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I'm going into a little bit of a preamble here. Our gentleman here has to have a little bit more time before we start our meeting on copyright.
Again, I must thank my nominator, Scott Simms, for nominating me as chair. It's a tremendous honour for me to be the chair of the heritage committee. I'm sorry I didn't quite reciprocate in the way that I should have maybe with a nomination, but I am very pleased, again, to chair this committee, which we seem to have gotten along so well with.
There are a couple of things we are going to do today. We will carry on our meeting with the officials who will be here today until 5 o'clock. At 5 o'clock we'll switch into a little other business we have to do. We have some scheduling we should look at, or that at least everyone should have to peruse.
In regard to the next meeting, it goes back to some of the suggestions that were made at our last meeting about where we wanted to go as a committee.
Also today I'll be reporting a draft schedule of meetings for October, and I'll be outlining a museum study to be presented to members, as well as an operational budget proposal for a railroad museum study, and this is with the expenses. I think Mr. Scarpaleggia has made a request that a railroad museum from his area might want to come here, and I know Mr. Abbott has suggested a railroad museum from his area.
I have a couple of other things to put forward when we get into museums. It may be that each one of us could think of a small museum in our riding that we might ask to come as a witness. Then we would all know where we're coming from around this table. I think if there's a museum in your riding that could come, that would maybe represent something we might want to do. It's something to think about. Maybe down the way we could invite some of those people here when we come to discussing small museums.
Again, I have one announcement, and I'm going to make it now, regarding our meeting on Wednesday with CBC Radio-Canada. It's been requested by the CBC that the meeting be extended by 30 minutes. So I'm proposing that the meeting would run from 3:30 p.m. until 6 p.m. I don't know whether I can stay for the whole time. If I can't, I might have to ask one of my vice-chairs to chair the final part of the meeting.
That gives you a little bit of insight into where we're headed. I was going to bring some of these things up a little bit later, but we're going to talk about some of them from 5 o'clock until 5:30 p.m., to see where this committee will be going in the next little while. We do have estimates. We do have some of the those things that we can talk about at that time.
That said, I think I've taken up the time I had to take up.
Again, welcome to the Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage, meeting 11, it says, pursuant to Standing Order 108(2), a briefing on copyright.
Our witnesses I invite to the table are from the Department of Canadian Heritage and from the Department of Industry. Take your positions, please.
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Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I also thank the committee members. We are pleased to appear before you this afternoon to give you an overview of the Canadian Copyright Act, as well as the international obligations that it entails.
Today's presentation is purely technical. You have read the presentation that was handed out to you. This presentation describes the current Canadian Copyright Act. This presentation makes no reference at all to the history of this legislation over the past few years, nor does it refer to anything that might happen to this legislation in the future. This afternoon, our aim is to describe the legislation as it stands today. We are really confined to the present.
I gather that there will be a second sitting next week. At that time, we will be pleased to deal with the issues that might have to do with the history of the Copyright Act. This afternoon, we will give a 101 course on the current legislation.
The presentation will last more than 10 minutes. As it will be rather long, we beg your indulgence. If you have any questions, we will be pleased, Albert Cloutier, my colleague from Industry Canada and myself, to answer them during the presentation.
Let me begin without further ado. I invite committee members to turn to page 5, as the first pages give a quick view of the table of contents in which today's subject matter is covered quite exhaustively.
Page 5 deals with—
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Without further ado, let us go to page 5, which deals with the principles of the Copyright Act.
Let me begin by saying that the Copyright Act is a framework law that deals with many sectors, such as the artistic community, authors, artists, writers, cultural industries like film and music, information technology, service providers like Sympatico, Rogers, Telco and Telus, the fields of education and research, museums, libraries and consumers in general, just to name a few. Besides, we can also mention foreign stakeholders, given that works by many foreign authors are being used here in Canada. These people are very interested in the way our country meets its obligations in copyright matters.
Thus, we are dealing with legislation that affects a great number of people and has an obvious impact on Canada's economy. This act, which came into force in 1924, has two fundamental principles, the first one has to do with control and remuneration for rights holders. The term “control” refers to the highest degree of protection pursuant to the Copyright Act. When an exclusive right is granted to a rights holder, it gives him the right to accept or refuse the way in which his work will be used. This is a very important right. As a whole, rights holders want to have as many exclusive rights as can possibly derived from this legislation.
The right to remuneration has been somewhat reduced, to the extent that a rights holder can no longer accept or refuse that his work be used. He is only allowed to receive remuneration in exchange for the use of his work. This is an important distinction to draw. In our Copyright Act there are cases where the rights holder only receives a right to remuneration.
A corollary to this basic principle has to do with the dissemination, or access to works. This involves any means that can facilitate the use of works through the application of emerging business models that allow users to keep better track of works and to be in a better position to pay the appropriate fees. Here I am referring to management companies that have been set up to facilitate access. There are also individual licences and a host of business models that can facilitate the use of works. This concept also extends to exceptions and limitations, whereby certain categories of persons can use a copyright without having to ask for the rights holder's authorization.
Page 6 deals with jurisdiction in copyright matters. First, let us note that the Copyright Act belongs to a set of laws dealing with intellectual property. Some examples are given here. We should also note that in Canada, copyrights falls exclusively under federal jurisdiction.
I really want to emphasize the fact that this is a legislated right. In other words, unless a right's holder has a right that is specifically provided for in the legislation, he cannot exercise any kind of control over his work. Let me explain this. For instance, there are no royalties for renting audiovisual works in Canada. Thus, any retailer can rent out films, without asking for any authorization for anyone who took part in creating the film, be it the producer, the manager or anyone else.
This is why the field of copyright is constantly evolving and adapting to new kinds of use. Since this is a statutory right, if some kind of use has not been provided for in the legislation, creators cannot exercise any kind of control over this kind of use.
Page 8 deals with departmental responsibilities. The responsibility for this file is shared between two departments. The Ministry of Industry is responsible for intellectual property as a whole, including copyright. The Copyright Act identifies the Minister of Industry as the minister responsible for this legislation.
The Minister of Canadian Heritage is responsible for the formulation of cultural policy as it relates to copyright. He is given this responsibility pursuant to the incorporating act of his department, namely the Department of Canadian Heritage Act.
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In the next section of the presentation we'll discuss what kind of material is actually protected by copyright and what is the nature of that protection—in other words, what rights are inherent in the copyright.
First, I'd like to mention that ideas themselves are not protected by copyright; it is the expression of the idea that is actually protected. By way of example, we can think of software. There are many ways of executing certain instructions to do certain things, but it's the way the author chooses to create the program that is protected, not necessarily what the program does.
The same is true with a literary work. There are certain stories that in a sense are universal and very much belong to the public. But what is expressly protected are the words used by the author to tell the story.
Copyright protects a variety of works: literary works, dramatic works, musical works, artistic works, and combinations of those works, as well as combinations of facts. Although a fact is not typically protected by copyright, the combination of those facts may give rise to protection as a compilation.
These are the works of creation, but copyright also protects what builds on that creation and enhances it. Thus the way a performer actually performs a musical work is protected, as is the way that performance is recorded. As well, the way it's communicated through a broadcast signal may be protected. These latter types of protections, which are not the works themselves, are sometimes referred to as neighbouring rights.
On page 9, there are some examples from each category of works. While you may wish to read through them, there are a couple of points worth noting. Under “Literary works”, for example, copyright obviously protects works of fiction, but it also protects academic material, and computer programs are recognized as literary works.
Under “Compilations”, I want to draw your attention to the fact that a database of facts can be protected, where the arrangement and selection of the facts that go into the database give it an original character. Although each individual fact is not protected, the database as a whole may be protected as an original work.
In terms of what I've talked about regarding neighbours, when we talk about performances, there are the performances of actors, musicians, dancers, and singers. They get a type of protection that's more limited in scope than the work they're actually performing. Presumably that's in recognition of the special originality and creativity that attaches to the underlying work. The same is true for sound recordings and broadcast signals, which benefit from protection.
On page 11, we start to describe the rights inherent in copyright. Copyright is not a monolithic single right; it's sometimes referred to as a bundle of smaller rights that cover very specific kinds of activities. Not all uses of a copyright work are protected by the Copyright Act.
The list on page 11 is not exhaustive but identifies perhaps the most significant rights. It includes the right to control the reproduction of a work, which is probably the most important right in copyright. Reproduction in the paper world obviously refers to photocopying, but the right is crafted in a way that's technologically neutral. When you have a digital reproduction of a work, it's also covered by the Copyright Act.
The second right, communication to the public by telecommunication, is something that covers what we traditionally think of broadcasting, and until the later 1980s was actually referred to as a broadcasting right, but subsequently it's been broadened to be more technologically neutral and is now a communication to the public by telecommunication right. That right not only governs traditional broadcasting, but communications that take place over the Internet. We have confirmation of this through a decision of the Supreme Court of Canada when it looked at a tariff that would have been applied to Internet service providers. While the court concluded that Internet service providers are not communicating works, it still recognized that the right does apply to the Internet environment.
A third important right is the public performance right. Again, in a traditional setting we think of the performance of plays or perhaps a work of choreography in the form of a ballet, but it also extends to venues where you might have some kind of electronic performance. For example, if you're talking about a sports bar where there's a widescreen TV with a sports event going on in the background, in that case there's the public performance of the sports event as a work, so the use of that work is controlled by the rights holder. In contrast, a private performance in one's own home is not covered by copyright, and that's the distinction there. Ultimately, the list is finite, and anything that's not on the list is not protected by copyright.
I won't go through the other two. There are illustrations, but again this list you see here is not the full list you would find in the act.
Pages 12, 13, and 14 give some sense of the more limited right that's granted to the neighbours. So performers, until their performances are actually recorded, have the right to control their broadcasts to the public.
Until a performer actually consents to the recording of his or her performance, they have the right to prevent its broadcast or they have the right to control the broadcasting of that. That right actually disappears once they consent to its recording. So it's a limited right to control the communication to the public of the performance. In that way, they're treated somewhat differently from the author of a work who has a much stronger right to control the broadcast of their work. Once they've consented to its fixational recording, as I call it, then they have a right to control the further reproductions of their performance that may be based on that recording.
Were there further questions?
On the next page, in terms of sound recordings, music labels have the right to control the publishing, the reproduction, and the renting out of their sound recordings.
As Danielle mentioned earlier on, there are in a sense two kinds of rights that may be conferred. One is an exclusive right that gives the rights holder the ability to control the use of the work. A more limited right is the right to be paid for the use of the work, but you don't actually have the ability to refuse permission to use the work. Currently, for the communication of musical works, there is a right to be paid, but there is no right to say no. That's the case for both the performer and for the label. They can't deny a broadcaster, for example, the right to broadcast their recording or their performance, but they do have the right to be paid. That payment is established by the Copyright Board of Canada, which is an independent, quasi-judicial tribunal that's been established precisely to fix copyright royalties, among other things, for the purpose of setting royalties for the communication of music. There again, it's an important distinction between the creator of the work who does have an exclusive right versus the neighbour who has a much more limited right.
On page 14, it talks about the rights in broadcast signals. By a signal here, we're not talking about a work as such. We're literally talking about the electromagnetic waves that are used to communicate some copyright material. The nature of the protection here is basically to provide broadcasters with protections against the theft of their signals. So they can say no to the recording of their signal, to the rebroadcasting of their signal, and the performance of their signal in a public place where there is an entrance fee. In the example I had given previously--the sports bar--where typically there is a cover charge, they have the right to prevent the public performance of that.
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Page 16 deals with moral rights. Following what my colleague said about economic and neighbouring rights, moral rights have only been granted to authors of works in Canada. No one holds any neighbouring rights. For instance, no artist, no producer of a sound recording, no radio broadcaster holds any moral rights in Canada. Only authors hold moral rights, which can be divided into three categories: the right of attribution, the right of integrity and the right of association.
The right of attribution is the right to be associated to one's work, to be identified as the author of a work. The right of integrity is the right to prevent anyone from modifying, altering or changing a work in a prejudicial way. I am emphasizing this term because if the change is not prejudicial to the author, no recourse can be applied. As for the right of association, it is meant to prevent any prejudicial use of a work by associating it with some product, service or cause.
In Canada, there was a cause célèbre involving an author who had created geese that were displayed at the Toronto's Eaton Centre. Now during the Christmas season, the Eaton Centre had decided to tie little red ribbons to the little geese. These red ribbons that were added were deemed to go against the author's moral right. This is an illustration of how this right is implemented.
Page 16 gives criteria for protection, which are the basic requirements for copyright protection. This deals with originality; of course, the work must be original. A mere copy of reproduction of someone else's work would not satisfy the standard of originality. Fixation of the work is also required in order to benefit from protection pursuant to the Copyright Act. We must note that protection of a work arises automatically upon its creation. This is very different from patents, for instance, where the potential patent holder must apply to the patents' commissioner who, after studying the file, will say whether this inventor can become the patent holder for a given invention. In the copyright field, as soon as the standard of originality has been met and the work has been fixed, protection arises, without any need for any authority to declare whether or not this work is truly a work as defined by the Copyright Act.
In Canada, copyright can be registered. Registration is optional. The creation of a work is in itself sufficient for its protection under the legislation. However, if someone wants more security, he can register his copyright with the Intellectual Property Office. Let us also note that it is unnecessary to mark a work with a “c” symbol in a circle to protect it. Here again, we see that the originality of a creation suffices under the Copyright Law.
Who is the author of a given work? It is the person who created this work, for example someone who wrote the lyrics of a song, or someone who has created a computer program. However, there are exceptions to this legislation. For instance, in photography, the author is the one who owns the original plate, or what is sometimes called the “negative”. But what happens to copyright in a digital setting where there are no more plates or negatives. In such cases, the owner of the camera is the author of the photographic work.
Who is the copyright holder? Once again, generally, the copyright holder is the author. However, the legislation has provided for situations where the first copyright holder could be someone else, tout the extent that there is no agreement to the contrary. Let me explain.
When working in an employee-employer relationship, the employer would be the first copyright holder for any document prepared by his employee, to the extent that certain criteria are followed, specially regarding the employer's supervision of the work done by his employee. If there is no agreement to the contrary, the employer would be the first copyright holder.
When dealing with patents, agreements to the contrary frequently occur, but normally, when the work is done in an employer-employee relationship, the employer would be the first copyright holder.
As for works prepared or published under the direction of the Crown — like the work done by consultants for the Crown —, the Crown would be the copyright holder.
There is another exception. In the case of photographs and portraits, the person who commissioned the photo is the first copyright holder. If, for instance, you get married and you ask a photographer to take your wedding pictures, as you are the one to order the photos from the photographer, you would be the first copyright holder. We must note that in fact, photographers often sign agreements to the contrary. Photographers very frequently want to be the first copyright holders for the photos, but even when that happens, we must know that the legislation is very clear regarding the fact that the one who commissioned the photo is the first copyright holder.
Let us go on to the duration of protection for works. In general, works remain protected for 50 years after the author's demise. This means 50 years beyond the author's life span. There is a technical detail; we should know is someone passes away on September 25, 2006, the protection will continue to the end of a calendar year. Thus, the 50 year period would begin on January 1st, 2007. When the period of protection expires, the work comes into the public domain. This is a standard formula for copyright. When the work is in the public domain, anyone who wants to use this work can do so without asking permission from the author or from the copyright holder.
But we must be careful, because this rule is not as simple as it may appear. For instance, in the case of Beethoven, who died a very long time ago, his work has been in the public domain for a very long time. But if, on the other hand, a producer of song recordings, or a symphony orchestra, for instance, were to make a recording of Beethoven 9th symphony, in such a case, neither Beethoven or his succession would have any rights regarding that work, the producer of the song recording who has done the work needed to produce this new version of the work would benefit from protection. Likewise, all the musicians, as artists, could be protected by the Copyright Act, for a 50 year period.
I mentioned other matters, namely neighbouring rights. Protection is somewhat shorter for artists and producers, it covers 50 years after the first fixation of the audio recording or after the execution, if it has not been fixed, or, for audio recordings, 50 years after fixation. Of course, for audio recordings, individuals are very rarely involved. Most cases involve corporations, and the protection lasts for 50 years. Thus, neighbouring rights are more restricted and less protected than the rights of authors.
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The rights set out in the Copyright Act are subject to certain exceptions and limitations. These exceptions may be in the nature of allowing a use in a certain context without requiring not only the consent of the rights holder, but also without requiring payment of the rights holder. In some cases, a limitation may derogate from an exclusive right such that the use can be made, but there still is a requirement of compensation.
I'll discuss a few examples to illustrate some of this.
There's a general exception that applies broadly to all the rights in the act and that's what we refer to as fair dealing. It's possible for somebody to use material in a limited way for the purposes of research or private study or news commentary or criticism. This provision was recently looked at by the Supreme Court of Canada in a case called CCH, which is a legal publisher, versus the Law Society of Upper Canada. The situation was that the law library at the Law Society was making reproductions of certain case material from the books published by law publishers for client lawyers. The court held that even though this was a commercial context, because the lawyers were doing it to derive revenues, it was nonetheless fair dealing in this context because it was done for research and private study.
Apart from this general exception, there are some very specific exceptions that have been put into place for the benefit of a number of public institutions, such as non-profit libraries, archives, museums, educational institutions, and persons with perceptual disabilities. In that category, for instance, a school or a teacher can perform a sound recording in the context of a class for the benefit of students. That doesn't require payment or consent of a rights holder. They can also turn on the television so that they can watch a news program, even though normally this would be considered the public performance of that program in the classroom, and there's no payment or there's no consent required.
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Another limitation on the communication right exists in the context of what we call retransmission. Retransmission is done by cable companies and direct-to-home satellite companies. They pick up television signals and then transmit them by cable to their subscribers. Normally the rights holders that produce the content contained in those signals would have the ability to say no or to negotiate terms of payment. In this particular case, however, just because of the large number of rights holders that would need to be consulted and clear all the rights for, there's what we call a compulsory licence. There's a requirement of payment again, but you don't go to each and every rights holder to obtain authorization. The Copyright Board establishes a tariff and the cable companies and satellite companies pay according to that tariff. That's a limitation as opposed to a true exception.
The private copying regime is another kind of compulsory licensing scheme with a bit of a twist. What it allows people to do is to make copies of music for their personal use on certain kinds of recording media. They don't again need the consent of the rights holder and they don't pay. However, the manufacturers and importers of the media that qualify under the regime for the making of these copies must pay a form of levy to a collective society that represents various classes of rights holders, in this case authors of musical works, the sound recording makers, and the performers. That gives you a sense of the range and type of limitations and exceptions you might find in the act.
If you turn to page 22, that slide discusses a bit about how the rubber hits the road, as it were, in terms of how rights holders can exploit their rights to their advantage for economic purposes. Not only is copyright in a sense a bundle of individual rights, and each of these individual rights can be administered in different ways, but by the same token a rights holder can decide that they will license by territory or over a certain timeframe or into a certain media. It's up to them to decide how they wish to exploit their rights.
A fundamental principle of copyright is that these rights are alienable. In other words, you can assign your right to other people so that they can then exploit the right. This is very important for the manner in which ultimately these rights are administered.
This is true of the economic rights, but the moral rights are treated on a slightly different footing. The moral rights recognize that it is important not to allow the honour or reputation of the author of the work to be prejudiced. They can't be transacted away; they can't be sold or assigned. But if somebody wants to use a work in a particular way that in theory could be prejudicial to the creator, then they can approach the creator and the creator can waive their right and say they consent to the use in this context. That's a bit of the distinction between the economic rights and the moral rights.
How is consent given? That's dealt with on page 23. I can give a simple permission that is generally known as a licence. I just allow you to use my work in a specific instance or for specific uses, but I can also surrender my right to you. I can sell it to you, if you will. In that case there's actually a change, a transfer of the ownership of the right. I'm no longer the person who can exploit it and you have to go to the new owner to get all the necessary consents. To be legally effective, these assignments and these licences must be in writing and signed by the owner of the copyright. That's a small technical matter.
On page 24, we deal with the way in which rights management actually occurs in practice. For the most part, individual creators are not interested in having to go out themselves to try to sell their works. They're more interested, by and large, in the creative act and the creative process. They have a number of options that are open to them in terms of how they can do this. In some cases, they can assign their right to a publisher. In the literary world, that's the typical arrangement. They will assign their right to the publisher, and then the publisher is responsible for marketing the work and exploiting the right.
In the case of music, on the other hand, particularly as it relates to communication, the rights holders have banded together in the form of a collective society, and the collective society is the entity that will license the rights on their behalf. There again, how the licensing is done can vary. In some cases, licences are transactional, so they relate--
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Page 25 deals with international copyright forums. Some of them deal solely with copyright, others deal with copyright and education sciences, and others still are of a very commercial nature.
The World Intellectual Property Organization only deals with copyright. The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization deals with access issues. It has also dealt with the Convention on the Prevention and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions. This organization has occasional indirect dealings with copyright matters.
Regarding commercial agreements, the World Trade Organization has the WTO agreement on those aspects of intellectual property rights that have to do with trade, the TRIPS contains a chapter aimed specifically at intellectual property. Chapter 17 of the North American Free Trade Agreement deals with intellectual property and more specifically with copyright. Finally, the free trade agreement between Canada and the United States that was concluded in 1989 sets out obligations for rebroadcasting.
Page 26 deals with international copyright norms. These are based on the fundamental principle whereby copyright is dealt with on a national basis, whereby foreigners can enjoy the protection of Canadian law pursuant to our international commitments. Likewise, Canadians whose works, audio recordings and performances are used in foreign countries can benefit from protection outside Canadian borders.
Page 30 deals with the international agreements of which Canada is a member. It is very important to emphasize the word “member”, because these conventions are binding for Canada, I mean the conventions that Canada has already implemented, such as the Berne Convention, the Rome Convention, the Canada-US Free Trade Agreement, and more recently, the WTO Agreement on TRIPS.
Page 32 mentions various international agreements to which Canada is a signatory. The word “signatory” means that the Canadian government is not bound by these agreements. Canada signed these conventions because it agreed with their underlying principles, but has not yet taken any steps to become a member of these conventions. To do this, the Copyright Act would have to be amended.
Page 34 goes into further detail about one of the international conventions that I mentioned earlier: the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works. This convention is administered by the World Intellectual Property Organization and already has 162 members. It is very important in the copyright field, because it not only contains a broad list of exclusive rights granted to authors, but it also includes obligations regarding moral rights as well as a three-step test.
The three-step test is a provision of the Berne Convention that allows a member state to restrict the scope of certain activities or exclusive rights under certain conditions. This is called a three-step test because there are three criteria to be met. The member state must only use exception or restriction in special cases.
Also, it cannot unjustifiably impede the marketing of the work. It also cannot cause prejudice to the rights holder. These three conditions must be fulfilled before the government can oppose the exclusive rights prescribed by the convention.
The Rome Convention is a convention on neighbouring rights. A little earlier, my colleague Albert talked about the rights of artists, sound recorders and broadcasters. The Rome Convention is a convention which frames the protection these three beneficiaries receive. The convention is administered by three international organizations: the World Intellectual Property Organization, or WIPO, UNESCO and the International Labour Organization, or ILO.
It should be noted that the United States is not a member of this convention. It's a convention which grants rights to the three beneficiaries mentioned a little earlier, but more limited rights in certain cases. There are no moral rights, there is no three-step test, but there is a fairly exhaustive list of exceptions which can be taken into account under this convention.
Let's move on to page 32. You can see the Canada-United States Free Trade Agreement, which was signed in 1988. This agreement established minimum standards for cable retransmission. Following this agreement, Canada amended its own legislation to create the famous mandatory licensing system my colleague Albert Cloutier talked about a little earlier. You should also know that this agreement contains a cultural exemption for cultural industries.
Then, there was NAFTA, signed by the United States, Mexico and Canada. Again, this agreement sets minimum levels. In fact, the minimum levels of copyright protection were largely based on the Berne Standards. The agreement also includes a dispute settlement mechanism, which means that if one of the three countries does not respect its obligations, one of the other countries can lodge an appeal before a group of experts who would have to decide whether the country in question did or did not respect its international obligations. As well, the agreement includes a cultural exemption for cultural industries. No complaint has ever been lodged to date.
Further, the World Trade Organization has implemented paragraph 6 of the Doha Declaration on TRIPS and public health. This agreement, yet again, established minimum levels. I'm insisting on using the expression "minimum levels" because this means it would be possible for a member State to go beyond the obligations set out in the convention, but each country must, at the very least, respect these thresholds. Within the framework of this agreement, new standards had been introduced for computer programs. It was the first time that an international convention specified that a computer program was protected under the Copyright Act. Again, a three-step test and a dispute settlement mechanism were also established. You should know that, until today, only one complaint was made to the WTO regarding copyright, and it was a case which pitted the European Union against the United States.
Let's now turn to the WIPO Treaty on copyright, or the WCT. This treaty came into effect in 1996 and is administered by the World Intellectual Property Organization. Today, 60 countries are members of the treaty. Canada is a signatory, but not a member. This treaty supplements the Berne Convention. The WCT represents a special arrangement within the meaning of the Berne Convention, and it completes the Berne Convention to ensure that the Internet and any use made of digital works are framed and subject to international minimum standards.
Lastly, there is the 1996 WIPO Performances and Phonograms Treaty which affects sound recording producers. That treaty was also signed in 1996. There are 58 signatory countries including Canada. At the outset, this treaty was to provide economic rights so as to address new technologies and all the digital issues. It also provides for a three-step test.
Mr. Chairman, that completes our technical presentation. We will be pleased to answer certain questions.
If I may, I'll take a brief minute before I get into the timing of my question—just as a little aside, maybe for the benefit of new members—to say that we dealt with copyright in the last session. Some of you have already dealt with it. As you can see today, it's quite complex.
You will be lobbied from many different angles in many different ways. Maybe you have been already; I don't know. I found in my experience with it that they would come to see me, and I hadn't, I guess, done jurisprudence in the first place. They came in fresh, and I didn't know much about the issue—say with radio transmissions and that sort of thing, or photographs.
Just as a word of advice, get some information from these guys about this before they come to you. You'll find that it is incredibly beneficial and will shorten your meetings. I just want to put that out there—I say it to all—because it gets quite crazy.
Anyway, in questioning I want to talk about WIPO for a minute. We're way behind, aren't we?
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Our Copyright Act, as currently worded, does apply to the digital context. When my colleague Albert reviewed economic rights, he mentioned on several occasions that economic rights that are provided for under the Copyright Act do apply to the digital context.
Clearly, several cultural industries feel that additional legislative efforts must be made in order to allow them to profit fully from their creations. In this context, the film industry, the sound recording industry and the software industry—to name but a few—are demanding amendments to the Copyright Act. Many associations also think that it would be appropriate to amend the Copyright Act so that they can work in a more secure and clear context in terms of their business model or in order to benefit fully from their creations.
Others are also demanding that the legislation be updated. Service providers, for example, now that works are circulating on their networks, are wondering what their role is and their responsibility in this context and they would like these issues to be examined.
The education, research and library sector would also like us to address the increasingly frequent usage of contemporary digital works and they would like to see amendments to the act in order to facilitate their work.
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Thank you for returning.
First of all, I'd like to go over the agenda from now until October. Everyone has the calendar.
On Wednesday the 27th, as I explained earlier, CBC will be here from 3:30 until 6. Again, I might have to have one of my vice-chairs do part of that meeting for me.
On Monday the 2nd, we have another copyright briefing. If you can get the fog out of your mind about some of the things we've just heard, check Bill and you'll notice there were certain parts of Bill C-60 that weren't clear and still weren't answered. Do scan through at least the recommendations this committee put forward in the May 2004 report. I think those would be important, so we can question where we might be going with copyright and some of the bills.
On Wednesday the 4th we're talking about some museum studies. Everyone has that and objectives of this study and stuff. Let's go over some of that in the next little while and be ready for that particular study that day.
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Okay. I'm glad I asked the question, then, and I'll tell you why.
I think as far as it goes, it's fine, but I believe the real question that has to be answered is what criteria should the federal government establish--and here I mean any federal government, whether it be ours or not--in terms of federal responsibility for the funding that would go to small museums? This information on small museums in Canada--the overview, the introduction, the issues and challenges, and so on and so forth--is all very interesting, but at the end of the day, if we have not defined what the criteria should be for the federal government....
If I may, I just want to be completely clear so that my friends understand. To me this is not a partisan question; this is a question of jurisdiction. If we are talking about something that has a real interest to Ed Fast and his constituents in Abbotsford, and there is a strong local flavour, is there a federal responsibility to Mr. Fast's constituents or not? Is there a national concern, a national connection? Clearly, in the case of railways, I think there is. I think that case can be made. But even with railways there are sub-concerns.
So I would suggest that what we need from our researchers is a more concise way to say what I'm expressing right now, establishing criteria, or a recommendation on criteria, for the federal government to determine federal responsibility. It's not a jurisdictional question as much as it is a question on what is the rationale for there to be a federal contribution to a museum.
:
Mr. Chairman, I agree with Mr. Abbott that we should quickly consider Mr. Scapaleggia's motion.
On the other hand, I will come back to our last meeting when we spent so much time on the museum studies. I thought we had settled the matter. At the meeting, I said something to the effect that it was a waste of time, given the work that was initially done by the previous government with regard to museums.
The consultation of regional and local museums will only be useful in response to a bill tabled by the government. Besides, given the $4.6 million cuts to museum assistance that has just been announced, it seems the government has information on the state of affairs.
Why lose time on this issue? Let us allow the government to move forward with its bill, and we will respond accordingly. Initially, we had presented issues that might take time to consider, given that there might be an election called next spring. In addition to museums, we need to deal with such urgent issues as film, television and the CRTC.
With respect to the agenda that was submitted to us, I find that too much time was set aside for studies, which in the end will probably be of no use.
:
This arises from the suggestion last June from Mr. Scarpaleggia about having the railway museums come here. Generally, most of the committee members, I believe, were in agreement that railway museums had some particularly unique needs among museums. For the record, I have done a little work on this and have received information.
There are fundamentally, in the area of railway historical museums, two organizations, and there are different manifestations of those two organizations. I think we have to listen to both of them.
Before I carry on with that, let me make a quick aside. I would suggest respectfully to Mr. Kotto that if we have time in this committee to do this work, the information we gather will be of very high value for our government or any successor government for making policy, particularly with respect to railway museums.
I'll just finish my summary.
Number one, concerning organization, the Canadian Railroad Historical Association or CRHA, my notes say, is a world-class, pan-Canadian institution that owns, preserves, and disseminates information on Canadian railway heritage throughout Canada. The museum Mr. Scarpaleggia is recommending we hear from is actually the most significant manifestation of the Canadian Railroad Historical Association.
In addition to that, however, there is a second organization that is not in competition with but actually adds to this picture. That is the Canadian Council for Railway Heritage. In summary, the CCRH is an organized railway interest group that lobbies for improvement and sustainability on behalf of railway museums, tourist railroads, and railway heritage organizations in Canada. They are actually involved sometimes in rail tours and so on.
It's all part of this very unique thing that Canada has. Canada would not be a nation—we would not exist—without the railways. That's how key railways are to us. If we have time and if it's the wisdom of this committee to go ahead with these hearings, my recommendation would be to hear from spokespersons from both of those organizations.
:
I will not be pushing on any open doors. I'm not opposed to discussing Mr. Scarpaleggia's motion, which we do support. We were talking about the distinctiveness of that museum.
However, to come back to the testimony by the representatives of the Canadian Museums Association prior to the adjournment, it had been made clear that further studies would lead us back to the same conclusions reached during the previous parliament.
The information is available. Once again, if the government is announcing a $4.6 million cut to museums assistance this afternoon, it is because it has information at its disposal. If not, we might think it was improvising, which would greatly surprise me. The government should move forward with its bill on the basis of work undertaken by the previous government, and then we will see.
I am astounded, stunt and exasperated to see that so many weeks have been set aside for reviewing museums. We need to deal with the Canadian Railway Museum because its distinctiveness is definitely not an asset, contrary to what we might think.
:
Mr. Chair, may I present and ask support for this motion?
At the beginning of the meeting you mentioned that this museum was in my area. Just for the record, it is not in my riding. It's important, because this is not about my constituency per se. It's not in my riding. It's not even in my region of Quebec, and to be honest, I didn't know that much about the museum until I was invited this summer for a visit. I was just amazed and bowled over by what I saw.
This, Mr. Chair, is one of the top five rail museums in the world. It is not a small museum. The breadth of its collection is extraordinary. It captures the history of rail in Canada. At one point it was considered for integration into the Canada Science and Technology Museum. This is an extraordinary asset and treasure for Canada.
If we invite representatives from this museum, we will be alerted to a very important situation, almost a crisis situation, with this museum. I would hate to see this museum take a step backwards in any way. I think the hearing could probably generate some information, some answers, and even some further questions in relation to the museum policy in general in Canada, maybe in relation to small museums as well.
I was amazed at what this museum offers. It's not just any kind of museum; it's a very unique situation, and I would ask that the committee take one session to hear representatives of the museum discuss the challenges they face in relation to their future.