Bill C-8 is a huge and complicated bill
that would drastically change existing trade-marks and copyright law,
criminalize ordinary “infringement” and impose complex responsibilities on border
officials, who have much more serious things to worry about such as dangerous persons who pose risks to
national security. Bill C-8 is intended
to allow Canada to sign on to the very controversial #ACTA treaty, an American initiative,
and something that even the IP friendly EU has decided against.
Apparently, Bill C-8 is going to “clause by clause” as early as next Monday, December 2, 2013 without hearing from some potentially helpful witnesses, including me. The Committee has heard from a number of lobbyists and had some very general comments from a couple of law professors. The Committee and the Government apparently believe that ratcheting up IP laws to deal with “counterfeiting” will save the world from dangerous fake products and will promote innovation. Nobody supports counterfeiting or piracy, but hasty overreaction in the form of complex and compendious changes to longstanding well working laws won’t necessarily help. Indeed, such rushed changes – when there is no emergency – could cause a lot of harm, except perhaps to the interests of litigation lawyers who will have to clean up the predictable messes.
Apparently, Bill C-8 is going to “clause by clause” as early as next Monday, December 2, 2013 without hearing from some potentially helpful witnesses, including me. The Committee has heard from a number of lobbyists and had some very general comments from a couple of law professors. The Committee and the Government apparently believe that ratcheting up IP laws to deal with “counterfeiting” will save the world from dangerous fake products and will promote innovation. Nobody supports counterfeiting or piracy, but hasty overreaction in the form of complex and compendious changes to longstanding well working laws won’t necessarily help. Indeed, such rushed changes – when there is no emergency – could cause a lot of harm, except perhaps to the interests of litigation lawyers who will have to clean up the predictable messes.
What this exercise it will do – and has done – is to allow lobbyists
with a maximalist agenda to use this fake problem of fakes to create the
potential for interference with legitimate trade in parallel imports, vastly
increased criminalization of everyday “infringement”, shifting of enforcement
costs from the private sector to the taxpayer, and the interference with the
transshipment of generic drugs and other legitimate products. The new law will
allow incredible opportunity for abusive or even simply incompetent
enforcement. This can be very costly to large and SME business, not to mention consumers.
This is perhaps the most sweeping legislation in Canadian IP law in 70 years,
and it is being done without adequate hearings, study or the demonstration of
any need. Anyone looking for counterfeit products can find them on the street
in mid-town and downtown Manhattan. One doesn’t find this kind of flagrant
counterfeiting in Canada. The “evidence” of a major problem with counterfeit
good that can’t already be dealt with via existing laws almost entirely
anecdotal or absent. Piling on of responsibility to border officials is an
unnecessary and costly mistake. The DNA and fingerprints of the movie and
record industries are all over this bill.
However, if there is to be a bill – we need to get it right. Here
is my offer to appear sent to the Committee on November 11, 2013. It seems that
that the Committee does not wish to hear me on this.
HPK
*********
Dear
Honourable Members of the Standing Committee on Industry, Science &
Technology (“INDU”)
Re: Bill C-8
(“Anti-Counterfeiting”) – Request to Appear as Witness
I would like
to offer to appear before your Committee in my own personal pro bono capacity as
a witness in order to address certain issues of serious concern regarding Bill
C-8. While the overall purpose of the Bill is commendable, namely to reduce
commercial counterfeiting and piracy, and the drafting shows very diligent work
and great competence overall, the devil is in the details and there are 50 pages
of highly technical details in this instance – some of which have profound
policy implications.
I have
resigned from the Canadian Bar Association Anti-Counterfeiting Committee
because I have become a “minority of one” on certain key aspects of this Bill, and
would like to make my views known to you with sufficient particularity and in
person. I attach a short version of my CV, which demonstrates that I have been
involved in this area in several capacities for over 30 years.
For the
purposes of this Bill, it is useful that you be aware that I made the winning arguments
in the very important 2007 Supreme Court of Canada judgement in Kraft v. Euro-Excellence, which involved the issue of parallel imports and copyright. Here is a short analysis I did about that case for the Law Society of Upper Canada.
As I am sure
you are aware, questions involving parallel
imports loom large in this discussion. If the Bill “gets it wrong” on
parallel imports, competition will lessen and prices will rise in Canada and
the Government’s specific promises on “consumers first” and cross-border price
parity will be seriously frustrated. These questions are extremely complex and
there is a great danger that the legislation will lead to unintended
consequences and confusion between parallel imports and legitimate goods. Moreover,
if the nine judges of the Supreme Court of Canada split several ways on this
topic, and if the US Supreme Court recently split on a similar case (Kirtsaeng v. Wiley), are we not asking too much of our border guards to be able
to distinguish between a legitimate parallel import and an illegal pirated or
counterfeit good?
Here are the
main points I would address, if invited. I would need some lead time to prepare
a proper brief:
1.
The numerous
references apparently intended not to interfere with the free flow of parallel imports are inconsistent and
present potentially serious drafting problems that require further study. The
bill should propose appropriate declaratory language for both the Copyright Act and Trade-marks Act that makes is absolutely clear that, with the
exception of the sui generis book importation scheme now found in s. 27.1 of the Copyright Act, neither of these
acts shall in any restrict the importation, distribution or sale of any
product, whether tangible or digital, that has been manufactured or first put
on the market anywhere in the world with authorization
2.
It would be mistaken and harmful to criminalize routine
copyright and trade-mark infringement activity and there is no need to add
additional criminal sanctions, much less wiretap enablement provisions or any
provisions that would authorize the warrantless search of travelers to
determine whether they have infringing items in their baggage or on their
electronic devices. Past experience shows the potential for abuse of such
provisions both by the state and by the private sector. See R. v. Laurier
Office Mart Inc.,
1995 CanLII 7322 (ON SC)
3.
The Bill should contain no provisions that are not
essential for the purpose of combatting counterfeit or pirated products. In
particular, such provisions as those that would fundamentally change the
definition of trade-mark and would allow an examiner to be able to block a
registration on the basis that “the trade-mark is not distinctive” should be
removed from the Bill. Such changes to
the Trade-marks Act would upset a
careful balance and practices that have worked well since 1954, and are totally
inessential and irrelevant to the purpose of combatting counterfeiting.
4.
The Committee should resist expected attempts to have Bill
deal with transshipment (aka “in-transit
shipments”). Customs officers cannot possibly be expected to understand
enough about international law to decide what shipments should or should not go
forward. There is ample evidence of harmful interference with legitimate
shipments of drugs that were mistakenly interfered with even in such a
“liberal” jurisdictions as The Netherlands.
See New EU Customs Regulation Might
Allow Wrongful Seizures Of Generic Drugs In Transit, NGOs Say, Intellectual
Property Watch, October 17, 2013 http://bit.ly/HAqqDe ; ACTA: Risks of
Third Party Enforcement for Access to Medicines American University College
of Law, 10-01-2010 http://digitalcommons.wcl.american.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1001&context=research
I look forward to addressing the
Honourable Members of this Committee, as I have done at several other
Parliamentary Committees in various capacities in the past.
Yours sincerely,
Howard Knopf
PS - Interestingly, the Committee has heard both from Lorne Lipkus and his son David Lipkus, both of the same anti-counterfeiting law firm, in separate presentations that were presumably both very much in favour of this legislation, and presumably both advocating for it to go even further. (David's testimony is now posted - Lorne's not yet). Lorne is a colleague at the bar who I like and respect - and I'm sure his is son is a good lawyer too. However, it is one thing to have an unbalanced and incomplete list of witnesses, or even lobbying organizations that duplicate and reinforce one another. But, a Committee that is rushing to judgement and refusing to hear testimony that it might not like, while hearing separate testimony from a father and son in the same law firm with the same focus, is really rather unusual - even by Parliamentary Committee standards.
This is absurd. Not only will much up this be far to severe - and likely will not work as they've planned in regards to every day operation - but the fact that most of this is being done without input from opposing forces, or even the public and tax payers, makes me absolutely sick.
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