Bill C-11 provides for a new exception to infringement for user-generated content (UGC), along with new grounds for fair dealing. These provisions, combined with a strong and clear message from the Supreme Court of Canada’s pentalogy of copyright cases regarding users’ rights and the copyright balance, signal a new paradigm for copyright law in Canada—one that tolerates a much greater level of interaction with copyright-protected works. This chapter considers the shape Parliament has given to..
article published in law journalIN THREE RECENT CASES, the Supreme Court of Canada provided several ...
The Supreme Court of Canada’s unanimous decision in CCH Canadian Ltd. et. al. v. Law Society of Uppe...
Following the authors’ earlier article discussing the maze of restrictive copyright rules that could...
This article examines user-generated content (“UGC”) and the significance of re-inventions in the co...
This chapter examines the potential impact of the proposed fair dealing and anti-circumvention provi...
This paper seeks the most promising approach for reforming the European copyright regime to introduc...
Faced with a rapidly evolving technological landscape—one in which near-perfect copies of digital co...
University of Lethbridge Faculty Association March / April 2015 6 Copyright Update One of the many c...
In the summer of 2012, the Supreme Court of Canada issued rulings on five copyright cases in a singl...
In the summer of 2012, the Supreme Court of Canada issued rulings on five copyright cases in a singl...
This paper examines the policy dimensions of user–generated content (UGC). It argues that policy–mak...
Following the authors’ earlier article discussing the maze of restrictive copyright rules that could...
Copyright in Canada is subject to a number of statutory defences, of which parodies and non-commerci...
Now that Bill C-11, Canada’s Act to Amend the Copyright Act, has undergone its second reading in the...
The Supreme Court of Canada’s unanimous decision in CCH Canadian Ltd. et. al. v. Law Society of Uppe...
article published in law journalIN THREE RECENT CASES, the Supreme Court of Canada provided several ...
The Supreme Court of Canada’s unanimous decision in CCH Canadian Ltd. et. al. v. Law Society of Uppe...
Following the authors’ earlier article discussing the maze of restrictive copyright rules that could...
This article examines user-generated content (“UGC”) and the significance of re-inventions in the co...
This chapter examines the potential impact of the proposed fair dealing and anti-circumvention provi...
This paper seeks the most promising approach for reforming the European copyright regime to introduc...
Faced with a rapidly evolving technological landscape—one in which near-perfect copies of digital co...
University of Lethbridge Faculty Association March / April 2015 6 Copyright Update One of the many c...
In the summer of 2012, the Supreme Court of Canada issued rulings on five copyright cases in a singl...
In the summer of 2012, the Supreme Court of Canada issued rulings on five copyright cases in a singl...
This paper examines the policy dimensions of user–generated content (UGC). It argues that policy–mak...
Following the authors’ earlier article discussing the maze of restrictive copyright rules that could...
Copyright in Canada is subject to a number of statutory defences, of which parodies and non-commerci...
Now that Bill C-11, Canada’s Act to Amend the Copyright Act, has undergone its second reading in the...
The Supreme Court of Canada’s unanimous decision in CCH Canadian Ltd. et. al. v. Law Society of Uppe...
article published in law journalIN THREE RECENT CASES, the Supreme Court of Canada provided several ...
The Supreme Court of Canada’s unanimous decision in CCH Canadian Ltd. et. al. v. Law Society of Uppe...
Following the authors’ earlier article discussing the maze of restrictive copyright rules that could...