The Ambiguous Nature of Copyright Users' Rights
Resource type
Author/contributor
- Chapdelaine, Pascale (Author)
Title
The Ambiguous Nature of Copyright Users' Rights
Abstract
In this article, the author investigates the nature of exceptions to copyright infringement or users' rights as they are laid out in Canada's Copyright Act and in copyright jurisprudence, as well as through their interaction with contracts and technological protection measures. The author begins his analysis with four exceptions to copyright infringement that were added to the Copyright Act in 2012 (i.e., the non-commercial user-generated content, the reproduction for private purposes, the later listening or viewing, and the backup copies exceptions to copyright infringement) with a particular focus on their relevance for consumers and their relation to pre-existing users' rights. The author investigates the nature of these exceptions, including through Hohfeld's theory of jural correlatives. He looks at the policy considerations behind these questions and conclude his article by reflecting on the damaging effects of the uncertain nature of users' rights on the coherence and, ultimately, the legitimacy of copyright law.
Publication
Intellectual Property Journal
Volume
26
Issue
1
Pages
1-45
Date
Dec 2013
Language
English
ISSN
08247064
Accessed
12/10/24, 7:35 PM
Library Catalog
ProQuest
Rights
Copyright Carswell Publishing Dec 2013
Extra
Num Pages: 45
Place: Toronto, Canada
Publisher: HAB Press Limited
Citation
Chapdelaine, P. (2013). The Ambiguous Nature of Copyright Users’ Rights. Intellectual Property Journal, 26(1), 1–45. https://www.proquest.com/docview/1470792310/abstract/A8E4987B9CD64365PQ/1
Author / Editor
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