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Posts Tagged ‘royalties’

Is File-Sharing Legal in Canada? (Grand Finale)

April 18th, 2008

Sorry for the delay. Stop biting your nails, curl up in a comfortable chair with a hot cup of tea and read this final chapter of my essay.

So the Federal Court of Appeal made it clear that the area of downloading, hard drives and file sharing remains a very grey area. In future cases, which the CIRA will no doubt file in the coming months, these aspects of the Copyright Act will be tested. This foreboding was voiced in one of Sexton’s final comments: “[I] wish to make it clear that if this case proceeds further, it should be done on the basis that no findings to date on the issue of infringement have been made.” (Sexton, par.54) Read more…

Digital Music, Legal Studies , , , , , ,

Digital Music Intermediation Part 2

February 11th, 2008

Wilfred Dolfsma is assistant professor of Innovation Management at the Rotterdam School of Management in The Netherlands. In his paper “How will the Music Industry Weather the Globalization Storm” (2000), Dolfsma examines the institution of copyright and how information and communication technology will impact its structure in the years following 2000.

In this “institutional economic analysis”, he explains the structure of the music industry, especially the functions of major record labels and music publishing companies, and their dependence on the current system of copyrights. He shows how the industry is directly related to both the national and international system of copyrights and that this system is based upon its historical capacity to influence governing bodies to change intellectual property law in its favour.

Dolfsma concludes that new communications technologies have made current copyright law obsolete and therefore should be “removed or appropriately changed, if and when possible”. The reliability of this conclusion is questionable because of the author’s subjective tone and self-contradiction with respect to financial gains for companies and artists. Although the conclusion is ineffective in illustrating the advantages of Internet transactions’ exception from copyright, it does succeed in proposing a plausible scenario for the future of intermediaries. Read more…

Digital Music, Media Technology, Social Media , , , , , ,