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In the News Toronto (a.k.a. Accordion City)

Online Rights Canada

Ren Bucholz, who works for the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) here in Accordion City wrote to me:

I wanted to let you know that Online Rights Canada (or “ORC”), a new grassroots collaboration between EFF and CIPPIC, just launched an online petition drive on Sam Bulte’s copyright-for-cash scandal. 

People can voice their support for Michael Geist’s “Copyright Pledge,” which asks all politicians to swear off money from copyright lobbyists if they’re involved in setting copyright policy.  We’ve also got a pretty comprehensive backgrounder on the issue, including links to your coverage.  Finally, we have some ways for people to get involved offline.  For example, Bulte is going to be at two all-candidates meetings this week, and we’d love people to show up and ask all the candidates about taking the pledge.  Even if they’re not in that riding, attending all-candidates meetings and asking politicians to sign the pledge would be super-helpful.

They’ve also got a petition you can sign, requesting that Canadian politicians take the copyright pledge.

Keep up the good fight, Ren!

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In the News Toronto (a.k.a. Accordion City)

The Blogosphere on Bulte

Here come the bloggers…

Technorati, for those of you not familiar with the site, tracks what’s going on in weblogs. You can use it to see who’s linking to a blog or specific blog entry or see what topics are currently popular in the blogosphere.

Some examples:

  • As I write this, Technorati reports that over 19,000 sites link to the 800-pound gorilla of the blogsphere, Boing Boing, which ranks in the top 100 of the nearly 25 million sites it tracks. I’m doing nicely, currently ranking at #944, with 757 sites providing nearly 1,700 links to this site. Thanks, folks!
  • On the keyword search front, a Technorati search for “Brokeback Mountain” reveals that nearly 38,000 blog posts contain that phrase. It’s been getting mentioned in one to two thousand blogs every day this week.

This blog’s politican of the moment, Sam Bulte, has been getting a fair number of mentions in the past week. The chart on the left, taken from a Technorati search on the word “Bulte”, shows her rise from non-entity to topic du jour over the past few days. The intrepid research of Michael Geist and Boing Boing’s “juice” seem to have catalysed the local blogosphere, making Ms. Bulte’s coziness with the copyright cartel has been a regular topic of discussion over the past couple of days. If you want to see what they’re saying about Sam, click on this link to see the latest blogosphere chatter about her.

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In the News Toronto (a.k.a. Accordion City)

Peggy Nash Has My Vote

In case you were wondering, I do live in the riding of my current favourite blog punching bag, Sarmite “Sam” Bulte: Parkdale-High Park. Although I moved into the neighbourhood only recently, the riding has been my place of work for the past couple of years (Tucows is at its easternmost edge).

It’s also my old stomping grounds. When we first moved to Canada back in 1975, we lived at the corner of Glenlake and Pacific Avenues, practically falling distance from the apartment that Wendy and I now share. The first school I ever went to in Canada, Keele Street Public School, is still there, as are many of the little parks and tuck shops scattered throughout the neighbourhood surrounding High Park station.

As a technologist, card-carrying member of the EFF, amateur musician and music lover, Bulte’s cozying up to the copyright mafia really gets up my nose. She’s in the pocket of a handful of companies who’d like nothing better than to hamstring technology because it harms their pre-digital-age business models. Can you imagine what it would be like if the ice harvesters of the early 20th century were able to lobby the government to restrain the icebox and refrigerator manufacturers?


Here are the last election’s numbers, courtesy of the Parkdale-High Park entry in Wikipedia:

Canadian federal election, 2004
Party Candidate Votes
     Liberal Sarmite “Sam” Bulte 19,727
     New Democrat Peggy Nash 16,201
     Conservative Jurij Klufas 7,221
     Green Neil Spiegel 3,249
     Marijuana Terry Parker 384
     Marxist-Leninist Lorne Gershuny 130

Less than 8% of the vote separated the NDP from the Liberals in the last election, while the Conservatives trailed them by 27%. It would also seem that 384 of the people in our riding are seriously baked, maaaaaaan.

Between the Bulte brouhaha and AdScam, crazed promises and idiots in their ranks, I have decided to vote for the candidate who has the best chance of ousting the Liberals in my riding. I’m holding my nose and voting NDP. Peggy Nash, I’m voting for you on the 23rd.


For those of you in the Parkdale-High Park riding, the Bloor West Residents’ Association has organized an all-candidates meeting at Runnymede United Church (432 Runnymede Road) tonight at 7:30 p.m.. I’ll probably drop by, take notes, pictures and video. Say “hi” if you see me.

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In the News Toronto (a.k.a. Accordion City)

Today’s Sam Bulte Image: Greenbacks and Sam (or: "So Seuss Me!")

This one’s a good deal simpler, as I’m rather busy debugging software today. Here’s Greenbacks and Sam, which makes reference to the $250-a-plate fundraising dinner being thrown by various capos of the copyright mafia for our soon-to-be former MP:

If anyone feels like writing Seuss-esque poetry to match the image, do so, and post them in the comments!

By the bye, if you’ve concocted your own Anti-Sam Bulte images and want me to display them here, drop me a line!

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In the News Music Toronto (a.k.a. Accordion City)

Indie Musicians Against Sam Bulte

I just got a press release in an email from Neil Leyton, a musican with whom I used to play when I was in Lindi’s band (see here, here, here, here and here). Neil’s been brightening the local music scene since his days in The Conscience Pilate and through his indie record label, Fading Ways Records (which, by the bye, is Creative Commons-friendly). I know him to be a pretty stand-up guy who works actively to promote new music that the big labels would otherwise eschew in favour of megahit pap, and would also recommend that you catch one of his live shows if you get the chance.

Now that I’ve dispensed with the preamble, here’s Neil’s press release:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

Fading Ways Records & several Toronto Indie Artists protest the shameless sell out of a Canadian politician and potential Minister of Canadian Heritage to multi-national corporations’ lobbying interests in extremist copyright laws.

It has now become public knowledge that Liberal MP Sarmite Bulte, a long-time supporter of Canadian copyright “reform” and Bill C-60, has received significant campaign funding support from several industry players including several lobbying groups and trade associations such as Access Copyright, David Basskin’s CMRRA and even, sadly, SOCAN. While legal, these political contributions amount to an ethical conflict of interest that should be eradicated from Canadian politics.

The final straw here is that the multi-national major labels’ lobbying organization in Canada, CRIA, (the Canadian RIAA) is hosting a fundraiser for Bulte four days before the election. Tickets are $250 a plate.

CRIA, via their statistics-heavy press releases, persist on manipulating opinion polls and numbers to claim that they speak for Canadian citizens and the majority of Canadian artists – nothing could be further from the truth. In fact, the interests of intermediaries like CRIA are not the same as the interests of the musicians, songwriters and other creator groups.  CRIA can no more legitimately claim to politically represent musicians, than bank owners can claim to represent those who have bank accounts.

Furthermore, CRIA’s boast that they represent more than 95% records produced and sold in Canada is misleading. In fact, they represent the interests of the “Canadian” major labels, who are in fact cultural importers (largely of US acts) rather than exporters of Canadian artists. Very often Canadian artists like Danko Jones have to sign to foreign labels in order to export their own music. CRIA’s close ties to MP Bulte (“they are my friends”, she explained) are questionable and objectionable. Fading Ways Records believes that Canadian Heritage should be controlled by true Canadian cultural interests, not political sell-outs.

CRIA and the majors have launched a massive PR assault to convince the Canadian public that downloading and file-sharing hurts record sales – again, in the independent sector, nothing could be further from the truth. The internet helps new fans discover new artists, and “piracy” is nothing but a scapegoat for the major label’s failing business models that date back to the booming 80s. Indie CD sales are up, while major labels’ sales are down due to the rise in the DVD market, and the high-price of sub-quality releases they peddle to the masses via huge marketing budgets.

Lastly, CRIA’s press release this past week dared to accuse the NDP of “abandoning their traditional support for artists” in order to attack the NDP Parkdale candidate, Peggy Nash. (CRIA candidate Sam Bulte’s opponent). Not true – the NDP is the only party that is aware of CRIA’s corporate attempt to hijack Canadian copyright legislation, which at this point remains the most balanced and fair copyright act when compared to the USA’s DMCA and the EU’s IP Enforcement Directive. One particular NDP candidate, Charlie Angus, is an independent musician, author and broadcaster himself.

Bill C-60, which Bulte and CRIA support, and Angus criticizes, is a narrowing, one-sided piece of legislation that will inadvertently cause law-abiding citizens to break the law.  It makes copyright even more complex than it already is. Copyright being excessively complex is one of its greatest flaws, and if citizens and organizations without a team of lawyers are expected to obey it then it must be simplified rationally and in a balanced way such as that described by concerned citizens like Michael Geist.

Canadians, and citizens of the world in general, are not “pirates” at all. In fact, piracy is the high-seas act of armed robbery, pillaging, murdering and raping. We at Fading Ways find it offensive that the same word is now used to describe a social act of sharing that has traditionally been part of our culture (home-taping, mixed cassettes, etc.) and deemed acceptable for decades. What CRIA and Bulte would have us live in is an Orwellian State where present and future teens are limited to a mainstream culture of purchased goods with no room for cultural variety, diversification, or free exchange of opinions on what constitutes good music. One example of the type of “protection” endorsed by CRIA and Bulte is the recent Sony/BMG “rootkit” type of DRM (Digital Rights Management) that essentially hi-jacked people’s computers and was defined as “malware” even by Microsoft. The EFF has recently achieved an out-of-court compensation for fans whose consumers were affected by the Sony/BMG DRM copy protected discs that they purchased.

Neil Leyton and several Fading Ways Recording artists, as well as several Parkdale musical artists, hereby demonstrate their solidarity with the NDP Parkdale candidate, Peggy Nash. Neil Leyton is available to the press for further commenting on copyright, the indie music sector, and the questionable close links between CRIA and the Liberal MP – a strong connection that he had the opportunity to witness first hand at the U of T  Law School conference “Copyrights, Copywrongs” held last year.

Canada’s copyright laws must not be hijacked by CRIA and Bulte.

Stop the music industry madness!

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In the News

Today’s Sam Bulte news

Over at the CopyrightWatch.ca blog, David Fewer makes note of Sam Bulte’s evolution into a copyright politician (I added some formatting to make it easier to spot the campaign contributors):

Ms. Bulte was first elected in 1997. According to Elections Canada’s candidate contributions and expense reports, her campaign contributions totaled $67,423. Corporate sponsors aplenty, but no big copyright. And, interestingly, I cannot find reference to Ms. Bulte even uttering the word “copyright” until the dying months of that Parliament, when, as a member of the Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage, she asked a few questions in a working sessions on a study of the Canadian book industry. She’d have to have slept pretty hard to avoid talking copyright there.

In the November, 2000, election, Ms. Bulte had managed to scoop up over $81,000 in campaign financing. And now some of the big copyright names are there:

Interestingly, there are a number of other IP intensive industries represented:

[If you’re from Canada and especially Toronto, the name “Apotex” should ring a bell — they’re the drug company that sponsored Dr. Nancy Olivieri’s clinical drug trials and tried to suppress her findings of unexpected risks. — Joey]

And when the 37th Parliament began on January 29, 2001, voila, Ms. Bulte began publicly uttering pro-copyright platitudes. By April 2, 2001, Ms. Bulte stood in the House to “applaud” the initiatives of “the Canadian Association of Broadcasters and its partners, the Canadian Independent Record Production Association and the Canadian Recording Industry Association”. By December 6, 2001, Ms. Bulte was announcing to the House the imminent tabling of a copyright bill. And, on June 18, 2002, Ms. Bulte spoke on third reading of Bill C-48, the Internet retransmission exemption won by broadcasters. A Canadian copyright politician is born.

Her interest in copyright — or more accurately, the misapplication of copyright by corporations — is merely a byproduct of the crowd she’s running with. This is like the kid in high school who went to the UK for three weeks during summer vacation and came back with an accent and calling trucks “lorries”, but with far bigger implications.

For the greater good (and for your enjoyment as well), I’ve bookended this blog entry with a couple of modified Sam Bulte graphics that you can freely post on your websites, blogs or print out and turn into signs or stickers. Enjoy!

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In the News Toronto (a.k.a. Accordion City)

Update on Sam Bulte’s Wikipimpslap

This is more like it: someone’s updated the Wikipedia

entry for Sarmite “Sam” Bulte, incumbent MP for my

riding of Parkdale-High Park, which I wrote about

yesterday

During the 2006 federal

election, Bulte was criticized by blogger Cory Doctorow and professor Michael Geist

for her stances in favour of strict copyright laws and substantial

campaign contributions from Canadian and American entertainment

industries. They speculate she is a likely candidate for Heritage

Minister in the next Parliament. [1]