By submitting
User Materials to or using the Site, you represent that you have the full legal right to provide the
User Materials, that such
User Materials will not: (a) divulge any protected health information or infringe any
intellectual property rights of any person or entity or any rights of publicity, personality, or privacy of any person or entity, including without limitation as a result of your failure to obtain consent to post personally identifying or otherwise private information
about a person or which impersonates another person; (b) violate any law, statute, ordinance, or regulation; (c) be defamatory, libelous or trade libelous, unlawfully threatening, or unlawfully harassing or embarrassing; (d) be obscene, child pornographic, or indecent; (e) violate any community or Internet standard; (f) contain any viruses, Trojan horses, worms, time bombs, cancelbots, or other computer programming routines that damage, detrimentally interfere with, surreptitiously intercept, or expropriate any system, data or personal information, or that facilitate or enable such or that are intended to do any of the foregoing; (g) result in product liability, tort, breach of contract, personal injury, death, or
property damage; (h) constitute misappropriation of any trade secret or know - how; or (i) constitute disclosure of any confidential information owned by any third party.
To further the point, think of areas that would be tough for an organization to even think
about making revolutionary changes: compliance training, per
user intellectual property licenses, online learner history, eLearning courseware, etc..
Another strength of this book is that it focuses on areas that have been given short shrift in previous works on Canadian copyright:
users» rights (an area of increasing importance, since most public discourse
about copyright focuses on what we can't do rather than what we can); aboriginal approaches to
intellectual property rights (which emphasize the protection of the honour of clans, cultures, and nations over the rights of individual creators); digital rights management (and its spectacular failure to actually protect content); and public licensing systems (such as the Creative Commons licenses).