Dear Sir:
I am not in favour of the Canadian government legislating what it cannot adequately and clearly explain, in the light of the powerful interests pushing for the DRM legislation. I am not in favour of how fast, given the other important matters facing Canadian legislators, the bill is going through.
I am a content producer. I hope to some day make my living using the internet as a songwriter and op-ed writer. I have a burning interest in copyright law and I’d be leery of supporting the incoming legislation without more explanation.
I have uploaded a song, currently on Youtube, which is protected under a creative commons licence. BUT what will happen under this new law if I make a video and this video is uploaded to a server that uses drm software? Can I remove that protection from my own video? As I understand the legislation, I can not modify or kludge any DRM that any legal entity attaches to my work even though I control the copyright. As the person who made the content in the first place, this is a real kick in the head, and not exactly a spur to my creativity, unless it’s to put more rants about DRM legislation on my site.
If I understand the legislation correctly I won’t be able to adopt new technologies for old content. Let me tell you something. I work with geeks and they are NOT sending you emails or begging you to reconsider the legislation. They will merely, because it’s what geeks DO,(small edit here) subvert and end-run EVERYTHING your government tries to enact with respect to this legislation, and they will laugh at your discomfiture and ignorance (and mine, frankly) while they are doing it. I have absolutely NO ability to circumvent DRM. But some of my friends, who are REFUSING TO COMPLAIN about this legislation because they don’t want to be singled out for special treatment later, sure as heck do.
Did you ever consider that the technology to support this DRM was made by human beings who may just have built a ‘back door’ into it which will make the legislation the laughing stock of the free world?
My rights as a content creator are going to be messed over by this legislation, from everything I see, and my friends and colleagues will work tirelessly to pull the teeth of the legislation as fast as you can enact amendments to it! Seems like a waste of time, and an attempt to wring the last little bit of lobbying money from buggy whip media industries.
Don’t do it Mr. Prentice. The flood of emails and letters you are getting is now the same weight as a tombstone for your political career; please let me know that you’re smarter than the rest of your government, and more far-sighted than the frightened media moguls who are trying to buy a few more years of profits on the back of your career.
Allegra Sloman
I am indebted to Douglas Green, who posted to a CBC website, for providing me with a template for this letter. If I had a way to contact him and ask his permission, I would have done it, but somehow I don’t think he’d mind. The link to his comment of November 29 is here
Good letter! Copy protection has never worked except to inconvenience ordinary people. Look at how well copy protection has worked in places like china where most of the cd’s and dvd’s are pirated. Isn’t making the same mistake over and over again one of the hallmarks of insanity? Or, i guess, in the case of politicians, terminal stupidity. How I wish that in the next election i could vote for none of the above.