So apparently Canada is taking the life-plus-70-years route for copyright now. https://www.michaelgeist.ca/2022/04/the-canadian-government-makes-its-choice-implementation-of-copyright-term-extension-without-mitigating-against-the-harms/
(Link via https://singpolyma.net/actionstream/https-www-michaelgeist-ca-2022/ .)
If New Zealand does the same, thanks to the "free trade" agreement with the UK, how many remaining English-speaking countries will there be where copyright lasts "only" half a century after the author's death?
Michael GeistThe Canadian Government Makes its Choice: Implementation of Copyright Term Extension Without Mitigating Against the Harms - Michael GeistThe Canadian government plans to extend the term of copyright from the international standard of life of the author plus 50 years to life plus 70 years without mitigation measures that would have reduced the harms and burden of the extension. The Budget Implementation Act, a 443 page bill that adopts the omnibus approach the government had pledged to reject, was posted late yesterday by Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland's department and could be tabled in the House of Commons as early as today. Page 328 of the bill features the shoehorned amendments to the Copyright Act, including an extension of the term of copyright. While the government is not making the change retroactive (meaning works currently in the public domain stay there), no one seriously expected that to happen. What many had hoped - based on the government's own committee recommendations and copyright consultation - was to introduce mitigation measures to reduce the economic cost and cultural harm that comes from term extension. Instead, Freeland, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Innovation, Science and Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne, and Canadian Heritage Minister Pablo Rodriguez have chosen to reject the recommendations of students, teachers, universities, librarians, IP experts, and their own Justice Minister.