Filed under: disinfo reporting, music, net neutrality, new media | Tags: actra, Canadian copyright law, Canadian DMCA, downloading, Michael Geist, music, new media, piracy
Yes, another disclaimer….
*I’m not suggesting that artists shouldn’t get paid for their work, I’m suggesting that the current framing of the debate is short-sighted, lacking in a wider understanding of the current situation, and is just plain “bad business”.*
O, ACTRA wherefore art thou artistic sensibilities?
Despite the vast amount of information available on the proposed changes to the Canadian Copyright Act, (aka – The Canadian DMCA), I never cease to be surprised at the lack of understanding that artists have with regards to the new rules coming down the pipe for content creation (meaning: “art”).
A few months ago, I wrote a long open letter to ACTRA (a union to which I belong as a performer), and questioned the union’s position which overwhelmingly supports changes to the Copyright Act that they believe will enrich the finances of their membership. I wholeheartedly disagree with ACTRA…in fact…I believe that the proposed changes will become a major detriment to artists trying to create content while protecting only those at the top (read: broadcasters, big business and their lobby groups as well as internet service providers).
In the letter, I addressed the “Myths and Facts” page that ACTRA has posted on their website. The so-called “fact sheet” is riddled with errors and (if I didn’t know any better), outright lies which give me a sinking feeling in my stomach that leaves me wondering why my union is giving the broadcasters a “mulligan”.
ACTRA went on strike over “new media”…so, why are they now practically handing new media over to those we struck against?!
I’m sincerely confused by ACTRA’s stance. I’m confused even *after* speaking with ACTRA’s Director of Policy, Kim Hume, for the better part of an hour on the subject. In our conversation following my letter, we (Ms. Hume and I), respectfully agreed to disagree, but I have to say that some of my greater concerns (privacy issues, DRM, TPM technologies etc.), were not met with any real understanding of the implications that are buried deep within the proposed changes to the legislation. Rather, my concerns were met with, “we’re a labour union that represents artists” and “we need to protect our membership and get them the money that they deserve for their work in new media”.
I also received a letter from ACTRA president, Richard Hardacre, thanking me for my “activism”. (I’m not an activist….I’m an *actor*)
It should be noted that all of this occurred *before* the proposed changes were made public. As soon as the changes to Bill C-61 were public knowledge, I made a bee-line over to the ACTRA website and (though not surprised at all), was thoroughly dismayed by Stephen Waddell’s (Exec. Director of ACTRA), statement that “vocal opponents of this Bill will characterize it as mimicking what’s already been done in the U.S., but that’s oversimplifying things.”
Oversimplifying?!
Forgive me in advance Mr. Waddell, but…those of us who are against the changes have more than a “simple” understanding of the Act. And…let it be said (by a dues paying member of your union, no less…), that any knowledge on the state of copyright in Canada does *not* come from our union propaganda. In fact, my suggestions for the formation of a “new media committee” or even something as “simple” as a discussion on the matter with the membership at large have been ignored.
Waddell’s statement can be considered as “correct” in that it doesn’t just mimic the U.S. version of this law….it goes further.
While ACTRA maintains that they are *not* in the pocket of big business, it’s hard to accept the idea that we can be (as a union), members of a lobby group with big business and still represent the interests of artists. To put a finer point on it: how can a union represent interests that aren’t heard? Again, forgive me, but…it makes me wonder who is advising the executive at ACTRA on these matters. How can ACTRA continue to bash our collective heads against the brick wall of government (censorship, arts funding) and keep coming up empty-handed, AND THEN – hand copyright and intellectual property control over to the very people that don’t want to pay us anything for our work.
Can we actually believe (as members), that once Broadcasters own the copyright and intellectual property rights of a program and the digital locks on the product, that they will then give us a fair piece of the pie?…..talk about “tilting at windmills”…
On with the show…
Alright, enough with the rant….
How ACTRA is helping to kill the “mixed tape”…
- Under the proposed legislation, making a mixed tape and giving it to a friend is a crime. “Who cares?”, says you. “It’s always been illegal. No-one will ever *actually* be punished for committing the crime”. Well…the biggest difference between “then” and “now”, is that your old cassette player wasn’t hooked up to a broadband high-speed internet connection. You can’t even give someone your old iPod with songs on it. Legally, you’ll have to erase the contents. (Remember that iTunes or Windows Media Player is connected to the internet and *everything*, absolutely *everything* that you do on your computer is “open source” information to those with deep enough pockets to harvest your info.)
- Let’s say that you buy a song for $0.99 on iTunes. It’s “protected” with DRM (Digital Rights Management) or TPM (Technological Protection Measure) technology. If the technology that exists in your song file prevents you from changing the format (say…from an mp4 to mp3 or a .wav format), – or – it limits the amount of copies you can make (say…you can only burn it onto a CD once or twice) and you circumvent the technological measures in order to illegally change the format or copy it more than you’re allowed to…well, then…you can be sued up to $20,000 (depending on how famous and cranky the artist is that you’ve “gypped”). Again, you say – “Who cares? No-one will *actually* come after me for that”. I say, “The government enacts laws in order to exercise them”.
- Further to the point on TPM’s, ACTRA has made a grave error in suggesting to its membership that a user’s privacy cannot be violated simply by putting a CD or DVD into your player. This is so wrong, that it doesn’t *just* oversimplify the matter…it’s misinformation by definition. ( I hesitate to call it disinformation, but now that I’ve brought the matter to the attention of the Director of Policy, they can’t exactly say that “they didn’t know”…). ACTRA states on their website:
“The proposed changes to the Copyright Act have nothing to do with privacy. Some people have falsely stated that TPMs will violate your privacy. That is not true. The vast majority of TPMs do not collect personal information and cannot violate your privacy. For example, your DVD player uses TPMs. Your DVD player is not collecting personal information or violating your privacy.” (emphasis original)
Well…if you have even a cursory knowledge of the proposed legislation *and* have read ACTRA’s “Myths and Truths about the Proposed Changes to Canada’s Copyright Act”, you’ll see that ACTRA has actually been proven wrong on just about every “fact” that they’ve put forward. (If you’re an ACTRA member and this doesn’t concern you…I submit that you, a) are apathetic about your industry and probably stopped reading this post long ago or, b) still don’t understand the implications of what’s going on here…).
The idea that your DVD player (or CD or media player), is *not* collecting your personal information or violating your privacy underscores the frightening fact that ACTRA either has no idea of what they’re talking about, OR, they’re willfully disseminating misinformation. Granted, your DVD is not violating your privacy if you’re putting it into a DVD player that is hard-wired to a TV. BUT – if you watch movies on your laptop, or (again), organize your new media on your computer, your information is *most definitely* being collected.
In 2005, something called the “Sony/BMG Rootkit Scandal” shed some much needed light on the otherwise little-known practice of companies using “spyware” to collect your personal information. In the case of Sony BMG, a “root-kit” would be installed on your computer (without your knowledge) if you had bought a CD containing the technology (Celine Dion, Neil Diamond, Trey Anastasio, for example), and this “root-kit” would be virtually unseen on your computer and would send personal info (i.e. – what you listen to, when you listen to it….if it’s legal or not).
Now…not to keep oversimplifying things, but…
CONTINUED… Part Two: ACTRA Fumbles on Film
Filed under: music, net neutrality, new media, traffic shaping, tv | Tags: actra, bell, cliff clavin, crtc, indie, music, new media, rock and roll, rogers, tv
*Disclaimer* – I’m not saying that musicians are *better* than actors…there are other blogs for that ….back to our regularly scheduled programming…
When a bureaucratic agency like the CRTC issues a report titled,
Perspectives on Canadian Broadcasting in New Media
y’know it’s gonna be at least a few years behind the times.
I’ll admit, I’ve only been able to read the Executive Summary so far, but….seriously…I have a job. This is the shit that I read in my *off time*, so….I know….it’s disgusting and my wife is a saint for sticking with me.
All the same…
Government reports and statements are best consumed straight from the horse’s mouth.
Globally, the pace at which professionally produced broadcasting content is being made available online is accelerating, but Canadian participation is lagging with respect to the amount of high-quality, professionally produced new media broadcasting content available and the level of early stage investment in the new media broadcasting environment.
“Early Stage Investment” is a perfect example of how the film “industry” (specifically, the “gate-keepers”), continues to keep its head firmly implanted in its “Clavin”. It’s this kind of lingo that confirms that the movie moguls have yet to learn what the music industry cottoned on to over a decade ago.
“Early Stage Investment” can be translated as “how much money broadcasters and gov’t agencies are willing to put into a project at the beginning” (because they’re already confident that they’ll get cash out of it in the end). Trick is…you have to convince them that they will indeed make a return on their investment (it’s amazing what kind of research a producer is responsible for in order to “pitch” an idea….research that has more to do with focus groups and market research than it does with *story*). Problem is…they’re all (CRTC folks and their broadcasting cronies), so f****** old and out of the loop, it’s taken until 2008 to table the report that will lead to change….oh….sometime after the next election.
So, while film-makers and actors are out there creating and financing their own projects and trying to participate in the “new media environment” that has been “accelerating” (according to the CRTC….and they’re right about that…), the 800-pound gorilla in the room is *still* distribution.
You may be able to write your script between catering shifts, borrow an HD (or mini DV) camera, get enough time off from work to actually shoot yourself and/or the actors who you’ve been keeping your fingers crossed over (who will hopefully feel like squeezing it in between their restaurant shifts), find an editor who will “work for credit” or beer – or – be lucky enough to have a computer that will run your cracked software and wear the editor hat yourself (not advisable), and have the luck of the Irish when it comes to compressing your new video for on-line streaming. (Oh…and hopefully you don’t have a union membership that you have to “keep on the down-low”, otherwise the budget for your “indie production” will increase significantly…)
All of this work gets done by the wily artists of the digital era, only to have the ISP’s (again, broadcasters….such as Rogers & Bell), head them off at the pass and close the gates between the artist and their audience.
The fact that your ISP is probably spying on you notwithstanding….
I’m assuming that the CRTC is going to frame the debate in terms of how much money the industry can afford to put into developing “new talent” (read: programming), when the industry (read: Jim Shaw, Pierre Karl Peladeau, Hollywood, etc.), can’t properly realize larger profits without first taking control of the airwaves. (the airwaves that belong to the Canadian public by the by…). It’s a bullshit argument. It’s the same one that organizations such as CRIA continue to use with respect to the music industry despite the exodus of major label acts deciding to go independent.
Although, I will say that Bell & Rogers exercising their right to cramp our bandwidth (regardless of whether you’re paying for “ultra high-speed” or not), proves that the movie moguls are chomping at the bit to get right to the heart of the matter: controlling each individual users “on/off switch” to downloading. That’s a damn sight quicker than the labels were able to get Napster to toe-the-line…
But, the film world (from the low-level worker “POV”….that being of an actor who makes money in the blue-collar world), still has a long way to go until they catch up to the music world. They were dealing with downloading over a decade ago. That was then!…..NOW….major acts are giving away their albums and singles. It’s the cost of doing business.
How can you compete with free?? What price point can you come up with for your product that beats “zero”??
It boils down to this….
Actors get pampered when they get paid to work. Especially in any kind of work that gets broadcast on television. Even the lowest on the call sheet has a “substantial snack” made for and delivered to them within a set period of time or else they get paid “over-time”. (I’m not knocking the “sub”…it’s a wonderful thing and a big reason that I even continue to audition at all…it’s part of the freakin’ “working dues”, yo!)
Musicians are lucky if they get enough beer thrown into a gig that it won’t effect the take at the door significantly.
Actors get paid to interpret and participate in the collaborative works of writers, directors and designers.
Musicians pay a club for the privilege to perform (usually in the form of an agreement on expected bar sales).
Actors get driven to and from set in mini-vans (“transport”) paid for by the production.
Musicians get to the club in broken-down Econolines that they have to repair themselves. (And pay the gas).
Actors have union rules about snacks, over-time, dressing room conditions and nudity.
Musicians live on snacks, work for free, (dressing rooms???) and consider nudity a job “perk”.
Actors have dozens of people to answer to before their audience is even allowed to witness their work.
Musicians have total control.
Long Live Rock & Roll!


