Lexpert US Guides

2019 Lexpert US Guide

The Lexpert Guides to the Leading US/Canada Cross-Border Corporate and Litigation Lawyers in Canada profiles leading business lawyers and features articles for attorneys and in-house counsel in the US about business law issues in Canada.

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www.lexpert.ca/usguide | LEXPERT • June 2019 | 39 Otherwise, despite the similarities in US and Canadian trademark law, differ- ences remain that have not been covered by the USMCA. "Although both Canada and the US are parties to the Berne Convention, and there are little differences that can trip people up," Parker says. While the Convention, an international agreement covering copyright, protects copyright in the original work, the US and Canada differ on who is considered the au- thor or owner of the right. "Under the US 'work for hire' concept, the employer can be both the author and the owner of the work," Parker says. "In Canada, however, the work becomes one that was created in the course of employ- ment unless there is an agreement to the contrary. e employer, then, is considered the first copyright owner but not necessar- ily the author — and that's important be- cause the duration of the right is keyed off the author's life in both countries." ere are also differences in the moral rights regimes. In the US, moral rights ap- ply only to visual artists; in Canada, the au- thors of all works have moral rights. And while the concept of "fair use" and "fair dealing" are used interchangeably in Canada, legal advisers need to understand that they are distinct concepts for the purpose of comparing Canadian and US trademark law. "e US concept of fair use is more flexible than the statutory concept of fair dealing found in our Copyright Act," Parker says. "Fair dealing is an exception to copy- right infringement and is limited to certain purposes under the statute, whereas fair use in the US is not so restricted." However that may be, copyright owners in Canada are asserting their rights more aggressively than ever. "Historically, copyright owners have been reluctant to go aer consumers, be- cause they didn't want to alienate their customer base," says Andrew Bernstein in Torys LLP's Toronto office. "But that's changed, and we see it in cases like Voltage [Rogers Communications Inc. v. Voltage Pic- tures, LLC] where the copyright holder is seeking the identities of thousands of con- sumer infringers from the ISP." On the patents landscape, December 2018 saw the implementation of impor-

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