Archive for September 2008

Sunday, October 5: Funeral for Bill C-61

Thanks to Raphael, Fair Copyright for Canada:

On September 7, 2008, An Act to Amend the Copyright Act - known to his friends as “Bill C-61″ - died prematurely during an election call. The Vancouver chapter of Fair Copyright for Canada will be holding a funeral on Sunday, October 5 to remember the life and times of Bill C-61.

At 12:00pm, a funeral procession bearing the coffin of Bill C-61 will make its way from Waterfront Station, heading south on Seymour Street. The body will be laid to rest in front of a tombstone at the south entrance of SFU Harbour Centre on West Hastings Street.

Canadians are reminded that although this bill is being laid to rest, the issue is far from dead: how we vote in the next election will determine what the next version of this bill is going to look like.

WHEN: Sunday, October 5, 2008 at 12:00pm

WHERE: SFU Harbour Centre, South Entrance, 515 West Hastings Street

WHO: Vancouver Chapter of Fair Copyright for Canada

WHAT: Funeral Procession: 12:00pm
Eulogies at SFU Harbour Centre Entrance: 12:05pm

Posted by Heather Morrison to Uncategorized on 29 Sep 2008 | Comments (1)

Top 25 Censored Stories for 2009

From Project Censorship, the top 25 censored stories for 2009:

 Please go to the Project Censorship site for links to each story.


Posted by Heather Morrison to Uncategorized on 29 Sep 2008 | Comments (0)

Dear VANOC…

Photo by Ian Muttoo

 Dear VANOC,

This trademark stuff is getting completely redonculous.  First, there was the broad and unnecessary legislation protecting the Olympic brand and trademarked words like 2010, winter and Olympics.  I can’t believe that this was passed into law!

Then there was the Denman St. Olympia Pizza debacle, where you bullied a pizza shop that had had the same name and signage for the last 15 years, long before Vancouver even had an Olympic twinkle in its eye.

Now, you have trademarked part of the national anthem of Canada.  I read today that you trademarked “With glowing hearts” from the English version and “Des plus brillants exploits”from the French, before announcing that these would be slogans that you will use to brand keychains, ads, and who knows what else.

It’s thoughtful and kinda sweet that you will allow Canadians to sing our anthem on the medal podium, in schools and at special events without suing us for infringing on your trademark.

Thanks,

Tara

Posted by tara to copyright on 25 Sep 2008 | Comments (0)

Right to Know Week - Free Event Wed. Oct. 1 7:00 - 10:00 Vancouver

“Right to Know Week” is an international event which aims to raise awareness of individuals’ right to access government information and to promote access to information as a fundamental human right; it is Sunday Sept. 28th to Oct. 3rd 2008.  Canada’s info and privacy commissioners - both at the federal and provincial levels - are organizing public events.  There are a number of events throughout B.C. Here’s the information about the Vancouver event organized through BC’s Information and Privacy Commissioner’’s office and BC FIPA:

“Government Secrecy in BC and Canada: are we winning the struggle?”
Documents recording the decisions of government - past and present are essential in the quest for transparent government. Neither the public nor elected officials can ever hope to hold the government to account if they don’t have sufficient information about government activity. Nor can the government adequately demonstrate it has used public resources responsibly if the records are not preserved or easily made available for scrutiny.

Hear two global experts Alasdair Roberts and Professor Emeritus Terry Eastwood discuss the current threat in B.C. to the preservation of vital government records and the opportunity Canada has to take a leadership role in strengthening open government nationally and around the world.

Wed. Oct. 1st, 2008   7:00 - 10:00 pm
1400-1410 Segal Centre, SFU Harbourfront
515 West Hastings St.

Free. No registration required.

For more information on this event, other events around the province - in Victoria, Parksville, Campbell River, Kamloops, Surrey, 100 Mile House - or Right to Know Week  — www.oipc.bc.ca/RIGHT_TO_KNOW-2008.htm

Posted by Heather Morrison to Uncategorized on 25 Sep 2008 | Comments (0)

The Future of News: Free Event Monday, September 22

THE FUTURE OF NEWS
How Much Control Does the Public Have?

With the proliferation of free news on the internet, is the public in the driver’s seat when deciding what is news?  The days when editorial gatekeepers decided which stories we would see or read are gone.
In this brave new world of widespread access, there are some serious questions for people who value the quality and honesty of news sources: if we only go online for free news, then who will pay the journalists … and can we trust free online news services to provide the information we need?
To explore these issues and the changing landscape of news in Canada, the Canadian Media Research Consortium (CMRC) is holding free public forums across the country, beginning in Vancouver on Monday, September 22nd.
The Vancouver forum will be moderated by CBC TV journalist Ian Hanomansing, with guest speakers from both sides of the new media spectrum: Vivienne Sosnowski, who worked in Canadian newspapers including the Vancouver Sun, National Post and The Province, is now VP and editorial director of the Baltimore Examiner, the San Francisco Examiner and the Washington Examiner and the papers’ associated websites. And Leonard Brody, co-founder and CEO of NowPublic.com, is one of the pioneers in citizen-generated news, which is rapidly becoming one of the largest news agencies in the world, with over 130,000 contributing reporters in 140 countries. The Guardian ranks NowPublic.com as one of top five news sites in the world.
The public and journalists are invited to ask questions and join in the national dialogue on the future of news. To frame the discussion, Donna Logan, president of the CMRC and founding director of the UBC School of Journalism, will present new national research that discovered only a third of Canadians think the news they receive is ‘fair and balanced’ and nearly one in three who check online news at least daily has stopped using a media source because of loss of trust. Only 10 percent of news consumers in the 18-24 age group consider newspapers, television or radio news as important sources of information.
The Vancouver public forum is sponsored by the Canadian Media Research Consortium, the Network for Journalism Excellence, the British Columbia Press Council, and the UBC Graduate School of Journalism.

THE FUTURE OF NEWS
How Much Control Does the Public Have?
Monday, September 22, 7:00-9:30 pm
UBC at Robson Square Theatre, 800 Robson Street (at Howe)
Admission is free but seating is limited

Posted by Heather Morrison to Uncategorized on 22 Sep 2008 | Comments (0)

ibelieveinopen.ca

Update September 25 - as of today, 52 candidates have taken the pledge!  29 green, 21 NDP, 1 liberal!

Canadians - do you believe in open government?  If so, please go to ibelieveinopen.ca and take the pledge today!

ibelieveinopen is a movement to push politicians to make 5 commitments:

1. Support reforms that increase government transparency and accountability.

2. Make campaign promises specific and measurable, and report progress on promises and their metrics at least semi-annually.

3. Publish the content of his or her daily schedule, including meetings with lobbyists and special interest groups.

4. Support reforms allowing free access to scientific and survey data gathered by government institutions.

5. Support reforms that make it easier for Canadians to obtain government information they have a right to know.

Thanks to Jennifer Bell of civicaccess.ca

Posted by Heather Morrison to Uncategorized on 21 Sep 2008 | Comments (0)

CLA Election Kit and policy issues

The Canadian Library Association has just released the CLA Federal Election Kit with 9 issues to bring up with candidates.  There are several policy issues on the list!  The most recent issue (#9 on the list) is Net Neutrality - many thanks to CLA’s Danielle Dennie and BCLA’s Devon Greyson for their work in this area.

The 9 issues:

1. Copyright - a major advocacy area - see Unlocking the Public Interest on the CLA copyright site www.cla.ca/copyright

2. Library Book Rate

3. Removal of the GST on Reading Materials

4. Library services for Canadians with print disabilities

5. The Community Access Program

6. Public Library Infrastructure

7. Support for libraries through Library and Archives Canada

8. National Literacy Initiatives

9. Net Neutrality

The Election Kit includes brief information about all of these advocacy areas, and strategy tips.  Thanks, CLA!

Posted by Heather Morrison to Uncategorized on 19 Sep 2008 | Comments (0)

Secret ACTA agreement must be made public

The Canadian Library Association is one among many organizations calling for the Secret ACTA (Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement) draft agreement to be made public.  http://www.essentialaction.org/access/index.php?/archives/173-Secret-Counterfeiting-Treaty-Public-Must-be-Made-Public,-Global-Organizations-Say.html

From the announcement:  “The lack of transparency in negotiations of an agreement that will affect the fundamental rights of citizens of the world is fundamentally undemocratic. It is made worse by the public perception that lobbyists from the music, film, software, video games, luxury goods and pharmaceutical industries have had ready access to the ACTA text and pre-text discussion documents through long-standing communication channels”.

Thanks to Michael Geist for the tip, and for agreeing to serve as the Canadian contact on the release.

Posted by Heather Morrison to Uncategorized on 17 Sep 2008 | Comments (0)

Links from the IPC listserv

Two recent links from the IPC listserv:

Canwest no longer suing Tyee  (thanks to Tara Robertson)

Collapse of WTO Talks - One Good Piece of News this Summer (thanks to Brian Campbell)

Posted by Heather Morrison to Uncategorized on 17 Sep 2008 | Comments (0)

Jumpstarting the Public Sphere: Information Policy Issues for the 21st Century October 23-24, 2008

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Jumpstarting the Public Sphere: Information Policy Issues for the 21st Century October 23-24, 2008
Vancouver Public Library, Central Branch
350 Robson St., Vancouver BC
Presented by the Information Policy Committee of the BC Library Association

**  quick link to registration and full details:  http://www.bcla.bc.ca/jumpstarting **

With debates over information policy issues all over the news, the question of who controls and who has access to information has never been more timely. Many people have heard of things like Bill C-61, TILMA, media concentration, information access, and net neutrality  but may be unsure about what the implications of these terms are how they relate to information, libraries, and the public sphere.

On the evening of October 23, Michael Geist, Canada Research Chair in Internet and E-commerce Law, will give a keynote address on “Why Copyright? The Fight for Canada’s Digital Future” (synopsis below). His speech will set the tone for Friday morning’s panel  discussions in which presenters will give conference attendees the background information they need in order to spend the afternoon discussing  issues more deeply and coming up with creative ways of defending the public sphere from privatization and corporate control.

Thursday October 23 Keynote - Synopsis:

Michael Geist  http://www.michaelgeist.ca/
“Why Copyright? The Fight for Canada’s Digital Future”

In June 2008, the Canadian government introduced Bill C-61, new copyright legislation that closely followed the U.S. Digital Millennium Copyright Act. The public response to the bill was both immediate and angry - tens of thousands of Canadians wrote to the Minister and their local Members of Parliament, leading to town hall meetings, negative press coverage, and the growing realization that copyright was fast becoming a mainstream political and policy i ssue.  The “Canadian copy-fight”, which includes many new advocacy groups  and the Fair Copyright for Canada Facebook group that has over 90,000 members, has attracted considerable attention from the mainstream media, with many wondering how copyright had emerged as a contentious policy issue. This talk will assess both the legislative proposals and the Canadian copyfight experience in an effort to answer the oft- asked question “why copyright?”

Friday’s speakers will be:
* Ellen Gould, Trade Analyst - speaking about TILMA and trade agreements
* Paul Holden, BC Freedom of Information and Privacy Association (FIPA) - speaking about net neutrality
* David Loukidelis, BC Privacy Commissioner - speaking about  access to information
* Leslie Regan Shade, Concordia University - speaking about telecommunications pol icy
* David Skinner, York University - speaking about media concentration
* Paul Whitney, City Librarian, Vancouver Public Library - speaking about intellectual property
Please join librarians and interested community members to discuss  these pertinent issues and help come up with ideas for what you can do  aboutthem!

To register for the full conference, or for more information about speakers and times, please visit http://www.bcla.bc.ca/jumpstarting.

Michael Geist’s talk is free, but registration is required (and will open October 1; please see http://www.bcla.bc.ca/geist for more information).  Attendance at Geist’s talk is included in full- conference registration.

Student and low-income conference rates are available.
PLEASE NOTE: Media Democracy Day will be taking place at the  Vancouver Public Library on Saturday, the 25th of October. There will be  workshops about media democracy and the legendary annual Independent Media  Fair.
For more information about that event, please see http://www.mediademocracyday.org. We hope you can attend both the conference and the MDD events!

Questions or comments?

Please write to Elena Bianco  (ebianco@vcc.ca) or
Sabina Iseli-Otto (sio@vcn.bc.ca).

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Posted by Heather Morrison to Uncategorized on 08 Sep 2008 | Comments (0)