Good afternoon.
I thank you for this opportunity to speak as a member of the visual arts sector. I'm accompanied by Adrian Göllner, who's the past chair of my organization and a practising visual artist himself. We agree that copyright reform in Canada is long overdue.
I work for a collecting society, Canadian Artists Representation Copyright Collective Incorporated, CARCC, representing about 850 visual artists in matters of copyright. In 2010-11 we distributed over $200,000 in royalties to our affiliates, and we have had years when the total distribution has surpassed $500,000. Our affiliates are grateful recipients of royalty income. CARCC operates on money it earns from licensing.
I believe that as we work to reform our Copyright Act we need to remember our principles. Copyright is very ancient, surely older than the Greek playwright who felt hard done by when his plays were presented without his being paid. That copyright is old simply means that it is integral to creation. Artists must have copyright, and copyright must work for them.
Normand Tamaro, a lawyer, has said that the purpose of copyright laws is to provide a fair and civilized environment for the exploitation of creators' works, and artists must be allowed to negotiate compensation on favourable terms for uses of their works. Copyright laws include moral protections for a creator's reputation. Lately the young artist K'naan, invoked his moral rights when he told the Mitt Romney campaign to stop using his song Wavin' Flag. He did not want to be associated in any way with that campaign and he put a stop to it in a public way. His indignation came from that very old place, his droit d'auteur, his author's right.
CARCC is a member of CISAC, the International Confederation of Societies of Authors and Composers, the multidisciplinary association of copyright collecting societies, and its subgroup, CIAGP, the International Council of Creators of Graphic, Plastic, and Photographic Arts. Both these organizations have expressed dismay by letter to Canadian officials at the threats to artists' incomes posed by Bill C-32, and by extension the identical Bill C-11. They are concerned that Canada will lag further behind in its international obligations to harmonize its laws with those of other countries.
A recent report from CISAC summarized the global revenues for collective licensing--this is worldwide--from 2010 at over 7.5 billion euros. This is a lot. Canadian artists must partake of this vital economy.
Here are our specific concerns with Bill C-11, which I will summarize first in case I run out of time. The first one is that while we are pleased that photographers' rights are improved in Bill C-11, we feel that photographers will continue to be disadvantaged by the exception that allows clients to commission photographs to use for private and non-commercial purposes. The second is we would like to see the exhibition right extended to cover the term of copyright, dropping the June 1988 limitation. Third, we would really like to see an artist's resale right included. I think everybody's very enthused about that. We would support levies on digital hardware to cover private copying, and we do not support fair dealing exceptions for education, satire and parody, or mash-ups. Licensing activity in the education sector should be encouraged.
Here's the reasoning behind our concerns. Photography is a form of visual art, and we are thankful that Bill C-11 extends the rights of photographers. However, an exception specifically naming photography, clause 38, has been added, whereby the person who commissions a photograph is allowed to copy for private or non-commercial purposes. The photographer would earn from such copies, and the exception would deprive him or her of income as well as control of the quality of a copied image. We recommend that photographers be treated equally with other visual artists.
Second, Canada's Copyright Act includes an exhibition right that allows artists to require payment for the exhibition of their works if the purpose of the exhibition is not the sale or hire of the works exhibited. The exhibition right was enacted in 1988 and applies to works created after that date of enactment. We would like to see the 1988 date dropped and the exhibition right extended to include all works subject to copyright--that is, life plus 50 years. This would end discrimination against senior artists and the estates of deceased artists, which are often presently excluded. This could easily be put into effect in Bill C-11, and we strongly recommend this action.
Third, Bill C-11 could be vastly improved by the addition of the long overdue artist's resale right, the droit de suite, to the Copyright Act. Resale royalties are percentages of sales of works resold on the secondary market, such as auction sales. They are usually managed collectively. Resale rights benefit artists who have sold their works, often at a low price, only to see them fetch much greater sums later on or in foreign markets. Aboriginal artists and senior artists are the most affected. Some 59 countries around the world have this right included in their legislation. Without the resale right in Canadian legislation, there can be no reciprocity with countries such as France or Britain, and Canadian artists cannot benefit from secondary sales abroad.
The resale right deserves consideration here and now in Bill C-11. Existing collecting societies such as CARCC are ready and willing to take on the administration of the artist's resale right, and there is worldwide evidence that the resale right has little to no effect on art markets.
Fourth, the fair dealing exception for education—as well as all of the exceptions for education, and in particular those pertaining to the Internet—that are detailed in Bill C-11 generally weaken creators' capacity to earn from the reproduction of their works. Creators, including publishers, benefit from the many uses that this enormous sector makes of their works. Creators are the content providers for Canadian culture. Rights holders are paid at the time of publication as well as through collective licensing of reprography, which is used by photocopy.
We believe that collective management has a strong role to play when copies of works are used. Users can use at will as long as they pay for a licence and creators are paid. Reprography must be extended to digital uses and to the Internet. Licensing must be allowed to develop and flourish in this education sector. The education sector should count on paying those who provide its content, as they do those who teach and all the other workers. If they don't, the content will wither and die. Copyright supports culture and national identity.
To add education to fair dealing provisions is to invite litigation and to force creators to defend themselves against claims of fairness on the part of users. Many activities can be called educational. To expect creators and collecting societies to contest every fair dealing claim that comes from a museum or a business, not to mention schools and universities, is to place a very heavy burden upon those who would benefit from copyright. It takes years of unnecessary and expensive litigation to clarify a fair dealing exception, and the judges may well decide that non-payment of rights is indeed unfair to creators. Education really should be removed from fair dealing.
Sixth, the Internet is not the future; it is the present. It's a form of publication that's becoming increasingly important, indeed replacing ways in which copies were made and distributed in the past. It presents huge opportunities. Creators must be allowed to benefit, when their works are used privately, when they're copied from device to device.
A levy on digital hardware similar to that already in place on recordable media would be a fair solution to the problem of payment for private use. The levy is fair payment for something that people actually use—content—without which their shiny devices aren't fun at all.
Besides the economic benefit to creators, there are benefits to users as well. A levy allows people to use with a certain freedom, with no threat to their privacy. It does not replace investigation of the truly criminal activity that is piracy. Law enforcement should take care of that, not the service providers.
Bill C-11 proposes fair dealing exceptions for parody and satire and mash-ups—that is, non-commercial user-generated content. The effect of these exceptions is on the one hand to weaken creators' moral rights, which protect their reputations, and to encourage a culture of entitlement on the other. Canadian satirists have flourished without an exception to copyright. There are still many norms that satirists must respect, even if an exception is instituted.
Visual artists who similarly practice appropriation, a practice often shoehorned into parody and satire, have managed well without an exception. Telling these artists that they are free to appropriate under copyright offers them no protection from other forms of prosecution, such as trademark protections or libel. In other countries, parody and satire exceptions have invited protracted, expensive, and inconclusive litigation. We think they should be dropped from Bill C-11.