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Posts Tagged ‘Finckenstein’

Is File-Sharing Legal in Canada? (Part 2)

March 4th, 2008

Part one of this essay ended with the CRIA (Canadian Recording Industry Association) was putting forth a motion to force ISPs to give up the names of P2P file-sharers.

On this motion, the CRIA provided an affidavit from Gary Millin, President of MediaSentry, a company that specializes in detecting the distribution of materials on P2P networks. The record labels supplied MediaSentry with the names of songs that were to be investigated. The company then searched for and downloaded the songs, matched the sources of the files to specific IP addresses and took screenshots of the users shared folders to show the volume of copyrighted material being made available for download. Read more…

Digital Music, Legal Studies, Media Technology , , , , , , , , ,

Is File-Sharing Legal in Canada? (Part 1)

March 2nd, 2008

Short answer: yes.

Well, it is more accurate to say that file-sharing is not illegal in Canada.

In 2005, I wrote and essay: “Copyright v. Privacy: A Review of the Legal War Between Record Labels and File Sharing from a Canadian Perspective”. I am going to review it here, in my blog and discuss what has happened since. Here is part one of the essay:

In February of 2004, the Canadian Recording Industry Association (CRIA) filed a federal lawsuit against 29 alleged file sharers for copyright infringement and requested their identities from the five major Canadian Internet Service Providers (ISPs). This was the first suit brought by the record label trade group against individual peer-to-peer (P2P) file sharers whom the CRIA claim have caused the loss of millions of dollars and dozens of jobs in the Canadian music industry. Citing privacy concerns, the ISPs refused. The CRIA proceeded to file a motion in the federal court to order the ISPs to disclose their clients’ private information. Read more…

Digital Music, Legal Studies, Media Technology , , , , , , , , ,