Canadian Courts Strike Down 'You Must Be A Criminal' iPod Tax Again

from the haven't-we-been-through-this-before? dept

A few years back, we noted that a Canadian court had ruled that the “private copying levy” (better known as “you must be a criminal tax”) for blank media such as CDs and DVDs could not be extended to iPods. However, the Canadian Copyright Board seemed to think that such a decision didn’t preclude it from going back and adding the levy to iPods at a later date — and this year it tried to do so, sending the whole issue back to court again. Once again, the courts have said that the Copyright Board is wrong and it cannot put the levy on iPods. Apparently, it took all of about 24 hours to make this decision, pointing out that much of this stuff was covered in the earlier decision a few years back. It’s worth noting, by the way, that the recording industry probably wasn’t on the side you’d expect in this case. It was so afraid that a private copying levy would “legalize” file sharing, that it came out against the proposal as well. Now it can keep on suing people. Of course, it makes you wonder how it feels about the private copying levy that is still used on blank CDs and DVDs, which seem even less likely to be used for private copying purposes than an iPod.

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Comments on “Canadian Courts Strike Down 'You Must Be A Criminal' iPod Tax Again”

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14 Comments
EvilMessiah says:

Well ... technically speaking ...

As Canadian laws read now, there’s nothing in existing copyright law that explicitly prohibits file sharing and downloading in the first place, thus there’s really nothing to legalize per se. That would also be one of the reasons why music biz lobby groups can’t coerce Canadian ISPs into releasing customer information, and as such, nobody’s been sued … yet …

Anonymous Coward says:

This is why Steven Page (Barenaked Ladies) and the CMCC (Canadian Music Creator’s Coalition) keep making waves in parliament. The Recording Industry refuses to see the way the music industry is going, and with the huge numbers seen in Downloading (legal downloading) last year, it’s getting harder to ignore such things here in Canada. Until the industry gets it through their heads, we’ll have to rely on the CMCC to keep making noise.

mike allen says:

tax mmmm

The thing here has already been muted by anonymos coward in post one it seems a good idea to pay a amount at purchase the NO MORE, perhaps other countries should do the same. the user then should be able to do what he/she want with the discs or machine and place on it whatever content they wish knowing that copyright has been paid. Of course the RIAA and others are against this because they can no longer charge the individual or sue their customers for download or copies.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: tax mmmm

As a creator of copyrighted content such as video games, I oppose this on the ground that this is especially UNFAIR arrangement for the public.

The public shouldn’t be force to pay for musics or for anything unless they want to.

If the public wants to download over bittorrent and filesharing networks, damn the wishes of copyright holders.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: tax mmmm

As a member of the public, I oppose this on the grounds that this is an especially UNFAIR arrangement for the public.

The public shouldn’t be forced to pay for music or for anything unless they want the item in question.

If the public does not wish to purchase or consume the offal so many content creators produce they should not be forced to pay a tax to support those content creatros.

Should content creators wish to continue being paid they should perhaps focus on producing quality content that members of the public would gladly purchase.

However, should you be like most content creators, you can go on producing shit then suing those who actually generate you business because and ignore the fact that the vast majority of the public thinks your content is SHIT!

Trevlac says:

Have you all ever noticed that Canada has fewer laws that the States? Yeah, and everything seems pretty peaceful up there…

Everytime a law is made, somehow or another, you lose a freedom. That is the nature of a law. Maybe we should take a leaf out of Canada’s book and ease up a bit on them and see how natural human actions just kind of play out.

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