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The Canadian Music Creators
Coalition (CMCC) renewed its calls for the Canadian government to ensure a
made-in-Canada response to copyright reform. This call comes in the wake of the
landmark judgment October 4 against Jammie Thomas, the single mother of two from
Brainerd, MN who was hit with a penalty of $222,000 US for downloading 24 songs
(approximately 90 minutes of music with a retail value of less than $25) and the
Federal Government's addition of "copyright reform" to it's list of priorities
in last week's throne speech. "When the Canadian Record Industry Association
(CRIA) says 'copyright reform' what they really mean is 'give a free hand to sue
fans who download like they have in the US,'" explained CMCC representative and
Barenaked Ladies front man Steven Page. "We hope the government has a better
solution in mind." "We think lawsuits like the one in Minnesota would be
terrible for the music business in Canada. It's shortsighted to say 'See you in
court' one day and 'See you at Massey Hall' the next," Page continued. "If
record labels want to try and sue fans, we hope that they'll have the courtesy
to stop trying to do it in our names." The CMCC suggests a more effective
legislative approach to peer-to-peer technology would be one that accepts
current technological and music-business realities. "It's been nearly ten years
since peer-to-peer file sharing changed the music industry and, despite what
some people suggest, suing people isn't going to make it 1995 again," Page
elaborated. "Capitol Records v. Thomas is just another example of the drastic
measures American record labels have been taking against their fans for years.
Despite all this ill will, peer-to-peer downloading hasn't shown any sign of
going away. If the Canadian government wants to reform copyright it should be
creating a made-in-Canada solution that looks to where the music industry is
going, not where it was." (FROM www.boycott-riaa.com
)