The lovely city of Ottawa |
A little Canadian news before this blogger heads back to the UK:
this week the University of Ottawa Press
has published The
Copyright Pentalogy: How the Supreme Court of Canada Shook the Foundations of
Canadian Copyright Law, a book which collates the work of a number of
Canada's leading copyright scholars to attempt to examine the implication s of
the five copyright decisions handed down by the Supreme Court of Canada last
summer (see here
and here).
The five decisions all touched on different aspects of copyright law and
different industries, so this book should provide a pretty comprehensive
analysis of the state of copyright law in Canada at the moment.
The book is for sale, but the great (and unusual, for an academic
work) news, is that it is also available as a free
download under a Creative Commons licence. The book can be downloaded in
its entirety or each of the 14 chapters can be downloaded
individually. This is the first of a new collection from the UOP on law,
technology and society, of which Michael Geist is the
editor, that will be part of the UOP's open access collection.
In analysing the five decisions, this book covers fair dealing,
technological neutrality, the scope of copyright law (in particular the
establishment of a new "right" associated with user generated
content) and the implications of the decisions for copyright collective
management.
For those looking for more detail, editor Michael
Geist will be writing more about the individual contributions on his blog in the
days ahead and will provide more information on the plans for a conference on
the copyright pentalogy being planned for autumn.
No comments:
Post a Comment