25$ de rabais sur l’iPod

La Cour fédérale a rendu une décision, pas encore en ligne, qui déclare notamment que le tarif sur les lecteurs MP3 (non-removable memory permanently embedded in a digital audio recorder) était hors de la compétence de la CPCC. Il s’agissait d’une demande de contrôle judiciaire d’une décision de la Commissision du droit d’auteur du Canada.

Cette partie de la décision est aux par. 133 et ss. On reprochait à la Commission d’avoir considéré le disque dur ou la mémoire flash d’un lecteur MP3 comme étant un support audio (audio recording medium) au sens de l’article 79 de la Loi.

La Cour avance d’une part le fait que, si la mémoire doit être intégrée au lecteur pour devenir un support audio (audio recording medium), ne perd-elle pas sa nature de support (medium) par la même occasion?

D’autre part, la Cour constate que l’absence de changement dans la nature de la mémoire lors de son intégration réfute la théorie de la transmutation de la mémoire en médium qui sous tend le raisonnement de la Commission.

La Cour refuse donc la tentation d’étendre la définion restrictive de support audio dans la Loi et renvoie explicitement la question au législateur.

Corollaire: pas de bénéfice de la protection de 80(1) pour la copie privée sur les iPods (par. 147). Intéressant…

Notons que la Cour a aussi confirmé le fait que le tarif n’est pas une taxe (illégale) et que la Comission n’a pas agit ultra petita en octroyant un tarif sur les lecteurs MP3 plus élevés que ce qui était demandé par la CPCC.

Voir le Globe and Mail, Michael Geist et Slashdot

Videotron’s VOIP trials

Videotron’s VOIP trials:

« Videotron Ltee’s telecom division, the company has more than 1,000 customers
testing its Internet telephony service in Montreal. ‘The tests are very
conclusive (+++), and Videotron with Videotron Telecom are currently
poisitioned to become the first major telco to provide IP TEL over a high
speed internet network in Canada,’ a Videotron Telecom executive wrote in a
recent e-mail after AOL Canada received plenty of media attention about its
new TotalTalk telephony service.
Videotron may be getting close to its Internet telephony if a meeting today
with analysts in Toronto is any indication. Rogers has set its VOIP launch
date for July 1, 2005 while Shaw Communications will likely go live in the
first quarter of next year. »

A source article would have been nice though.

[Lifted verbatim from Mark Evans.]

Update: More from Mark. I suggest reading it with his article on a possible CRTC poilcy shift and VoIP perspectives in Canada.

Mozilla Thunderbird 1.0

Ars Technica reviews Mozilla Thunderbird 1.0. Although I’m a very happy Firefox user, I’m still sitting on the fence with regards to Thunderbird: email is a critical app for me and I’m running well with Entourage.

It certainly ain’t broke (until the DB dies on me again), and I’m not sure I want to fix it.

An email client is not like a browser where I can easily switch between Safari, Camino, Firefox or even OmniWeb and, surprisingly infrequently, Internet Explorer: my email universe is only partially in IMAP and I have quite a large offline storage archive. In comparison, my bookmark list is tiny (that function was mostly transferred over to my news reader) and just a bunch of useful links, or tentative reading list, that don’t need to be synched together; even the plugins are installed once for all browsers. Additionally, although I don’t use Entourage’s integration with Office much, I do use quite a few Applescripts, support for which seems to be absent from Thunderbird. Address book import is also an issue: Entourage has a rather rich set of fields and any import process would have to be checked by hand.

Conclusion: email clients are a segment where the switching friction is larger than for browsers.

It does look like an excellent piece of software though and I view switching as an inevitable event in the long term, along with the retirement of any POP-only account and throwaway Hotmail addresses.

[Thanks to Pseudo for the reminder]

On War

The New York Review of Books: On War.

Chris Hedges reviews Generation Kill: Devil Dogs, Iceman, Captain America and the New Face of American War by Evan Wright and The Fall of Baghdad by Jon Lee Anderson. Many excellent thoughts and observations, and this moment of lucidity taken from Generation Kill:

One of the Marines in the book returns to California and is invited to be the guest of honor in a gated community in Malibu, a place where he could never afford to live. The residents want to toast him as a war hero.

« I’m not a hero, » he tells the guests. « Guys like me are just a necessary part of things. To maintain this way of life in a fine community like this, you need psychos like us to go out and drop a bomb on somebody’s house.

I don’t know if I’ll ever read the books, but the review itself is worth 5 minutes of your time.

[Via MeFi.]