Time to act
AT THE END OF JULY 2021, with extraordinary speed and marked by controversy, the Supreme Court of Canada (SCC) ruled on two appeals in the long-standing York University v.Canadian Copyright Licensing Agency (Access Copyright) case. The ruling was a disaster for Canada’s books sector. Seemingly unwilling to set precedent on the question of educational copying and infringement, the SCC declared that, as written into current law, tariffs set by the Copyright Board of Canada are not mandatory – releasing York from any responsibility to pay up. Given that analysis, the court also concluded that “there is no live dispute” between York and this country’s writers and publishers (who were represented by Access Copyright in the case). Did York’s extensive copying infringe our copyright on a massive scale, as two lower courts…