Results tagged “michaelgeist”

Acting Up Against a New Millennium

Back when Parliament Hill was in the throes of its last electoral shake-up, Bill C-61, An Act to amend the Copyright Act, was nearly forgotten, buried beneath all the high-stakes drama of a government on the brink. When Governor General Michaëlle Jean dissolved the thirty-ninth parliament at Harper's request on September 7, 2008, the legislation died, with a promised—or threatened—resurrection should the Conservatives win re-election.

Oh! What a Throttled Web We Weave

For almost a year and a half now, some of Canada’s major ISPs, including Bell and Rogers, have defended their throttling practices by arguing that excessive BitTorrent traffic is crippling their networks. Open-internet proponents, like Michael Geist, SaveOurNet.ca, and even Google, have questioned the telecoms' motives and asked the CRTC to step in and stop throttling. Geist further argues that throttling, high prices, and slow speeds, are reducing Canada’s competitiveness in the new digital economy. Today, a report released by the OECD on broadband growth and distribution, revealed that Canada’s broadband services are among the slowest and the most expensive in the developed world. In terms of price per megabyte, Canada ranks twenty-eighth overall, just ahead of Mexico and Poland. With the CRTC’s July traffic-management hearings fast approaching, net-neutrality advocates are working overtime to spread awareness of the issues and rally Canadians behind their cause.

Despite claims to the contrary by Canadian recording industry lobby groups like CRIA and the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative, Canada is not the leading world source of digital media piracy. According to a new study by BayTSP—a U.S. firm which investigates file sharing for the movie and music industries—Canada doesn't lead the world in copyright infringement notices. As Michael Geist reports (the study hasn't been publicly released yet), Canada’s rank is declining; last year Canada ranked seventh, this year it only ranks tenth. In terms of both total numbers and on a per-capita basis, Canada isn't the worst offender—the real pirates are in Spain, Italy, and France, each of which garners five times as many infringement notices as Canada, but of those four countries, only Canada is on the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative's Priority Watch List for copyright infringement and media piracy.

Found, One <em>Search Engine</em> Podcast

Search Engine, the critically acclaimed and wildly popular CBC tech podcast, is moving to TVO. Since June 2008, when budget problems forced the CBC to cancel the Radio One version of the program and cut the show’s staff, the program has existed in a kind of uncertain limbo. But now, with the move to TVO, the show’s future has been secured.

Several years ago, Steven May did what any heartbroken, web-savvy individual would do: he blogged. Why throw gravel at your ex-girlfriend's window, or leave groveling "Iloveyou" [sniffle] "Imissyou" [honk] "Canwepleasepleasepleasegetback— tooooo—" [voice crack] "—gether?" messages on her answering machine when you could just as easily get her attention by broadcasting your woes on the web? But May never really intended for his ex-girlfriend (and ex-girlfriend’s friends, and ex-girlfriend’s friends-of-friends) to see his post-breakup blog. Really—he just needed to get a few things off his chest. Although May’s reactions were "virtual," the ramifications of his online grievances were real; he received a phone call from his ex-girlfriend, asking him to stop blogging about their breakup. "She thought it was an invasion of her privacy," says May, "even though I never used her name, or posted her photo. But a friend of hers had directed her to something I’d written online, and she asked me to stop."

Save Our Surfing

For a year now, several of Canada's ISPs, including Bell, Rogers, Cogeco, Shaw, and a few others, have been throttling BitTorrent transfers, frustrating subscribers and internet wholesalers like TekSavvy. Two weeks ago, we noted that the CRTC was investigating the throttling practices of Canada's ISPs, and while the formal hearings won’t begin until July 6, 2009, the commission's deadline for public submissions is only two days away. So far, if February is any indication, it looks like the net neutrality crowd is winning the media campaign. Last week, the major ISPs undermined their position when they released statistics to the CRTC that showed that the growth in total internet traffic volume declined in Canada between July 2005 and August 2007. These statistics raise an important question: if network traffic growth is slowing down, then why are network management policies necessary all of a sudden? More likely than not, certain ISPs are choosing to slow down access to the forms of media they either sell, or hope to sell. It's not a coincidence that Telus, who has shown little interest in online media, doesn't throttle its customers.

In two months, the Do Not Call List will launch across Canada to help prevent telemarketers from spamming your phones. Signing up is simple—you can do it online or by phone—and companies that don't abide will face a serious fine. The service will be operated by Bell Canada, which won a five-year contract earlier this year.

The day after the CBC announced its plans to release the finale of Canada's Next Great Prime Minister through BitTorrent, Bell Canada has moved quietly to throttle its services—including peer-to-peer filesharing—outraging both its customers and wholesale clients.

1