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  Sunday, February 11, 2007


OTTAWA- Canada's Private Copyright Collective is taking another stab at introducing levies on digital music players and memory cards.

The charges could add as much as $75 to the price of a new Apple iPod.

The collective, which seeks to compensate artists for unauthorized copying of their music, said Friday it's taking a new tack after a 2003 Federal Court of Appeals decision rejected the levies.

The court overturned the Copyright Board of Canada's approval of the charges after protests by a coalition of industry groups that included retailers Wal-Mart, Staples Business Depot and Future Shop.

The collective had argued the memory inside a digital audio device such as an iPod is an audio recording medium primarily used to store music, and therefore should be subject to the Canadian Copyright Act.

The act states an audio recording medium is "a medium regardless of its material form on which a recording can be reproduced."

The court, however, found the memory can't be defined as an audio recording medium.

Now, the group is going after the devices themselves. It says devices such as the iPod can be classified as a "recording medium" and should be subject to taxation.

"It is simply a matter of fairness that the creators of content, the creators of culture actually, should receive some compensation for the large volume of unauthorized and uncontrollable copying onto these media," said collective chair Claudette Fortier. "Private copying is a fact - Canadians do it."

The group is responsible for collecting a levy on blank recording media and distributing the money to those entitled to royalties.

In other words, every time a Canadian buys a blank CD, or audio cassette today a portion of the cost is sent to artists all over the world such as Kid Rock, Justin Timberlake and Paris Hilton.

In its new submission to the Copyright Board, the collective is proposing levies of $5 on devices with up to one gigabyte (GB) of memory, $25 for one to 10 GB, $50 for between 10 GB and 30 GB and $75 for over 30 GB. That would take the price of Apple's 30GB iPod to $365 from $290, a 26 per cent increase.

The group is also asking for levies of $2 to $10 for memory cards, which are primarily used to store photographs in digital cameras.

It's also asking for eight-cent increases to the current 21-cent levy on blank CD media and 77-cent charge for CD-R Audio, CD-RW Audio and MiniDiscs.


10:16:29 PM    

Canadian Copyright Group Wants iPod Tax. An anonymous reader writes "Unable to define memory as a 'recording medium,' Canada's Private Copyright Collective goes directly after portable music player devices, memory cards, and anything else that can be used to make private copies. The PCC submitted a proposal to the country's Copyright Board that suggests levies of $5 (Canadian) on devices with up to 1GB of memory, $25 for 1-10 GB, $50 for 10-30 GB, and $75 for over 30 GB. If approved, this propoal would increase the price of a 30-GB iPod by 26%. These collections are intended to compensate artists and labels for the losses they suffer when people 'illegally' copy or transfer music. The PCC is also seeking a new $2 to $10 tax on memory cards. The backbone of digital photography has become tangled up in the fight for making sure music companies get every nickel and dime they feel that they deserve." [Slashdot: Your Rights Online]
10:13:23 PM    


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