(Copying the http://list.digital-copyright.ca/mailman/admin/discuss list,
given that forum is where the petitions were authored)


  The existing petitions are what they are.  We can't change them and call
them the same petitions.  In order to ensure signatures would be accepted
we would need to go through the process of getting the new text validated
through the Private Members Business Office, just as we did with the
existing petitions.  I've seen signed petitions tossed out where this
wasn't done first.

  If there isn't an interest to endorse the existing petitions,  then as a
group we might contemplate authoring a new one and get it through the
process as quickly as we could.  Creating a new petition doesn't stop us
from getting signatures to existing petitions in the interim (sign all of
them - signatures are not a scarce resource).

  Would someone like to take the lead for that?  I will obviously offer all
the help I can given I went through the process for a few petitions
already, but think it might help to get some new people involved.


  The petition for Users Rights may not be as effective as it once was.  It
was generic, and dealt with issues that the government now claims they have
solved.   Other than the last part where I added the right to make our own
software choices, which they won't understand, their speaking points
address everything else.   They claim the bill was the result of
consultation (the TPM parts weren't), that they expand and not contract
Fair Dealings (true, if you ignore TPMs), didn't expand the term of
copyright (they did in a few obscure ways), and so-on.   If you discount
the TPM aspect of the bill, it almost appears as if they listened to us.



  For the Petition for IT property rights, they thus far appear to have no
idea why we are bringing that issue up at all.  They don't see the
connection between TPMs and software running on our computers.  Getting
them past that hurtle is the main reason for the petition.  We can't solve
everything at once, especially not in petition format.  It's not a bill or
policy document, but a petition.




On Feb 17, 2012 1:57 PM, "Richard Stallman" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>    Petition to protect Information Technology property rights
>    ----------------------------------------------------------
>
>    THAT technical protection measures (TPMs), as implemented by some
>    copyright holders, can violate end users privacy rights, prevent
>    consumers from enjoying content on devices and software of their
>    independent choice, and circumvent or compromise the security of their
>    computers, including rendering them vulnerable to attack, as was the
>    case in the well publicized Sony-BMG RootKit fiasco.
>
> "Protection" is a propaganda term of the enemy, so we should
> not use the term "technical protection measures" as if we
> agreed with it.


  It is a label within government documents, and ultimately what ended up
in the bill.  If the Canadian Government had called them "Fred", then I
feel it would have best served our purposes to also call them "Fred" so
they would at least recognize what we were talking about.

  We could have included a clause where we clarified that the word
"protection" was inappropriate (and a little of why), taking into
consideration that for size reasons/etc it might have meant we wold have to
give up mentioning something else.  It does come down to a matter of
priorities with these things for the petition format : both for the
citizens reading to decide if they want to sign, and the politicians we are
trying to convince.

> Regarding the conclusion:
>
>    THEREFORE, your petitioners call upon Parliament to prohibit the
>    application of a technical protection measure to a device without the
>    informed consent of the owner of the device,
>
> That seems very weak.  It would not require any change in practices,
> it would only require telling users that they are screwed.  So what?

  Valid concern, but we were trying to move things in at least the right
direction from the current situation with politicians unaware that owners
are valid stakeholders.  This is the same government that objects to the
mere registration of long-guns, so the hope was that once they understood
the basic concern that they would do the aggressive talk themselves.


  I still believe, as I did when we authored this petition after the
Conservatives formed government, that if the conservative base understood
this issue the way the technical community did that they would be making
all the arguments for us -- our job would be done.

  I worried that if we came on too strong that they would dismiss us, and
this is an issue we can't allow them to ignore.


 >                                                 and to prohibit the
>    conditioning of the supply of content to the purchase or use of a
device
>    which has a technical measure applied to it.
>
> I can't figure out what that would mean in practice.  Consider DVDs.
> Would this prohibit selling DVDs with CSS?  Or would it mean that if
> they sell DVDs with CSS, they must sell DVDs without CSS for the same
> price?  Or would it mean that they can sell DVDs with CSS, they just
> can't officially demand you use CSS to play it?
>
> It doesn't seem useful to make such an abstract demand when we
> can't tell if it would solve any problem.


  That sentence is linked to the one about the Canadian Competition Act and
tied selling.   They essentially could not offer only CSS or any other
mechanism that ties the ability to access lawfully purchased content with
specific brands of devices.

  It is not the technological mechanism that is the issue with the Canadian
Competition Act, so this won't translate directly into a technical answer
to your specific technological question.

  Price, whether they could offer multiple formats, and other such things
come under review of the competition bureau, and is already dealt with.
The idea wasn't to re-invent in sentence an entire body of law, but to
reference an existing body of law.   The same was true of the reference to
the existing Canadian federal privacy act PIPEDA.  The point was to alert
politicians to the fact that they are seeking to pass laws that contradict
with many areas of existing Canadian law.

>                                                 We further call upon
>    Parliament to recognise the right of citizens to personally control
>    their own communication devices, and to choose software based on their
>    own personal criteria.
>
> It is not clear to me that this implies any conclusion about the
> issue.  It seems to hint at something without saying it.  What is it
> meant to mean?

  I believe you are reading this as a technical person, with your very
intimate knowledge of how computers work, what software is, and so-on.
This petition was authored to try to educate non-technical politicians who
are seeking to pass laws where they have no idea of what the impact will be
on  what you or I do.



   Hope this clarifies the existing petition, with the Petition to protect
IT property rights being the existing one that could have the most impact.
I still hope there may be endorsements, existing flaws and all.

  If it is seen as ineffective and should be replaced, I hope we can
quickly move on getting that process going.   Even if we get new final text
authored in the next two weeks it is unlikely that we would get petition
signatures onto the floor of the house of commons until after the bill is
through the committee and back in the house.  We don't know how much time
there will be between when the bill is sent back to the house at report
stage and when it will be passed at third reading (and then on to the
Senate).


On that point: anyone have an existing relationship with any of the
senators, and can help set up meetings?  I've been writing letters for
quite some time, but no interest in meeting yet.   Ideal is Conservative
senators given they will have the greatest influence, but any senators
would be a great improvement.
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