Michael
Geist has an article
in the Toronto Star about the Access Copyright/AUCC deal being “The most expensive
copyright insurance policy in Canadian history”.
The
article is very good as far as it goes - and the issue gets even more interesting. That
is because the Insurance Act of Ontario and similar
legislation in other provinces requires that anyone who sells insurance or
operates an insurance undertaking should be licensed.
The
definition of insurance in the Ontario legislation is:
“insurance”
means the undertaking by one person to indemnify another person against loss or
liability for loss in respect of a certain risk or peril to which the object of
the insurance may be exposed, or to pay a sum of money or other thing of value
upon the happening of a certain event, and includes life insurance
It
is an intriguing question as to whether the indemnity scheme offered by Access Copyright
in the AC/AUCC model agreement, the interim tariff imposed by the Copyright
Board and as offered for many years in the past is actually “insurance”. If so, what follows? The last I checked, AC was still not licensed under the Insurance Act of Ontario.
I
wrote
about this issue at some length 13 years ago in an article proposing an alternative
competitive collective run by universities for universities.
HPK
No comments:
Post a Comment