Copyright Board posts comments received from Post-Secondary institutions regarding previous tariff years
April 5, 2019
|Comments received by the Board in response to Notice 2019-013 as well as comments filed by counsel for the University of British Columbia and the University of Winnipeg on February 28, 2019, can be found here.
- Ariel Katz
- Athabasca University
- Canadian Association of Research Libraries
- Canadian Association of University Teachers and Canadian Federation of Students
- Mount Royal University
- Northern Alberta Institute of Technology
- Simon Fraser University
- Southern Alberta Institute of Technology
- Universities Canada
- University of British Columbia and University of Winnipeg
- University of Calgary
- University of Guelph
- University of Toronto
Access Copyright Post Secondary Tariffs – Coming Soon to a Campus Near You?
February 20, 2019
|Excess Copyright - Howard Knopf blog
Wording of the two draft tariff’s currently being discussed can be found below:
COPYRIGHT REVIEW, CREATIVITY, INDIGENOUS, INDU, STANDING COMMITTEE, STUDENTS: Meera Nair’s remarks to the Industry Committee
December 21, 2018
|About Fair Duty
Years ago, a member of my doctoral committee said “fair dealing” lacked transparency and challenged me to rename the exception. And so “fair duty” came into being; to make evident the duty of copyright holders to follow the law and not impede legitimate exceptions to the rights of control afforded by law. As I have written here: “Exceptions exist in order to ensure that the rights of copyright do not impede the goals of copyright which might be loosely described as furthering both creativity and knowledge dissemination.”
Fair Duty, Meera Nair
STATUTORY REVIEW OF THE COPYRIGHT ACT – 107 submissions made to date
December 21, 2018
|STATUTORY REVIEW OF THE COPYRIGHT ACT
Universities Canada’s submission to the Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage concerning copyright at universities
December 21, 2018
|Universities Canada continues to advocate for a balanced approach to copyright law in Canada.
Here you will find their written brief submitted to the Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage as part of its study of remuneration models for artists and cultural industries. This study was assigned to the Committee as part of the statutory review of the Copyright Act led by the Standing Committee on Industry, Science and Technology.
Copyright and Culture: Michael Geist’s Submission to the Canadian Heritage Committee Study on Renumeration Models for Artists and Creative Industries
December 21, 2018
|Submission to the Canadian Heritage Committee Study on Renumeration Models for Artists and Creative Industries
McMaster Opts out of Access Copyright
November 23, 2013
Access Copyright & York University
August 2, 2007