes look at how Canada got its movie piracy bill based on internal government documents obtained under the Access to Information Act. Few will be shocked to learn that Hollywood lobbyists provided draft legislation months earlier as part of their barrage of lobbying, though the documents show that advisers to the Minister were skeptical that the proposal would accomplish anything. From the article: 'The industry's lobby efforts were clearly successful. Ignoring the inconsistent claims, the absence of evidence that Canadian films are being affected, the contrary internal advice, and the bracing reality that Hollywood has acknowledged that the U.S. is by far the largest source of illegal camcording worldwide notwithstanding its movie piracy legislation, Bill C-59 is expected to sail through Parliament. In doing so, Ottawa is sending Canadians two messages. The first is what drew the industry standing ovation - unauthorized camcording will not be tolerated in Canada even if it means diverting law enforcement resources from health and safety issues to movie theatres. The second is that private meetings, foreign pressures and lobbyist drafted bills is how law gets made in Canada.'"
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Behind the Scenes of Canada's Movie Piracy Law

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  • uh... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by froggero1 ( 848930 ) on Tuesday June 12, 2007 @07:46AM (#19476461)
    "even if it means diverting law enforcement resources from health and safety issues to movie theatres"

    I'd rather not do that... to me, health and safety is worth more than money.
    • I'd rather not do that... to me, health and safety is worth more than money.

      Then you obviously dont have enough yet. :)
    • Whilst I'm no fan of Draconian laws, or excessive interferece in the making of those laws, I feel that the number of law enforcement resources that will be diverted is not going to be significant. After all, it hasn't been a factor in the States, has it?
      • Right. That would never ever happen in the land of the brave and the free. Ever [slashdot.org].

        • by Curtman ( 556920 )
          Meh.. Maybe it should be illegal to cam a movie. They suck anyway, I'd rather wait for the DVD screener. At least it's still legal to download them. :)
      • by 1800maxim ( 702377 ) on Tuesday June 12, 2007 @08:47AM (#19477027)
        my friends went to the movies on Saturday, and guess what the police is hired to do? The police is hired to check everyone's bag as they enter the theatre to make sure there is no camcorder. That is the most idiotic thing that Canadian politicians did - cave in to a foreign country's lobbying group, at the expense that each teenager and older person has his or her bag examined.

        Greater lineups? You bet! However, it's not so much the lineups as the feeling that a little bit of dignity is robbed away from you.
        • my friends went to the movies on Saturday, and guess what the police is hired to do? The police is hired to check everyone's bag as they enter the theatre to make sure there is no camcorder. That is the most idiotic thing that Canadian politicians did - cave in to a foreign country's lobbying group, at the expense that each teenager and older person has his or her bag examined.

          That's funny, I went to the theater (Calgary / Cineplex Odeon) on Friday afternoon and although I saw the signs saying they would

        • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Tuesday June 12, 2007 @10:51AM (#19478469)
          Oh, don't worry. The lines will be longer for a little while, but only 'til people are so fed up with being considered a criminal for wanting to watch a movie that even more refuse to go to the cinemas anymore.

          And of course, this will all be blamed on the evil pirates. Instead of adding police state methodes on top of overpriced tickets and crappy movies without a script worth the name.
          • Oh, don't worry. The lines will be longer for a little while, but only 'til people are so fed up with being considered a criminal for wanting to watch a movie that even more refuse to go to the cinemas anymore.

            Next, the MPAA will gather the names of known and suspected pirates, their aliases, and their birth dates and issue a list of people not permitted entry into any movie theater. No photos, no descriptions, just names and birth dates. A kind of No-Cinema List.

            Sure, some people who may have the same n

            • "Remember, Ralphie, if no one notices your slashdot post, you're being too subtle... or not subtle enough!"

              Maybe I should have just stuck with my first thought: "Yeah, long lines and being treated like they were criminals really made people refuse to go to airports anymore, didn't it?"

              They're treating movie goers like potential airplane hijackers!
              • Damn that bush and those evil republicans. I wish they would quit screwing up country. It is almost to the point America isn't free anymore.

                Oh, .. wel this is still in north america. what band wagon are we supposed to jump on this week?
    • by Robber Baron ( 112304 ) on Tuesday June 12, 2007 @08:49AM (#19477047) Homepage
      Don't you know that the most egregious and offensive crime you can commit is stealing (back) from the rich?
      • Don't you know that the most egregious and offensive crime you can commit is stealing (back) from the rich?
        I see Dick Cheney has paid us a visit and he modded me troll!
    • "even if it means diverting law enforcement resources from health and safety issues to movie theatres" I'd rather not do that... to me, health and safety is worth more than money.

      Well, me too, but diverting cops isn't really going to affect that.

      You see, most cops are glorified ticket writers and traffic directors, with a license to carry a firearm and harass you at will. And in any case, they are not there to protect you as that is impossible! You'd need vastly more cops, and/or a total surveillance soc

  • by TheGrumpster ( 1039342 ) on Tuesday June 12, 2007 @07:48AM (#19476473) Homepage
    And this is news? Come on, you don't really think Canada (or any other "civilized" country is soverign, do you? What Hollywood (or any big business, for that matter) wants, they get, governments be damned. Face it, the only vote anyone on this planet really has is measured by how much money they have in their wallet.
    • I think its more along the lines of "Stephen Harper as his head shoved so far up Bush's ass that when Bush speaks, Harper can see his adenoids".

      This is what you get when you combine a bunch of red-neck fundamentalists (the Reform Party) with a bunch of burned-out hacks desperate for power at any cost (what was left after the original Conservatives imploded).

      Maybe we should all just separate from Ottawa.

    • by elrous0 ( 869638 ) *
      Speaking as a U.S. citizen; I must say it warms my Republican, Bible-thumping heart to know that Britain isn't the only foreign country whose leaders drop to their knees for us.
    • It is news. Or at the very least slightly important information. The MPs responsible need to be listed, so that we may know to not vote for them, their party pubilcly shamed(of which this thread is an example), etc.

      As far as I know Canada is still governed by Canadians, Canadian Laws, and (our sovereign) the Queen of Canada. We still have the choice whether or not to accept Continental rule. We can probably even get out of NAFTA if we were so motivated. Granted, I think we collectively would choose C

  • Changes in my life (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Kinthelt ( 96845 ) on Tuesday June 12, 2007 @07:55AM (#19476535) Homepage
    All it means to me is that it will be harder to smuggle food into the theatres.
  • In doing so, Ottawa is sending Canadians two messages. The first is what drew the industry standing ovation - unauthorized camcording will not be tolerated in Canada even if it means diverting law enforcement resources from health and safety issues to movie theatres. The second is that private meetings, foreign pressures and lobbyist drafted bills is how law gets made in Canada.

    ...not that there's anything wrong with that...

  • by iplayfast ( 166447 ) on Tuesday June 12, 2007 @07:56AM (#19476551)
    A film maker's job is to create an alternate reality and make it believable. They've just done that in real life.
  • The first is what drew the industry standing ovation - unauthorized camcording will not be tolerated in Canada even if it means diverting law enforcement resources from health and safety issues to movie theatres.

    I don't know about you Canadians, but if I lived there this would piss me off beyond comprehension. (It still pisses me off even though I don't live there, but if I did live there and my wife died at a car accident scene because no cops were around and someone else ran into her car....yeah. It wou

    • Law enforcement is a provincial issue. The Provinces will just let out a collective yawn and ignore it. This law is just a publicity stunt and has no real meaning. Bear in mind that even the Supreme Court of Canada isn't really supreme. The provincial courts have a higher status than the Supreme Court in Ottawa. If you are found guilty in a province and not guilty in Ottawa, then you better stay in Ottawa and not head home. It happens once in a while.
  • by davecb ( 6526 ) * <davecb@spamcop.net> on Tuesday June 12, 2007 @08:01AM (#19476593) Homepage Journal

    The bill, at Bill C-59 [parl.gc.ca] says that it's only a crime if the theatre manager says so.

    This allows the manager to set his own camera up in the projection room, which is conveient, but not as convenient as running the film through a scanner or the DVD through a duplicator.

    Perhaps the drafters think that theatre managers can't be bribed?

    --dave

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by flyingfsck ( 986395 )
      Exactly - it is a Work Reservation bill. Something that one would expect a Trade Union to create. It ensures that managers can keep their monopoly on pirating of movies. The provinces will just ignore this silly bill - as with most things coming out of Ottawa. Canada is a weak federation. Ottawa has almost no power inside the country.
      • by davecb ( 6526 ) *

        Wouldn't it be something a trade union would object to, as only a manager can brak the law with impunity (;-))

        --dave

      • It ensures that managers can keep their monopoly on pirating of movies.

        why would they (unions) be for it then? last time i checked, managers aren't union members, so it cuts them (the union members) out of it.
    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by LordEd ( 840443 )
      I like this part:

      3) In addition to any punishment that is imposed on a person who is convicted of an offence under this section, the court may order that anything that is used in the commission of the offence be forfeited to Her Majesty in right of the province in which the proceedings are taken. Anything that is forfeited may be disposed of as the Attorney General directs.
      Her Majesty is going to own a lot of camcorders.
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by davecb ( 6526 ) *

        Actually she won't: the great majority of copies are made using professional scanners/duplicators, from "screener" DVDs and distributed films. Only a small number are done by amateurs, ofen in the third world where bribes are cheap but scanners are expensive

        --dave

        • indeed... I for one wouldn't put up with watching a movie that is filmed via a camcorder in a movie theatre. Yes... piracy does exist in Canada... but I doubt it is more substantial that it is in the states, and, I would be shocked if it was done using camcorders in movie theatres. I hope somebody in the police force realizes this and we don't bother wasting our time with police officers at every movie theatres doing bag checks. A phrase I think applies well here - let's not and say we did.
  • by nurb432 ( 527695 ) on Tuesday June 12, 2007 @08:01AM (#19476599) Homepage Journal
    They bought it.

    No one should be the least bit surprised. Its how governments work now.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      Its how governments work now.

      Governments have always worked this way. They protect the industries on their soil by using all means necessary to coerce other countries into accepting what is the most favorable trade agreements (in this case laws) for them. That was one of the reasons the FTAA (Free Trade Area of the Americas) failed in South America. It was not because the countries there wanted to remain separate (most of them are part of some trade zone), it was because they were weary of having the US

  • There too? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by $RANDOMLUSER ( 804576 ) on Tuesday June 12, 2007 @08:02AM (#19476605)

    ...private meetings, foreign pressures and lobbyist drafted bills is how law gets made in Canada
    Sounds a lot like the country just south of Canada, too.
  • by packetmon ( 977047 ) on Tuesday June 12, 2007 @08:05AM (#19476623) Homepage
    The first is what drew the industry standing ovation - unauthorized camcording will not be tolerated in Canada even if it means diverting law enforcement resources from health and safety issues to movie theatres. A nice exaggeration if I ever saw one... Anyhow. To be the devil's advocate here, has anyone taken the time to do some research on where bootleg movies come from? Before people anywhere start shooting off at the mouth, they should take a look at where the vast majority of RECORDED movies comes from. Then they should focus on fixing that solution. Implementing moronic laws such as "No Camcorder Left Behind" lobbied by deep pocketed Hollywood sharks will never fix the problem. Common logic will dictate survival of the fittest with this said let me be an usher at a movie theater. Let someone come in with a camcorder... My wage is say $15.00 per hour as an usher... Someone is paying me $1000.00 to play Ray Charles/Stevie Wonder. Guess what? Survival of the fittest. This is anywhere you go.

    The second is that private meetings, foreign pressures and lobbyist drafted bills is how law gets made in Canada. Unless the one who posted this has been living in a bomb shelter for the past 50 years... Has anyone ever noticed that businesses have been dictating laws since the inception of time? Coca Cola and others did similar things in Latin America once upon a time, Airbus in France, and countless other companies here in the US. Get over it.
    • Democracy is supposed to represent the interests of the people, not of whoever pays the politicians' reelection funds. It's corruption. Now if only we could actually persuade the populaton to vote out assholes thsat do this...

      but american idol is far more fun and far less effort.
      • You're correct in American Idol but you seem to be asleep at the wheel... You forgot Paris. Not France, Hilton.
  • Sickening. Genuinely sickening.

    Despite no proven detrimental effect to Canada they have passed laws to restrict behaviour and use tax money to enforce the restrictions, all at the say so of corporate interests.

    This pretty much sums up what I hate about the world right now. Democracy is dead.
    • by kwandar ( 733439 )
      "Democracy is dead."

      Agreed - I refuse to vote any longer as it is a complete waste of time, and I encourage others to protest by not voting, contrary to the Much/MTV Get Out the Vote Campaigns. Until there is proportional representation, boycott and tell them that their election is in no way a reflection of how a democracy should work.

      For those interested in a fairer system:

      www.fairvotecanada.org
  • There's really not much that these new laws will do aside from giving Canadians early screenings again. It'll be good to see movies earlier once more and I'm sure that Pacific Mall will not be put to any real danger by this new act. Yes it's sad that more money and resources are wasted on this futile jesture, but the baby needs it's bottle.
  • by Bullfish ( 858648 ) on Tuesday June 12, 2007 @08:20AM (#19476741)
    Really. What the industry wanted was a DCMA type act in Canada. They didn't get that and they won't get that. Instead they settled for an anti-camcording law. Not many people will argue that camcording in the theatre is good. Not even the pirates like it, makes for lousy copies. In the end the industry gets a sop, and the government says, okay, we did our bit. It will make no difference to piracy in the end (Canada is not the major source of pirated movies in the world).

    No, cops won't stop doing policing over it. They are certainly not going to drop a car chase or a stakeout to go pick up a kid with a camcorder. That's just silly.

    As for the thin edge of the wedge, the conservatives are not doing well in the polls, and they only managed a minority government last time after catching the liberals in what they billed the scandal of the century. They are not going to be around for much longer anyway. Then we will get the do-nothing liberals, and that's what htey wil do - nothing.
    • by dkf ( 304284 )

      Then we will get the do-nothing liberals, and that's what htey wil do - nothing.
      A government that does nothing? Are you really trying to sell them to us?
      • by swordgeek ( 112599 ) on Tuesday June 12, 2007 @10:01AM (#19477859) Journal
        Well, it's all a measure of evil.

        The liberals will generally do nothing about anything, anytime. The conservatives will screw things up worse and sell out to the US at the drop of a drool-covered hat. The NDP doesn't stand a snowball's chance in hell at getting elected, but if they did, they'd attack business to the extent that the economy would tank. Then there's the Bloc, which should be illegal since they're a regional separatist party dedicated to destroying the country. Ironically, the Green party (which should by definition be a dedicated single-issue party) actually has a very comprehensive and well thought-out platform, but they haven't got a single seat in their history.

        All things considered, doing nothing is not bad. Not good, but not bad.
        • by alexo ( 9335 )
          > Ironically, the Green party (which should by definition be a dedicated single-issue party)
          > actually has a very comprehensive and well thought-out platform,
          > but they haven't got a single seat in their history.

          (emphasis mine)

          And what are you doing about it?
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Opportunist ( 166417 )
      Then we will get the do-nothing liberals, and that's what htey wil do - nothing.

      Well, when I look at the laws created recently, I dunno if a government doing nothing would be such a bad alternative. We have sensible laws in place, so executive and judicative would be enough for my tastes. Generally, when you look around, you only see more and more incredibly insane laws spring up which are either unenforcable or just against the interests of the general population.

      So yes, a government that is unable, unwill
    • by Geof ( 153857 ) on Tuesday June 12, 2007 @12:19PM (#19479777) Homepage

      What the industry wanted was a DCMA type act in Canada. They didn't get that and they won't get that. Instead they settled for an anti-camcording law.

      I hope you know something I don't. With regards to the anti-camcording bill, the head of the Canadian Motion Picture Distributors Association[2] said [michaelgeist.ca] it "is really the first step - not only for the movie industry - where the government has shown it will seriously address the whole area of intellectual property theft." Reports are [michaelgeist.ca] that the government intends to go ahead with a DMCA-style "reform". Bev Oda, one of the two ministers responsible for copyright, has previously said [blogspot.com] Canada will ratify international treaties, implying that includes the WIPO treaty on which the DMCA is based[1]. The 2007-2008 Report [tbs-sct.gc.ca] on Plans and Priorities lists "copyright reform" as a priority to which the government has "previously committed". Given the

      On the up side, now is not the time to give up: the significant opposition to stronger copyright provisions seems be having an effect. While the RPP's statement on the issue points towards anti-circumvention legislation and a flawed conception of copyright as a simple conflict between creators and consumers (when in fact there are creators on both sides, and citizens and the public interest are directly affected), it avoids committing to any paricular course of action:

      even though technological advances open the way for innovation and renewed creativity, they do bring with them challenges for the arts and cultural community and for government, especially in terms of balancing the rights of creators and consumers. . . . Actions: reforming copyright; . . .

      I wrote to her in January and received a similarly ambiguous reply: "the Government is continuing to consider the concerns of all Canadians . . . The Government wants to ensure that the rights of Canadian creators are adequately protected by law, and that these rights are balanced with the ability of the public to access works."

      [1] I should point out that Canada is under no obligation to ratify the WIPO treaty. Even if we do, the treaty's [wipo.int] anti-circumvention provisions don't require all of the excesses of the DMCA:

      Contracting Parties shall provide adequate legal protection and effective legal remedies against the circumvention of effective technological measures that are used by authors in connection with the exercise of their rights under this Treaty or the Berne Convention and that restrict acts, in respect of their works, which are not authorized by the authors concerned or permitted by law.

      [2] For the most part we don't make Canadian films, we distribute American ones. For the distributors, maximalist intellectual monopoly laws are in their interests even if they inhibit the production of Canadian films.

      • While I would not go so far as to say that Canada will never get an overhauled electronic copyright law, I doubt it is high on the list of priorities for the present government. They are more focused on trying to improve their image and gain ground. In that they are fighting a losing battle. The latest fiasco with the Atlantic provinces is an example. They cannot afford to lose members considering they are hanging by the skin of their teeth and the tricky co-operation of the Bloc. I doubt, therefore, that w
  • "The second is that private meetings, foreign pressures and lobbyist drafted bills is how law gets made in Canada."

    Isn't politics pretty much like this everywhere though? If politicians don't actually listen to people and take actions (albeit yes they should be able to discriminate between ordinary Joe citizen and a paid lobbyist) - what exactly are they there for?

    The movie industry nievely thinks that having an extra law will reduce the piracy - it won't - even with greater enforcement the pirates will fin
  • Harpers Bizzare (Score:5, Insightful)

    by BillGatesLoveChild ( 1046184 ) on Tuesday June 12, 2007 @08:25AM (#19476793) Journal
    Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper? Isn't he the guy who, when IDF warplanes killed UN Canadian Peacekeepers said "Well, what were they doing there anyway?"

    Wonder if he's going to give the Canadian people back their CD levies? ($0.29 per unit for Audio Cassette tape (40min or longer); $0.77 per unit for CD-R Audio, CD-RW-Audio & MiniDisc; $0.21 per unit for CD-R, CD-RW (non audio) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Private_copying_levy [wikipedia.org] )

    Stop voting for people like this. It only encourages them.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by dusanv ( 256645 )
      And who do we vote for? Liberals? They're not in bed with big media companies? Please enlighten me.
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        There's other parties to vote for NDP, Green, etc. Every vote you do make counts and helps those parties to do better in the next election by giving them larger campaign funds.
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by Abcd1234 ( 188840 )
          The problem is, if you're centrist or center-right, there's no party for you, anymore. The conservatives took a hard right after the merger with the Canadian Alliance, and these days the Liberal's are known more for corruption scandals than their political views. Meanwhile, the remaining, notable parties, specifically the NDP and the Green's, are so far to the left there's no way they'll get voted in.

          IMHO, the Canadian political landscape was significantly damaged by the merger of the PC and CA parties.
          • Actually, if you really are centrist or right-of-center, you will know that Harper and the CPC have taken a hard turn to the left. (If you really are leftisch, you won't have noticed; many studies show that lefties tend to be unaware of their own or any one else's leftishness.)

            Conservative voters can only hope that this is a strategy to get a majority in the next election, that it will be successful, and that the CPC will revert to the right after forming the government. It's a long shot, but one can alway

      • Every Western (and quite a few Eastern) Liberal Democracies has just two parties: Both so similar that it's hard to tell the difference. Come election power the opposition often tries to get elected by trying to look like the government: "Look! If you vote for us, and you'll hardly notice the difference!"

        Come election time, there may be 30 or so issues, yet we have to narrow down our vote to two parties. My local member doesn't represent me. They made have made sense a few hundred years ago, but these days
  • I don't see how camcordering a movie really has any effect on the sales of movie tickets or DVDs of the film. Has anybody actually seen one of these camcordered movies? The quality is terrible. If the MPAA think that this is competing with their product, then they better come up with a new product. Also, wouldn't this already be considered illegal under current copyright laws? Do you really need a specific law against using camcorders to record stuff in theatres? Especially in a way that allows it to
    • I think this is more aimed at Telesync [wikipedia.org] copies of movies. Which are actually quite good. Not that I've ever seen one ....
      • Not, they are actually still quite bad. At least compared to most of the DVD rip stuff that you'll often find. And besides, if it's telesync, then it's being done from the project room (at least proper telesync is) in which case, they probably have the manager's permission, and it isn't covered by this law.
    • Oh, I can see how screeners damage the Hollywood revenue.

      You get to see a half minute preview and it's hot! Lots of action, great scenes, impressive effects... then you see the screener and notice that those 30 seconds are pretty much ALL the good scenes in the movie.

      Question for 100: Are you going to go see the movie on the big screen?

      You might have done that if you hadn't the opportunity to see the screener and notice that the movie is crap. So yes, screeners do hurt Hollywood...
      • Personally I've stopped going to theatres except for things that I know are going to be really good. Not stuff that they tell me is good, but stuff that I know I want to watch. It's not worth $12 for 2 hours of entertainment as it is, why would I want to spend that unless I know that I'm going to be entertained. I'd rather just spend $5 for the rental (which is still pretty steep), and have me and all my friends be able to see it.
  • by PhysicsPhil ( 880677 ) on Tuesday June 12, 2007 @08:27AM (#19476821)

    I thought this whole business was remarkably clever of the Canadian government. They managed to sidestep a messy showdown with Hollywood by outlawing something that isn't a problem. Seriously, our movie theatres are not giant igloos, and pirating movies on a camcorder hasn't been an issue for a decade or more (has it ever been?). These days pirated movies usually come from stolen or "borrowed" cinema masters.

    Given the choice between having Hollywood lobbying against something stupid, like a camcorder ban, or something more serious, like a DMCA equivalent, I'd much rather pacify them with the stupid stuff.

    • It's hilarious when the plebes get all foamy at the mouth over something they've totally missed the point of. This was a clever move, not a nefarious one.

      An inconsequential smolder has been smothered rather than face an inferno from Hollywood's fattest wallets. That's a good move -- it represents a certain economy of action that's often lacking in Canadian government.

      No DCMA equivalent in Canada! Vive le Canada semi-libre!

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      Given the choice between having Hollywood lobbying against something stupid, like a camcorder ban, or something more serious, like a DMCA equivalent, I'd much rather pacify them with the stupid stuff.
      Choice?? Canadian DMCA To Be Introduced This Spring [michaelgeist.ca]!
      • Did you even read the damn article? Apparently not. To summarize: It will be a cold day in hell when that bill passes. It pisses off far more people than it pacifies.
        • Did you even read the damn article? Apparently not.
          Because Hollywood ISN'T lobbying for it?
          Did you even read what I was replying to? I quoted it and everything.
    • Sure, sure. You have exactly the rationale that is ideal for corporate-minded politicians to keep themselves in power: "Oh, hey, this isn't too bad, getting searched at the movie theatre isn't nearly as bad as having DMCA-like laws in Canada!" ... Sure, it's the "lesser of two evils", but why are we just passively accepting the "lesser evil"?
  • by flyingfsck ( 986395 ) on Tuesday June 12, 2007 @08:33AM (#19476875)
    The reason the law passed is because it is useless.

    Provinces are responsible for law enforcement - they'll just ignore it as another idiotic Ottawa publicity stunt.
    • That is what I was thinking when I read this.

      The federal goverment can pass the law (because criminal law is a federal matter) but it is up to the provincial attorney-generals to enforce it (because policing and maintaining law and order is a provincial matter). Not to long ago, while the Liberals formed the federal government and wanted the "long gun" registry funded and enforced, the governments of a few provinces said "fine, but we're not going to devote any resources to it, or prosecute anyone for fail
  • This is the fundamental problem of capitalism: how is democracy possible in the face of huge, rich, powerful corporations that can by-pass any control of the government by the people?
  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday June 12, 2007 @08:50AM (#19477061)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • They may have had several scandals but at least the were a Canadian govenment not an American proxy.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Deviant ( 1501 )
        Not that I necessarily agree with your sentiment, but it reminded me of a joke I heard while watching the election coverage up there during the last election (I was living in Western New York at the time and got Canadian stations).

        "What the Canadian people really want are two Liberal parties - one to vote into office when the other becomes too corrupt to governern."
  • by joneil ( 677771 ) on Tuesday June 12, 2007 @10:24AM (#19478129)
    Almost daily there is news in the GTA (Greater Toronto Area) of crimes, including murder, committed with hand guns. Legally obtaining a handgun in Canada is very difficult (and has been since the mid 1930's), so the vast majority of these hand guns are illegal imports from the USA.

      I wish governments and big business on *both* sides of the border would devote as much attention, time and money to the issue of illegal handgun imports into Canada as they do about movie piracy. I don't know about the rest of you people, but I am a lot more afraid of somebody walking into a local movie theatre here in Canada with an illegal handgun than an illegal camcorder. Are movies worth more than lives anymore?

              The other issue to me, one that Hollywood & the studios and others never address, is that for me and my family (two adults, two children) to go see a movie in a theatre today, with admission, parking, car gas, popcorn, drinks, etc, etc, I'll spend at least $100. I don't have that kind of money to go as often as I would like too. Sorry Hollywood, but this month the car needed fixing and the kids needed dental work. I am sure most of you have similar stories. I am also pretty peaved that the very fews times I do go to a movie theatre, I have to sit through several minutes of commercials for an event I PAY to attend. This turns me off completely. Are you guys litening out there? :(

            But I will and do buy DVDs.

          With everybody buying larger and larger TVs, home theatre systems, etc, etc, why not release DVDs of new movies at the same time as they are released in theatres? I imagine you would kill off a lot of piracy right there and then. I don't have the big screen LCD TV myself (yet), but someday when I do, I'd rather stay home and watch movies in the comfort of my own house.

      Movie distribution today is bascially a very flawed business model due to many factors, including some of those listed above,a nd trying to place the blame on piracy will do nothing to help. Wake up and smell the coffee.

    • I wish governments and big business on *both* sides of the border would devote as much attention, time and money to the issue of illegal handgun imports into Canada as they do about movie piracy.

      The solution is to make it legal, as well as reasonably easy to get a handgun. Do some psychological test, require some training, issue a certificate and allow people who have it to purchase guns. The more law-abiding armed people who know how to use a gun you have in your streets, the more risky it will be for a th

  • by sirwired ( 27582 ) on Tuesday June 12, 2007 @10:39AM (#19478309)
    I have no problem with lobbying groups supplying draft legislation. It is better that legislation be written by somebody that has knowledge of the topic in question rather than a lawmaker just pulling it out of his ass. I believe that most bills affecting the private sector do come from lobbying groups of some sort.

    That doesn't mean that this law was in any way useful or good (it isn't), but the fact that it was written by a lobbyist is not inherently evil. If the FSF had pushed for a bill requiring the govt. to consider Free Software for all procurement purchases over $X, I don't think Slashdot would be screaming.

    Of course, that does not absolve lawmakers from their responsibility to look over any proposed legislation and suggest it be modified or tanked...

    SirWired
    • The problem I have with legislation like this that it is not for the benefit of "the people" but rather just for a small portion of them or no people at all but just some financial conglomerate. I doubt that organisations like the FSF would qualify for the same kind of "small group benefit more important than large group benefit" problem. But you're invited to offer other examples.

      Laws should be made for the benefit of the majority, or for the protection of minorities that require protection from larger gro
      • by sirwired ( 27582 )
        As I said in my original post, I am not saying this law is any way a good law, just that the fact that it was written by a lobbyist is not inherently evil. The article summary was written as if we should be outraged that a lobbyist wrote the law, not merely that the law was bad. (Which we already knew, and discussed when the law was passed.)

        You have to remember that from twisted logic of the MPAA (or the Canadian equiv.), making an attempt to stop piracy in this fashion IS for the common good, even if Sla
        • I wouldn't even believe that they think it's for the common good. It's good for them, to hell with the rest.
  • They are going to put cops in movie theaters to protect corporate profits?! What a joke!

    "Our law that we wrote says its illegal to use a camcorder in a theaters, and we have had local athorities install automated gun turrets installed to enforce it." -- The MPAA
  • That government has degenerated to a parasitic, degenerative, sellout, noise making machine and, barring realization and self correction, should be vestigilized.
  • This is so awesome. I went to the Calgary premiere of Grindhouse a couple months ago and they were super-strict about recording stuff. Anyone with a camera on their mobile phone had to sign a waiver (!!) and check it in for the duration of the movie. Naturally, I set my ringer to "PIERCINGLY LOUD" and planned on making some calls from non-camera phones later on, just to get a giggle. Anyways, the mall cops at the entrance were so frazzled by having to confiscate all these phones that they didn't notice (or

  • ...that Hollywood movies these days suck? Has there been anything worth the bother?
  • "The second is that private meetings, foreign pressures and lobbyist drafted bills is how law gets made in Canada"

    Hey, that's how it gets made EVERYWHERE - especially in the United States.

    When a US Senator gets a half million dollar bribe from the Turkish lobby to kill the Turkey-Armenia bill, well, that's just chicken feed compared to what else goes on in the "land of the free".

    "Corrupt politicians" is a redundant phrase.

  • >The second is that private meetings, foreign pressures and lobbyist drafted bills is how law gets made in Canada.

    History Channel's "Secret Superpower Aircraft" made a pretty good case that Canada's early-1970's mach-2 fighter was scrapped because of pressure from U.S. industry (which had no comparable fighter, as all resources were being diverted to bomber programs).

    It's fun being our neighbors, eh?

"An idealist is one who, on noticing that a rose smells better than a cabbage, concludes that it will also make better soup." - H.L. Mencken

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