Access: an e-newsletter

Access...an e-newsletter for Member Organizations 

December 2011 

 

In this issue
New Repertoire Eligibility Guidelines for Affiliates
Supreme Court of Canada Hears K-12 Tariff Appeal
Access Copyright Releases its Latest Distribution of Royalties
Toronto Copy shop owner pleads guilty to contempt of court order
a©e Creator Brings Order to Content Management
a©e Publisher Brings Order to Content and Metadata Management
Professor-Affiliates Speak on Life After the Access Copyright Interim Tariff
Bill C-11 Update
Access Copyright Signs New Reciprocal Agreements with the United Kingdom and South Africa
New Repertoire Eligibility Guidelines for Affiliates 

Access Copyright has changed its eligibility requirements so that creator and publishers affiliates can more quickly qualify for our annual repertoire payment.

 

Starting in 2012, creators are eligible for Payback and publishers are eligible for the Publisher Repertoire Payment as long as they affiliated with Access Copyright by the end of the previous year.

 

For example, those who affiliated with Access Copyright by December 31, 2011 will be eligible for a repertoire payment starting in 2012.

 

Read more information on Payback and the Publisher Repertoire Payment.

 

Supreme Court of Canada Hears K-12 Tariff Appeal 

On December 7, the Supreme Court of Canada heard the appeal of the K-12 tariff by the Council of Ministers of Education (excluding Quebec) and the Ontario school boards (the Objectors).

 

We believe that we put our best case forward and are cautiously optimistic as we await the decision of the Supreme Court, which is expected to be rendered sometime in the next 12 months.

 

Background

In June 2009 the Copyright Board of Canada certified a tariff of $5.16 per FTE for the photocopying of published works in K-12 schools. The Objectors appealed the Copyright Board decision to the Federal Court of Appeal which in turn rendered a decision largely in favour of Access Copyright. Dissatisfied with the Federal Court of Appeal decision, the Objectors sought leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada.

The two issues under review by the Federal Court of Appeal were the Board's assessment of fair dealing and its interpretation of the tests and examinations exemption in section 29.4 of the Copyright Act. In its decision, the Federal Court of Appeal upheld the Copyright Board's assessment of fair dealing. The Objectors are appealing this part of the Federal Court of Appeal's decision to the Supreme Court of Canada. On the issue of tests and examination, the Court found that the Copyright Board had not considered all the requisite elements of the exemption and requested that the matter be remitted back to the Copyright Board for reconsideration.   

 

More information on the December 7 hearing

 

Access Copyright Releases its Latest Distribution of Royalties 

Access Copyright has released its latest distribution of royalties.

 

These royalties cover the following distribution categories:

  • Publisher Repertoire (Non-Title Specific) for the period January 1 to December 31, 2010.
  • Full Reporting (Title Specific) from post-secondary institutions, business and non-profit sector and other territories for the period January 1, 2006 to September 30, 2011.                  
  • Pending payments including those under $25.
  • Royalties from the UK (ALCS) and from Quebec (Copibec) for Canadian writers for the period 2010 and 2011.
  • Transactional licensing (Title Specific) for the period May 1 to September 30, 2011.
  • Digital Royalties from CAL (Australia) for 2009.

Get more information on Access Copyright's distribution guidelines

 

Toronto Copy shop owner pleads guilty to contempt of court order - continued to illegally reproduce copyright protected works

On December 14, 2011, Mr. Duc Tinh Nguyen of Quality Control Copy Centre in Toronto (currently operating under the name T&T Copy Centre) pled guilty to contempt of an order of the Federal Court of Canada.

 

Access Copyright has been investigating Mr. Nguyen's business located near the University of Toronto St. George campus for the past three years, and has already taken Mr. Nguyen to court on claims related to copyright infringement and breach of settlement. 

 

As part of its mandate, Access Copyright routinely monitors copy shops for evidence of illegal photocopying of coursepacks and textbooks, activities that are essentially robbing revenues from Canadian publishers and authors. Access Copyright helps businesses, academic institutions, copy shops, and other users of copyrighted materials comply with copyright through its range of licensing solutions.

 

"Despite a Federal Court order instructing Mr. Nguyen to stop making, distributing and selling unauthorized copies of copyright-protected works, Mr. Nguyen continued to illegally reproduce and sell full textbooks and coursepacks," said Maureen Cavan, Executive Director, Access Copyright, The Canadian Copyright Licensing Agency.

 

Access Copyright will be returning to the Federal Court on January 30, 2012 for the penalty phase of the contempt hearing, in which the nature and extent of the penalty to be laid against Mr. Nguyen will be determined.

 

 

a委 Creator Brings Order to Content Management 

Access Copyright is pleased to announce a委 Creator, a comprehensive, password-protected web-based service that allows creator affiliates to access their content anywhere at any time. Store multiple file formats, archive, retrieve, repurpose and track your writing edits. Manage your entire collection of works in digital form from one secure location and maximize your earning potential.

 

 

For more information on a委, please contact us at acesupport@accesscopyright.ca.

 

a委 Publisher Brings Order to Content and Metadata Management 

Access Copyright is pleased to announce a委 Publisher; a cost-effective Canadian solution for secure content storage. It simplifies ONIX metadata creation and management, allowing digital file distribution and tracking. a委 Publisher was designed to be accessible to publishers of any size and registration is free for Access Copyright Publisher Affiliates (and self-publishing Creator Affiliates with a need for book industry supply-chain metadata).  

 

Key features include:

  • ONIX based system that focuses on BNC/BISG recommendations, but manages the full spectrum of ONIX 2.1
  • Metadata input in Excel, ONIX file, or manual creation
  • State-of-the-art user interface and codes for easy ONIX creation
  • Organization by project, with flexible tagging for sorting and retrieval
  • Variety of outbound metadata formats
  • Partner communications by email, invitation for secure retrieval, or scheduled FTP drop
  • Full audit logs of metadata changes, archiving and content file distribution
  • Customized user defaults for managing common data across projects
  • Automated generation of marketing collateral (Tip Sheets)    
  • Secure, web-based storage for any kind of file  

a委 Publisher is currently in BETA testing with an official launch scheduled for January 2012. For more info, or a sneak peak, please contact us at support@acepublisher.ca.

 

Professor-Affiliates Speak on Life After the Access Copyright Interim Tariff 

Last summer, a number of universities and colleges across Canada made the decision to opt-out of the Access Copyright Interim Post-Secondary Educational Institution Tariff, 2011-2013 (Interim Tariff).

 

Replacing the Interim Tariff, which offers a simple and cost-effective way to use copyright protected materials in all post-secondary institutions, these opt-out institutions have produced copyright guidelines and procedures to guide their staff.

 

Among the universities and colleges that opted-out of the Interim Tariff as of August 31, 2011 were Carleton University and York University.  

 

Recently we spoke with two Access Copyright affiliates: Michael Dorland, a professor at the School of Communication and Journalism at Carleton, and Roberta Iannacito, an associate professor in the Department of Languages, Literatures and Linguistics at York, about their experiences getting content for their courses now that neither university uses the Interim Tariff.

 

Read our interview with Professors Dorland and Iannacito  

Bill C-11 Update

Access Copyright Concerned About New Copyright BillOn Thursday, December 15, the House of Commons adjourned for the holidays. As of adjournment, Bill C-11, the Copyright Modernization Act, is in second reading and is expected to be referred to committee soon after the House resumes sitting on Monday, January 30, 2012.

 

Keep a look-out for a feature article in the February e-newsletter on the joint effort of writers' and publishers' groups across Canada to seek changes to the bill.

 

Access Copyright Signs New Reciprocal Agreements with the United Kingdom and South Africa 

Access Copyright has recently signed two reciprocal agreements with reproduction rights organizations in the United Kingdom and South Africa.

 

The agreement with the UK's Newspaper Licensing Agency (NLA) means that when our affiliates' works are both photocopied and copied digitally (by the education sector only) in the UK, the royalties collected for this copying are passed along to us to distribute to the creators and publishers of the content. Similarly, royalties collected by us for works copied in Canada of content licensed by the NLA is sent back to the UK for distribution.

 

Our agreement with South Africa's DALRO covers both print and digital copying.

 

Both agreements replace previous agreements that covered photocopying only.

 


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