Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec
475, boulevard de Maisonneuve Est
Montréal (Québec), H2L 5C4
Theatre of the Canadian Museum of History
100, rue Laurier
Gatineau, K1A 0M8
Activity online with ZOOM (The connection link will be sent the morning of the event between 10 AM and 11 AM)
Activity online with ZOOM
Activity online with ZOOM (The connection link will be sent the morning of the event between 10 AM and 11 AM)
Salon privé Le lionceau d'Or at Cabaret Lion d'Or, 1676 Ontario Street East, Montreal
1676, rue Ontario Est
Montréal, H2L 1S7
Le lionceau d'Or du Cabaret Lion d'Or
1676, rue Ontario Est
Montréal, H2L 1S7
Activity online with ZOOM (The connection link will be sent the morning of the event between 10 AM and 11 AM)
Loranger Marcoux
2000, McGill College Avenue, Suite 1000
Montréal, H3A 3H3
Activity online with ZOOM (The connection link will be sent the morning of the event between 10 AM and 11 AM)
Activity online with ZOOM (The connection link will be sent the morning of the event between 10 AM and 11 AM)
Activity online with ZOOM (The connection link will be sent the morning of the event between 10 AM and 11 AM)
Activity online with ZOOM (The connection link will be sent the morning of the event between 10 AM and 11 AM)
Hotel 10 - 10, Sherbrooke Street West, Montreal
Activity online with ZOOM
Activity online with ZOOM (The connection link will be sent the morning of the event between 10 AM and 11 AM)
535, Avenue Viger Est
Montréal, H2L 2P3
Activity online with ZOOM (The connection link will be sent the morning of the event between 10 AM and 11 AM)
Activity online with ZOOM (The connection link will be sent the morning of the event between 10 AM and 11 AM)
Activity online with ZOOM
One often hears about ADR in the context of patents and trademarks. What about for copyright? Given the emphasis nowadays on such methods of conflict resolution, here is an opportunity to learn more about it thanks to panelists whose hands-on experience will provide real insight.
Activity online with ZOOM (The connection link will be sent to you the morning of the event between 10:00 AM and 11:00 AM)
Activity online with ZOOM (The connection link will be sent the morning of the event between 10 AM and 11 AM)
Crypt of the Notre-Dame-de-Bon-Secours Chapel
The much-awaited reform of the Quebec status of the artist legislation will be explained with a focus on the publishing industry.
Activity online with ZOOM
A return engagement for our speaker who will highlight the various developments in Canadian copyright law that have taken place since his talk last year.
Activity online with ZOOM (The connection link will be sent the morning of the training between 10 AM and 11 AM)
A return engagement for our two speakers who will highlight the various developments in Canadian copyright law that have taken place since their talk last year.
Activity online with ZOOM
Activity online with ZOOM (The connection link will be sent the morning of the training between 10 AM and 11 AM)
Because the European Union brings together 27 industrialised countries, developments in EU copyright law represent important information on the direction copyright law takes in general. Decisions from the European Court of Justice, directives that require Member States to amend their laws, policy documents that canvas emerging issues all create an important body of norms that are discussed both within and outside the EU. Our guest speaker, who has recently published a book on Copyright in the Digital Single Market, will guide us through the elements that are particularly relevant to our own Canadian debates.
Activity online with ZOOM (The connection link will be sent the morning of the training between 10 AM and 11 AM)
The relationship between copyright law and artificial intelligence did not need to be the focus of a federal consultation in 2021 to be the hot topic about which so many copyright specialists around the world like to debate. Our panelists, an academic expert on the issue and the Executive Vice-President of one of the largest research centres on artificial intelligence which happens to be based in Montreal, will talk about the state of the art in this field under the guidance of the director of the Digital Law Centre in Switzerland.
Activity online with ZOOM (link will be sent the day before the event between 2:00 PM and 4:00 PM)
Last year, the Québec Court of Appeal rendered a decision in which it discussed the tax treatment of master tape recordings : Agence du Revenu du Québec v. Unidisc Musique Inc., 2021 QCCA 393. The decision thus provides a rare opportunity to examine how tax law applies to a copyright situation. Our two tax law specialists will help us navigate through it and react to your questions.
Activity online with ZOOM (link will be sent the day before the event between 2:00 PM and 4:00 PM)
It is well known that the Copyright Act does not deal with matrimonial and estate devolution matters because they are under the jurisdiction of the provincial legislatures. Two relatively recent decisions, one in Quebec on an inheritance issue and another one in New Zealand concerning the divorce of a painter, provide an opportunity to look at those lesser-known matters in Canadian copyright law. A lawyer and a notary from Quebec will discuss them together with a Belgian moderator whose doctoral dissertation bore on those issues.
Activity online with ZOOM (link will be sent the day before the event between 2:00 PM and 4:00 PM)
In 2021, Canadian courts were asked to decide two infringement cases that dealt with different types of works: Bouchard v. IKEA Canada dealt with plush toys and Winkler v. Hendley involved a historical fiction novel inspired by a historical non-fiction book. Our two panelists will explain the decisions and what they reveal about the way our courts handle such cases.
Activity online with ZOOM (link will be sent the day before the event between 2:00 PM and 4:00 PM)
William Patry studied music before law, and his law studies led him to various positions in the United States leading to his current role as Senior Copyright Counsel at Google. In this conversation with Andrea Rush, he will talk about his latest pandemic hobby (learning about women composers from various historical periods) which led him to a new appreciation for the multifaceted meanings and implications of the word "Search" that raise copyright issues.
Activity online with ZOOM (link will be sent the day before the event between 2:00 PM and 4:00 PM)
Less than three months after its hearing, the Supreme Court of Canada rendered its decision in the case that opposed Access Copyright to York University. Even if two copyright issues were at stake, what has become known as the « compulsory character of the Copyright Board decisions » when it approves tariffs according to the “general regime” of the Copyright Act is the main issue on which the Court unanimously expressed detailed reasons. Our two panelists will exchange their views on the decision based on their respective fields of specialization, administrative law and copyright law.
Activity online with ZOOM (link will be sent the day before the event between 2:00 PM and 4:00 PM)
The Copyright Act does not have many provisions that affect copyright owners’ contractual relations. Yet lately, the Court of Appeal of Quebec pronounced itself on the types of contracts that form the basis of such essential relations in Druide Informatique inc. v. Éditions Québec Amérique inc., a case whose application for leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada was rejected in March this year. Two practitioners, moderated by a French specialist who is accustomed to more explicit legislation regarding contractual matters, will discuss its implications.
Activity online with ZOOM (link will be sent the day before the event between 2:00 PM and 4:00 PM)
The Copyright Modernization Act seemed to be the last word on the status of intermediaries in the copyright world. Yet, the federal consultation on this topic last spring provided the opportunity to revisit their role in the monetization of copyright. Our panelists, who represent diverging stakeholders, will discuss how the current situation led to such renewed interest in the issue and what they expect from it. Their discussion will be moderated by the US Register of Copyrights whose recent report on section 512 of the US Copyright Act also deals with this issue.
Activity online with ZOOM (link will be sent the day before the event between 2:00 PM and 4:00 PM)
The Copyright Modernization Act seemed to be the last word on the status of intermediaries in the copyright world. Yet, the federal consultation on this topic last spring provided the opportunity to revisit their role in the monetization of copyright. Our panelists, who represent diverging stakeholders, will discuss how the current situation led to such renewed interest in the issue and what they expect from it. Their discussion will be moderated by a French specialist who is well versed in French and EU developments in this area.
Activity online with ZOOM (link will be sent the day before the event between 2:00 PM and 4:00 PM)
Activity online with ZOOM (link will be sent the day before the event between 2:00 PM and 4:00 PM)
The new trade agreement between Canada, the United States, and Mexico requires Canada to extend its basic term of protection to “life + 70” as of January 1st, 2023. Three panelists will share their opinions on the subject: one from Canada, one from the United States, and one from the European Union.
MLS Legal
3800A, St-Hubert
Montréal, H2L 4A5
This year, ALAI Canada will hold its Annual General Meeting on Wednesday, April 28, 2021 at 5:15 PM. Since social distancing will remain in order, we will only be able to welcome a very limited number of people, that is to say the directors/members who are called upon to present a report on this occasion as well as the chair of the meeting. For this reason, we are therefore offering you the opportunity to participate in the AGM by Zoom.
Activity online with ZOOM (link will be sent the day before the event)
There has been no shortage of judicial developments in copyright 2020-2021. This talk will highlight cases of interest - a potpourri - with something for everyone.
Activity online with ZOOM (link will be sent the day before the event)
This presentation will cover the 78 Canadian copyright decisions that were rendered in 2020. The speakers will spend more time on five of them while the other ones will be highlighted through their similarities and differences.
Activity online with ZOOM (link will be sent the day before the event)
An Alberta Court of Appeal decision in 2017 may not have received all the copyright attention it should have despite the fact that the Supreme Court of Canada refused to grant leave to appeal it. In it were at stake serious emerging issues such as data protection by copyright, confidential information protection, regulatory regimes, artificial intelligence, etc.
Activity online with ZOOM (link will be sent the day before the event)
Authors are increasingly turning to the Small Claims Court to settle conflicts over unauthorized uses of their works. The merit of this approach has been more officially recognized in 2019 in the United States with the Copyright Alternative in Small-Claims Enforcement Act (the “CASE Act”).
Activity online with ZOOM (link will be sent the day before the event)
The landscape of judicial remedies for copyright owners whose works are disseminated on the Internet is becoming more focused. Towards the end of 2019, the Federal Court of Canada issued for the first time a blocking order against an Internet service provider in GoldTV. Two years before in Voltage Pictures, the Federal Court of Appeal pronounced itself on the conditions required for the issuance of a Norwich order.
Activity online with ZOOM (link will be sent the day before the event)
On July 1 this year, the Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement came into force. For Canada, it has meant that the basic term of protection of copyright works would become “author’s life + 70”. This is the basic term of protection in the United States while Mexico’s basic term is “author’s life + 100”. Yet, a special provision allows Canada to keep its basic term of protection of “author’s life + 50” for an extra period of 2 ½ years. How are these differences experienced on a day to day basis?
Activity online with ZOOM (link will be sent the day before the event)
Two recent decisions by the Federal Court of Appeal, York University v. Access Copyright and Entertainment Software Association v. SOCAN, raise interesting issues concerning collective management in Canada such as the mandatory nature of the tariffs certified by the Copyright Board of Canada, the interpretation of the “making available” right, and the role of international law in the interpretation of the Canadian Copyright Act.
Activity online with ZOOM (link will be sent a few days before the event)
Last April, two Canadian courts have issued decisions in which fair dealing was at stake. The Federal Court of Appeal rendered its decision in York University v. Access Copyright and the Superior Court of Justice of Ontario did so in Wiseau Studio v. Harper. Our two panelists will discuss their impact with you.
Zoom webinar
En ligne
Theme : Une revue de cinq décisions d'intérêt en droit d'auteur pour l'année 2019
Centre d'entreprises et d'innovation de Montréal
Montréal
Montréal
Montréal
1100, Rue de la Montagne, Salon René
Montréal
Cassels Brock Lawyers
Toronto
Norton Rose Fulbright
Montréal
Restaurant HAMBAR
Montréal
Centre St-Pierre, salle Marcel Pépin
Montréal
Centre St-Pierre, salle Marcel Pépin
Montréal
Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt LLP
Toronto