So... Whats for lunch?

Started by kits, Feb 06 06 09:57

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tenkani

 W00h000!!
Tax all apple products and put those damn nazis out of business!!!!    :)
   
For thou art with me; thy cream and thy sugar they comfort me
Thou preparest a carafe before me in the presence of Juan Valdez
Thou anointest my day with pep; my mug runneth over
Surely richness and taste shall follow me all the days of my life
And I will dwell in the house of coffee forever.

purelife

Yup, I've heard about that.  I had no idea it's going to be 75 BUCKS!  OMG!  Freaking expensive.    

Lise

Like taxes on your blank CDs and DVDs. It's to stop you from downloading illegal/free music from the net. It's enough to make me cry.  You won't get charge on the iPods you own but the newer ones might get a hefty tax charge.  
Always end the name of your child with a vowel, so that when you yell the name will carry.
Bill Cosby.

Sportsdude

 No Apple iPod tax for Canada:
[a href="http://news.com.com/No+iPod+tax+for+Canada/2100-1041_3-5809117.html"]
http://news.com.com/No+iPod+tax+for+Canada/2100-1041_3-5809117.html[/a]

  The Canadian Supreme Court won't hear a case involving extra fees for iPods and other MP3 players in that country, ending a dispute over a so-called iPod tax, but rekindling debate over the legality of file swapping.      [/p] At issue was a long-standing law that allows a regulatory agency to collect a small extra fee on blank media such as CDs and tapes, with the revenues going to artists and record labels to recompense them for the private copies being made of their work. [/p]  That agency, the Copyright Board of Canada, said in late 2003 that iPods and other hard-drive players were being used to copy music as well, and [a href="http://news.com.com/Canada+deems+P2P+downloading+legal/2100-1025_3-5121479.html" title="Canada deems P2P downloading legal -- Friday, Dec 12, 2003"]imposed a fee [/a] of up to $25 on the devices. An Appeals Court set aside that decision last year, and Thursday's Supreme Court action will leave iPods untaxed. [/p]  The decision may have broader implications for Canadian computer users, however.  [/p]  The country's trade association for record labels quickly welcomed the Supreme Court's action as a sign that unauthorized file swapping was once again viewed as unambiguously illegal. [/p]  That connection stems from another court ruling, in which a judge said that trading files though a file swapping network [a href="http://news.com.com/Judge+File+sharing+legal+in+Canada/2100-1027_3-5182641.html" title="Judge: File sharing legal in Canada -- Wednesday, Mar 31, 2004"]appeared to be legal[/a], citing the Copyright Board's fee regime. [/p]  But if copying files to hard drives--whether on an iPod or a computer--is not included in the private copying fees, then file swapping is no longer protected, executives at the Canadian Recording Industry Association said.
[/p]
 "For years, those supporting unauthorized file sharing have misleadingly used the existence of the Private Copying Levy to justify illegitimate file sharing," CRIA President Graham Henderson said in a statement. "Today, the Supreme Court says 'no such luck.'" [/p]  Copyright regulators said the Supreme Court's action was regrettable, and might even make most common uses of the iPod illegal. [/p] "The clear result of this decision is that copying recorded music onto an iPod is illegal, unless the copying has been authorized by rights holders," said David Basskin, a director of the Canadian Private Copying Collective, which collects and distributes the fees on blank media, in a statement. [/p]  The CPPC would return the fees that had been collected from iPod and other digital audio device sales between December 2003 and December 2004, the group said. [/p]  The ambiguity in Canadian law may be resolved before the courts have much time to address file-swapping issues again, however. The Canadian government has [a href="http://news.com.com/2061-10796_3-5754580.html" title="Canada proposes tighter copyright law -- Monday, Jun 20, 2005"]introduced a wide-ranging new copyright law[/a] that is expected to definitively make trading copyright files online without permission illegal.[/p]  
"We can't stop here. This is bat country."

Russ

Yeah I heard about that Lise. Nice to know our voted in members are thinking about our passed laws on music, and trying to give them more money.

  If it goes through it will be the last time I buy an iPod in canada with that dumb law. Come to think of it I already buy lots outside of canada.    
Mercy to the Guilty is Torture to the Victims

purelife

I hope that it doesn't go through.  75 bucks is a lot.  7.50 would be better.  

Sportsdude

everybody its happening lol look at the link!  
"We can't stop here. This is bat country."

purelife

It is or isn't happening?

Sportsdude

Its not. Supreme Court of Canada knocked it down.  
"We can't stop here. This is bat country."

purelife

When was that last updated?

Sportsdude

[a href="http://www.ecommercetimes.com/story/8XAvJ3Rk19qqvO/Canadian-Group-Pushes-for-iPod-Tax.xhtml"]http://www.ecommercetimes.com/story/8XAvJ3Rk19qqvO/Canadian-Group-Pushes-for-iPod-Tax.xhtml[/a]


This group is going to try to tax all mp3's again. If this board accepts it, it will most likely be challenged by somebody and it will head right back to the Supreme Court of Canada which will unless all the judges are replaced by the Conservatives by then rule in favour of the people and not the companies and the tax will be illegal.
 
"We can't stop here. This is bat country."

tenkani

Oh, I thought it was just iPods   :(
All MP3 players...that does suck.
 
For thou art with me; thy cream and thy sugar they comfort me
Thou preparest a carafe before me in the presence of Juan Valdez
Thou anointest my day with pep; my mug runneth over
Surely richness and taste shall follow me all the days of my life
And I will dwell in the house of coffee forever.

Lil Me

Well, I guess we'll all be buying MP3s in the States.
 
 Has anyone been to LA Chicken?
   
"In the absence of clearly-defined goals, we become strangely loyal to performing daily trivia until ultimately we become enslaved by it."  Robert Heinlein

P.C.

Playing catch-up again.

  Congrats on the new house LilMe.  Whiterock is wonderful.  One of my favourite mainland places.  I might have missed this part (I was skim reading)....but when will you move?
Sir Isaac Newton invented the swinging door....for the convenience of his cat.

Russ

P.C. wrote:
 Playing catch-up again.

  Congrats on the new house LilMe.  Whiterock is wonderful.  One of my favourite mainland places.  I might have missed this part (I was skim reading)....but when will you move?[/DIV]
 Uh, it was ally miss pc.
Mercy to the Guilty is Torture to the Victims

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