Monday, April 13, 2020
Canadas Copyright Law Is One Of Our Hardest Laws To Enforce. Essays
  Canada's copyright law is one of our hardest laws to enforce.    The reason the police have so much trouble enforcing this law, is due  to technology. This law is very easy to break, and once broken, it is  very hard to track down violators. So although some form of a  copyright law is needed, the one we have has, too many holes to be  effective. There are three main ways in which the copyright law is  broken in everyday life. They is audio/video tape copying,  plagiarism, and software piracy.    The first, and most commonly violated aspect of the copyright  law, is the copying of audio tapes for oneself and friends. Thanks to  the invention of dual cassette stereos, this has become very easy.    You simply take an original or even another copy of a tape, as well as  a blank tape. Stick them both in to the stereo and bingo you have a  new tape. You also just broke the law.    Along with copying audio tapes, now we can copy video tapes  almost as easily. If you hook two VCR's together, they can copy from  one to the other. You could rent a movie form the video store, copy  and return it, with no one the wiser.    The problem with copying video and audio tapes is that for  every copy you make the recording artist, the actors, producers and  everyone else who collect royalties from the tapes lose money. If the  companies start to lose money, they raise prices. Thus a vicious  circle begins. As prices go up, fewer people buy original copies. If  less people buy the original cassettes prices will once again rise.    Another major form of piracy is plagiarism. The stealing of  someone elses ideas or work. The biggest category of people who fall  into here are students. Very often a student when doing a research  paper will "accidently" forget to footnote his work. By "forgetting"  to give the author credit, the student has claimed the work as his  own. Another reason students may copy someone else's work is to sound  more sophisticated hoping that if they use someone elses words it will  sound better than their own. Generally, this provides an easy way for  a teacher or the police to catch them.    Teachers also plagiarize rather frequently. Very often a  teacher will photocopy several pages from a book, in order to save the  students the expense of having to buy the book for themselves. While  this is a noble act by the teacher, in most cases, this is illegal.    Unless the author of the book, gave consent for his/her work to be  freely distributed, teachers can't copy it anymore than students or  anyone else can.    The third category of piracy is Software Pirating. There are  several forms which this can take. The most common form is very  similar to audio/video cassettes. It is when someone copies a game or  program from his/her computer to someone elses. As long as the two  people have the same type of computer, (they both have apples or    IBM's) this is a very simple process, so long as the programmer didn't  put a bug into the program (a precaution they take against people  copying their work).    Another form of Computer Piracy is a "cracker". A cracker is  someone who has an in-depth knowledge of computers and programming.    He can then remove the "bug" that prevents programs from being copied.    After he removes the bug he's able to distribute the software at his  own discretion. This is in direct conflict with the copyright law,  because the program was not meant to be copied thus the bug. It  therefore becomes illegal to remove the bug.    Like audio/video cassettes copying, computer games causes  people to lose money. In this case, instead of it being the singer,  or actors, it is the programmer, and the software companies who lose.    This leads to the same vicious circle. More copies make higher  prices etc..    The copyright law is hard to enforce likewise so are the  penalties. If you are found in violation of breaking the copyright  laws, you probably will only have to pay a fine. However, the fines  can be quite substantial and depending where you are in the  distribution chain (how many copies were made before yours) the fine  varies, with whoever copied the original paying the most. In extreme  cases, where a contract is enacted upon the purchase of the original  copy like with Word Perfect, a computer word processor. Upon buying  an original set off disks you must sign a contract promising not to  distribute the program. In these cases, you could face    
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)
 
