Canadian Court: Yes, We Can Order Google To Block Websites Globally

from the that-seems-like-a-problem dept

Almost exactly a year ago we wrote about a troubling lawsuit in British Columbia, where a court ruled that Google needed to block access to a website globally. The case involved one company accusing another of selling counterfeit or copied equipment, and despite Google not even being a party to the case, said that Google needed to make sure no one could find the site in question via Google anywhere in the world. As we noted, this had tremendously problematic consequences. For example, China doesn’t think anyone should be able to learn about the protests in Tiananmen Square. Can it now order Google to remove all links to such references globally? That result seems crazy. And, of course, there was a separate issue of how the court even had jurisdiction over Google, seeing as it does not have any operations, staff or servers in British Columbia. Google stepped in to protest the injunction at the appeals court.

Unfortunately, the court has now ruled against Google, using the same sort of logic the lower court did — basically arguing that because Google is available in British Columbia, the court has jurisdiction, and because it’s trying to stop what it deems to be illegal actions from reaching Canada’s shores, it has every right to order Google to block things worldwide, lest someone from British Columbia decide to type “google.com” into their browser to avoid the “google.ca.” On the question of “doing business” in BC, the appeals court basically accepts the lower court’s confused understanding of things:

While Google does not have servers or offices in the Province and does not have resident staff here, I agree with the chambers judge?s conclusion that key parts of Google?s business are carried on here. The judge concentrated on the advertising aspects of Google?s business in making her findings. In my view, it can also be said that the gathering of information through proprietary web crawler software (?Googlebot?) takes place in British Columbia. This active process of obtaining data that resides in the Province or is the property of individuals in British Columbia is a key part of Google?s business.

Google says that even if it is concluded that it carries on business in British Columbia, the injunction was not properly granted, because it did not relate to the specific business activities that Google carries on in the Province. In my view, the business carried on in British Columbia is an integral part of Google?s overall operations. Its success as a search engine depends on collecting data from websites throughout the world (including British Columbia) and providing search results (accompanied by targeted advertising) throughout the world (including British Columbia). The business conducted in British Columbia, in short, is the same business as is targeted by the injunction.

In other words, if you don’t want to be subject to the laws of BC (with control over your entire global operations) don’t index websites based in BC? That’s crazy. While I doubt it will happen, it’s got to be tempting for some at Google to just say “okay, no more Google for BC or any website in BC.”

Now as for the nutty idea that a court in BC has jurisdiction over all of Google’s global operations, again, the court doesn’t seem even remotely concerned about that. It’s response is basically “yeah, so?”

Google raises the specter of it being subjected to restrictive orders from courts in all parts of the world, each concerned with its own domestic law. I agree with the chambers judge that it is the world-wide nature of Google?s business and not any defect in the law that gives rise to that possibility. As well, however, the threat of multi-jurisdictional control over Google?s operations is, in my opinion, overstated. Courts must, in exercising their powers, consider many factors other than territorial competence and the existence of in personam jurisdiction over the parties. Courts must exercise considerable restraint in granting remedies that have international ramifications.

And it notes that previous cases have said that, sure, BC courts have “worldwide jurisdiction.”

At one time the courts of this Province refrained from granting injunctions that enjoined activities outside of British Columbia…. In 1988, however, the English Court of Appeal held that it had jurisdiction to issue a worldwide Mareva injunction…. It is now over 25 years since the Supreme Court of British Columbia first issued a worldwide injunction…. The jurisdiction to do so was re-confirmed …. and is, today, well-established.

Google, quite reasonably, points out that while injunctions make sense against parties that actually break the law, it makes no sense to issue an injunction against a third party that has nothing to do with the party that actually broke the law. The court goes on a long and winding road saying “sure, but… in this case, it’s okay.”

Finally, the court addresses another concern raised by the Canadian Civil Liberties Association, noting that banning access to a website worldwide has serious free speech consequences. Once again, the court says “sure, but, we don’t care in this case.”

For that reason, courts should be very cautious in making orders that might place limits on expression in another country. Where there is a realistic possibility that an order with extraterritorial effect may offend another state?s core values, the order should not be made.

In the case before us, there is no realistic assertion that the judge?s order will offend the sensibilities of any other nation. It has not been suggested that the order prohibiting the defendants from advertising wares that violate the intellectual property rights of the plaintiffs offends the core values of any nation. The order made against Google is a very limited ancillary order designed to ensure that the plaintiffs? core rights are respected.

I note, as well, that the order in this case is an interlocutory one, and one that can be varied by the court. In the unlikely event that any jurisdiction finds the order offensive to its core values, an application could be made to the court to modify the order so as to avoid the problem.

In short, sure, banning speech around the globe from one court in British Columbia, Canada could have serious global free speech concerns, but… we really don’t like this website, so we’re not going to change the ruling. In fact, later in the ruling, the court basically says “hey, the idea that there may be some ‘legitimate’ speech on this website we’re ordering blocked globally is totally speculative”:

There has, in the course of argument, been some reference to the possibility that the defendants (or others) might wish to use their websites for legitimate free speech, rather than for unlawfully marketing the GW1000. That possibility, it seems to me, is entirely speculative. There is no evidence that the websites in question have ever been used for lawful purposes, nor is there any reason to believe that the domain names are in any way uniquely suitable for any sort of expression other than the marketing of the illegal product. Of course, if the character of the websites changes, it is always open to the defendants or others to seek a variation of the injunction.

And, thus, British Columbia believes it can order global blocking of any website its courts deem problematic in BC. One wonders if we’ll start to see “censorship tourism” migrating to BC courts now that its doors are open for global censorship orders.

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Comments on “Canadian Court: Yes, We Can Order Google To Block Websites Globally”

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137 Comments
Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

No.
Anyway, who uses google now anyway, startpage gets google results as if you were on google without the crap (and I got AdblockEdge and bunch of other mandatory addons, so they can’t even personalize my search,which is the most controling aspect of google, it thinks everyone have one track minds with maybe 3 subjects of interest online, at best.That might be true for people in their late 50’s and older, as for me, the internet has got me to learn how to get practically billingual (I’m french canadian).

Use ixquick or duckuckgo for results not indexed by google. Supreme Court of Canada could intervene and put an end to this too, like they do with our current PM, even with his small majority he manages to get get 1/3 of his fascistic laws and edicts annulled by the our Santa Clauses (our SP, their dress is basically a santa claus costume without the hat heh. Gives me more fuel to vote BQ again since Duceppe is coming back at the head os a party, because first past the post elections and by percentage. Shit, we have 3 to 4 (2 were bitchslapped in 2008 and 2011, that time in 2011 it was for contempt of parliament..which automatically dissolves it and new elections start, but that time the fucker was prepared, with people who worked with karl Rove (yes, he brought in Bush Jr. election people in for money in return) and he still barely got the most ridings(districts for the american equivalent?,anyway), but that time he became Dictator of Canada with a majority that could have have been prevented, had the Liberals been less..well, they don’t like the NDP because they are leftist party, while Liberals are Left to Centre Left, but add these 2 together and we could have had our first ever coaliation government, would have been worth it for us.

By the way back on topic, like I said, the Supreme Court (of Canada, not the provincial SP)wont let that stand if the defendants are to pursue this. I think all of the internet is gonna be laughing off their asses, who’s gonna stop people living in BC….for a quite Liberal/New Democratic Party, with also the sole Green Party seat, I’m surprised their court would be filled like small minded people like that.

PaulT (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

“Anyway, who uses google now anyway, startpage gets google results as if you were on google without the crap”

So… if you use it you’re still using Google, you’re just using a different frontend.

“the internet has got me to learn how to get practically billingual (I’m french canadian).”

I’m pretty sure there were a lot of bilingual French Canadians before the internet as well. Congrats on using such a useful tool for actual education, though.

Erin says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

BC would have to push the ruling to a federal court as they have no jurisdiction over a company that has no presence in the province, no matter what they try to claim. They could try to apply fines or whatever but those could be ignored just as easily as the ruling itself. What’s BC going to do? Apply a China-style firewall to block Googlebot? Which would then drag ISPs into the mix and start a whole new round of “why the hell are you punishing us for an unrelated crime?” questions.

If they push it to a federal court and the federal court also agrees, then Google is in a bit more trouble. At that point they’d have to either comply or remove their local CDN and google.ca. Of course there’s still the question of how much that would matter to Google. It would mostly hurt Canadian companies that rely on Google’s advertising network, but it would have minimal impact on Google and minimal impact on searches (typing .com isn’t that much harder than .ca!) Might have a significant impact on things like Youtube in Canada (CDNs are gone so we’d be streaming from the US.)

Overall, short of one of those China-style provincial (or national, if it comes to that) firewalls that I mentioned, there’s basically a whole lot of squat Canada could really do to enforce this because the internet is a global phenomena and unlike the similar situation in France, most Canadians wouldn’t really care a whole lot if they had to use the US servers to do their searching.

All that of course is assuming Google’s willing to risk a war of attrition in order to stick by the principles of free speech. I somewhat hope they will as this is a horrendous precedent to set. Canada and France and wherever else don’t seem to want to consider the fact that if we’re applying our local censorship to China, China has a much stronger argument for enforcing their (significantly worse) censorship back on us.

Aquifel says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

The Canadian government cares greatly about how the US government feels about them. The US government barely cares at all about how the Canadian government feels about them, frequently forgets that they aren’t some kind of US territory.

I would bet a whole paycheck that the US would either not comply with an asset seizure order or, more likely, drag it out until the courts gave up.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

If Canada does send a request to the US to have money/assets from Google as payment for any such fine you can sure bet the US will refuse to comply and grant such a request even though the US fully expects NZ to bend over with complying and granting with handing over all of Dotcom’s money and assets etc.

PaulT (profile) says:

Re: Re:

“And what exactly are they going to do if Google refuses?
Block them? That would be interesting.”

Yeah that was my first thought. They have no direct jurisdiction over Google, and the collateral damage inflicted against local companies by any such block would dwarf any punitive effect inflicted on Google. According to a rough calculation, BC represents 0.06% of the world’s population. I’m sure Google will be fine without them for a while. A lot of local business could well suffer – but they’re as much innocent bystanders as Google themselves..

“But let’s say Google/Bing/Yahoo/… complies. How long will it take for someone to sue Google/Bing/Yahoo/… in US for stifling the free speech?”

Is there an American law the blocks a private company from doing this (I believe that the 1st amendment only covers US government censorship)? Especially since they’re not blocking anything, they’re just not providing a tool for the speech to be located as easily? The speech is still there, you just couldn’t use Google’s platform to locate it (but, as you rightly note, they have many competitors who have not been asked to block anything).

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

The US courts are government so a US court order wouldn’t stand.

I could just see the algorithm suddenly deprecating every thing from BC and then .CA a few points. What do you mean the only Pizza shop in Nukko Lake BC is on the bottom of the second page of search results for Nukko Lake Pizza?

That Anonymous Coward (profile) says:

So about my theory that power causes a form of brain damage…

This again appears to be based in the magical thinking that Google = The Internet.

One of these times, I would really like to see Google say f’ it again and give them exactly what they want. I imagine that blackholeing BC or all of Canada from Google explaining that the liability to index anything in CA is to great to do so might get people talking… and maybe someone with a modicum of technical knowledge would clue some Judges in.

About Time says:

"no evidence that the websites ... have ever been used for lawful purposes"

JUST like torrent sites, then! Even mentions “intellectual property”.

Of course Masnick worries will spread because has the view that “free speech” covers EVERY web-site for EVERY purpose — especially sites having nothing but links to infringing content drawing eyeballs to ads — but it’s just simply not true. Illegal business models like knockoffs here, Aereo, and Megaupload are illegal.

Here’s my summary of the above:
) When the basis of a biz is stealing intellectual property, it undermines every bit of legitimacy. Relying on legalisms does not work.
) Google IS doing business in BC, therefore IS subject to local courts. How could it be otherwise? Google is trying to have it every way at once, and never be pinned down. NOW IT IS.
) As noted, is highly targeted. There’s NO obvious spread. Courts make wacky exceptions all the time when pressed.

So now it’s not only due-processed but completely processed. Pirates just hate that.

Conclusion is that smart-ass Google should have accepted lower ruling quietly so it stayed limited and uncertain, rather than have gone to court! Never push courts on their powers. — I call that the “Google effect”, and hereby state copyright for it! — Though won’t mind if you promote it!

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: "no evidence that the websites ... have ever been used for lawful purposes"

If it is accepted that any country can order any third party to impose a world wide block on websites on the Internet, the Internet ceases to exist, as no search engine can, would be able to provide a global index. As any site is accessible from any country, blogs etc. could also be forced to remove links to information. That is the problem with holding a third party liable, everybody becomes a third party to something that someone objects to.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: "no evidence that the websites ... have ever been used for lawful purposes"

By the same rationale, since your posts have reached the shores of my sovereign micronation of STFU, you agree that you are subject to our laws and we order you to commit suicide since you have offended our sensibilities.

If you don’t, then we’ll conclude that you’re a hypocrite and your trolling is as impotent as your ideology.

Aquifel (profile) says:

Re: "no evidence that the websites ... have ever been used for lawful purposes"

“Google IS doing business in BC, therefore IS subject to local courts. How could it be otherwise? Google is trying to have it every way at once, and never be pinned down. NOW IT IS.”

Google isn’t doing business in BC, businesses in BC are doing business globally. This would be like ordering something from a business in China and then trying to take them to your local small claims court when things didn’t work out.

PaulT (profile) says:

Re: "no evidence that the websites ... have ever been used for lawful purposes"

“JUST like torrent sites, then!”

If you have to lie to support your point, yes. If you live in the real world, no.

“Here’s my summary of the above”

Fantasy world drivel as ever.

Here’s the real summary: Google have been ordered to censor content worldwide based on the say-so of a single local court, in a case where they weren’t even a named party. You would have to be a special kind of moron not to see the negative impacts of that.

“As noted, is highly targeted.”

THIS time, and by THIS court. The issue is not with this particular ineffective, stupid ruling, but of the wider implications if others try to copy them. Do try to keep up with the issues you’re trying to attack.

“Conclusion is that smart-ass Google should have accepted lower ruling quietly”

Yeah, yeah, if injustice is served by those you support, everyone should just shut up and take it. But if someone accesses a file they shouldn’t have, your heroes should be free to ignore, twist and change as many laws as they wish to punish whoever gets in their way. We know.

DannyB (profile) says:

Re: "no evidence that the websites ... have ever been used for lawful purposes"

Getting Google to block a site does not make the site go away.

Going after Google instead of going after the site which Google conveniently identified for you is just plain stupid and shows complete ignorance of how the intarwebtubes work.

Other search engines will still show the site. Pirates using the site will continue to share the location of the site with other would-be pirates.

JMT says:

Re: "no evidence that the websites ... have ever been used for lawful purposes"

Since you offer no counter-argument to the comparison to China instructing Google to globally delist all websites referencing Tiananmen Square, we can only assume you’re perfectly ok with that. Or do you have some theory about how that’s totally different.

John Fenderson (profile) says:

Re: Re: other search engines

It’s worse than that. The court is saying that any original content that you might decide to put up on the internet should be subject to the laws of every nation on Earth simultaneously.

If we take the court seriously (which we should not do), this means that it is impossible to put anything but the most trivial content on the net.

Anonymous Coward says:

Pig Guns

Google needs to pull out the big guns.

1st, they should make sure that the Streisand effect causes the blocked website to get more traffic than ever before.

2nd, replace result links to the site with the word with Blame Canada playing in the background.

3rd arrange for a sequel to the South Park movie to be made about this incident.

and finally

divert traffic away from canada and canadian made products.

I suspect that would get a bit of attention.

Ninja (profile) says:

Re: That's kind of why the concept of jurisdiction exists.

That. Google could throw a ton of shit in the fan by starting to apply decisions delivered elsewhere to the BC jurisdiction. When they complain just point that if they think their stuff id valid globally then they shouldn’t complain of other countries messing with them. I’d love to see some mandated “Allah is great! Westerns have a pact with the devil!” phrase on Google main pages in BC or something (just to go with the current “Arabs are bad” stereotype).

TheResidentSkeptic says:

Back to basics

There is nothing that says anyone must use a search engine. The underlying code for searching has been available for many many years – all the way back to SWISH and SWISH-E. Anyone can run their own web indexing engine, given a big enough drive farm to store the index. And with the price of drives these days, or using mega amounts of cloud storage (pun intended) – this becomes possible.

They will eventually have to make it illegal to search. And illegal to use the internet.

And the Phoenix of WWIV will rise from the ashes of the internet. Then what will they do? Outlaw modems?

PaulT (profile) says:

Re: Re:

“If Google had any semblance of ethics they’d self-police themselves like every other legitimate company does.”

Ah, the idiot brigade has backup. So, how does Google “self-censor” in this case, which two companies completely unrelated to it had a dispute it was not involved in?

Yeah, yeah, you don’t like Google. Leave that aside – in the real world, how would you expect this to be handled before the courts dragged them in on a case to they were not previously party in any way?

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

“Plaintiffs obtained a default judgment against the defendants. But, the defendants continued to sell the offending goods over the Internet. The plaintiffs, unable to enforce their judgment, asked for Google’s help in blocking the website. Google de-indexed specific URL’s requested by the plaintiffs, but this “whac-a-mole” process was ineffective. When Google refused to de-index the offending websites from its search results, the plaintiffs brought a motion against Google for interim relief requiring Google to de-index the websites.”

Google is a completely shady company only concerned with making billions off of surveillance and selling crappy advertising. They brought this judgement upon themselves. Karma is a bitch.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

So that site that Google is told to block is 100% illegal across the entire world? Google should have the right to remove sites like that? What next, should we give China or North Korea the right to tell Google what sites to block world wide? I think that Google is ethically right in that decision. If the BC courts want to have the site removed, go after the source not the person who makes the maps.

PaulT (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:4 Re:

“I refuse to use anything related to Google.”

Including facts and logic when commenting on stories related to them, and refusing to answer direct questions like the one I posed.

You hate their business model so refuse to use their services? Cool, just like I do with numerous companies I dislike. However, I never feel the need to whine about them anonymously whenever they’re mentioned. I wonder why you feel that need.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:5 Re:

According to the Copia link at the bottom of the homepage of Techdirt Techdirt is sponsored by Google amongst other companies that are mentioned. From this a person could make the argument that this site being sponsored by Google is in a way related to Google and as such the person who you replied to is wrong is stating “I refuse to use anything related to Google.” being as this site is therefore related to Google because of sponsorship.

That One Guy (profile) says:

Re: Re:

Hey, not a problem, I mean I’m sure that would be dirt cheap to do, so why don’t you offer to handle it for them? Should be easy enough right, so I’m sure you’ll be able to get through every single site they index and spot with 100% accuracy the ones that need to be de-listed, while agreeing to be held personally accountable for any mistakes you make.

Grumpy Disheartened Canadian says:

Re: Re:

Google reserves the right to delist and block anyone they want. They are a private business offering a free service after all, aren’t they? Do they even have offices and servers in Canada? It’s actually in Google’s best interest to do so until this is resolved due to the high level of legal liability being imposed on them. Google wasn’t even named and is just a third party to these shenanigans. As someone else pointed out, Google isn’t doing business in BC, but rather BC is doing business globally. Why should Google take on any kind of legal liability for that?

David says:

Re: Re:

Again, for what? After all, at that point they are no longer operating AT ALL in BC. Which by serving BC, is the basis of their argument. By no longer serving BC, Google, by all measures, have stopped operating in BC – thus by their own and any other argument, would fail to have jurisdiction.

These types of lawsuits (where Google is given ‘orders’ despite not even being a party to the suit) have got to stop.

David says:

Re: Re:

Again, for what? After all, at that point they are no longer operating AT ALL in BC. Which by serving BC, is the basis of their argument. By no longer serving BC, Google, by all measures, have stopped operating in BC – thus by their own and any other argument, would fail to have jurisdiction.

These types of lawsuits (where Google is given ‘orders’ despite not even being a party to the suit) have got to stop.

Flames Attractor says:

The internet: say stop stealing and stop watching mindless entertainment,

and pirates want you dead:

>>> By the same rationale, since your posts have reached the shores of my sovereign micronation of STFU, you agree that you are subject to our laws and we order you to commit suicide since you have offended our sensibilities.

No one reasonable should comment here, hate is all you’ll get. Don’t be deceived by the pirates who write more mildly: they’re just more subtle snakes, same opinion.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: The internet: say stop stealing and stop watching mindless entertainment,

>No one reasonable should comment here…

>Where did you get the crazy notion that your comments >are reasonable?

Good job, Gwiz! You took the bait and proved the troll exactly right! Thanks for making us all look stupid.

Gwiz (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: The internet: say stop stealing and stop watching mindless entertainment,

Lol. Nice try Blue.

You are pretty much the only one who uses the greater than symbol instead of quotation marks or italics when quoting someone (the only other person I know who does that is a Federal agent who’s comments are infinitely more intelligent than yours).

At least you admit you are a troll though, that’s a start.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: The internet: say stop stealing and stop watching mindless entertainment,

Where was the hate? If you didn’t read the satire and absurdism in the original comment (that you couldn’t be bothered to respond to directly instead of creating a new thread), you’re going get real butthurt at a lot of comments that aren’t meant to be as mean as your sensitive little ego perceives them to be.

But since you consider yourself reasonable, why would you comment here? Are you martyring yourself to bring the gospel of authoritarian greed to the heathen pirates who don’t worship your god Moloch whose blood is running money? We appreciate the evangelism for our cursed souls, but you really don’t have to try so hard for our sakes, especially since not all of us are the evil pirates you think we are…

Nicci Stevens (profile) says:

If this were, indeed, a legitimate tact of government, then, for example, a conservative Muslim country could force Google and other search engines to say, prohibit pages that involve alcohol advertising, birth control, civil rights, etc, or, other countries could limit speed that they would deem dissent to their government even if that speech did not actually include references to their government. In countries where it is illegal to say bad things about their [insert head of state here]. The chilling effects could be a sweeping “magnificence” of prior restraint throughout the world.

How do these issues get solved in a truly fair and equitable way? One country cannot rule the Internet, though many keep trying. Perhaps there needs to be a world body that can adjudicate these things?

The real answer, of course, is to reduce litigiousness, prevent courts form holding third party responsible for the bad acts of people those third parties have no control or responsibility over. Like that’s gonna happen.

John Fenderson (profile) says:

Re: Re:

In my opinion, the only way that nations can address this “problem” with even the slightest amount of legitimacy is to do what China is doing: firewall the internet off.

As bad as that is, it’s far better, more fair, and more reasonable than asserting that you have the right to control what is being done everywhere on the planet.

Anonymous Coward says:

I think the US should pass a law that allows us to tax Canadian businesses on all their revenue, because they might have customers in the US. We should also make sure they know that all Canadian businesses are subject to US laws and court decisions on all activities, regardless of if they are in any way connected to the US.

mike says:

A fun solution would be to comply, but on the main Google page have a series of links of banned sites, with this one right at the top. Create a Streisand effect, to get this site even further visibility so that no future companies try these types of lawsuits or risk having the proposed banned site at the top of the Google banned links page.

jameshogg says:

It says a lot that this court is going after Google on a global scale instead of their ISPs on a local scale.

It is the ISPs that provide access to out-of-state Google domains which are not under the state’s jurisdiction. They should be the prime target, not a body that is not within local jurisdiction.

But irrational Google-hatred knows no bounds. I’ve said this a million times, there are very good reasons to be hostile to Google: its tax dodging, its monopoly powers, its corporate lobbying, all the traditional working-class-against-the-ruling-class stances etc. But it’s incredible how they are the last things people want to bash Google for.

jameshogg says:

Re: Re:

And I highly doubt everybody has forgotten the said links that were ordered to be removed.

And I highly doubt Google’s links to THOSE links have been made to be removed either.

We’re living in a wish-thinking world if we think this will do anything to attack piracy. If we’ve learned anything from the stupidity of the war on drugs, it is that if there is a majority demand in a black market, it will always cause a supply for that black market no matter how many times you attack the supply. Some conservatives think you should deter against the demand in the drug war by bringing in harsher punishments for possessers, but everyone knows deterrents are all talk if you can’t enforce them. What bloody fool thinks you can enforce a deterrent against an infringing downloader?

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

It would be a far lot easier for the court to rule that all ISP’s in the country should block access to the (in their eyes offending) like the UK and a few other countries in the EU where the court has ruled to block access to certain sites then it is to force a company outside of the jurisdiction of the country to block access to the site.

By not getting the ISP’s in BC to block access to the site people in BC can still very much access the site in question.

limbodog (profile) says:

Been thinking about this one.

I’m not sure I’m still upset about this. They are saying “If you want to do business in Canada, then these are rules we expect you to apply everywhere.”

What if, say, they said “If you want to do business in Canada, you may not be engaged in slave trading anywhere in the world.” Would that be a problem?

To use the China example, sure, China can attempt to censor the internet globally. That’s the price of doing business in China. They have zero power over my local newspaper who doesn’t have reporters in China.

The real issue, to me, comes when a company like Google or Yahoo says “Ok, we’ll comply with that and censor globally”.

And forgive me if I’m wrong about this, but couldn’t any company just spin off a wholly-owned subsidiary called “GoogleCanada” which *does* follow the Canada rules (or China rules etc.) and have regular Google pull out of the country?

nasch (profile) says:

Re: Been thinking about this one.


What if, say, they said “If you want to do business in Canada, you may not be engaged in slave trading anywhere in the world.” Would that be a problem?

Seems like the same situation to me – the Canadian court has no jurisdiction over the rest of the world to enforce what happens there. They should only be permitted to enforce rules within their own jurisdiction. Besides that, I don’t think this order is in the form of “if you want to do business in BC” it’s just a flat out injunction – you shall block this content worldwide, period.

limbodog (profile) says:

Re: Re: Been thinking about this one.

Besides that, I don’t think this order is in the form of “if you want to do business in BC” it’s just a flat out injunction – you shall block this content worldwide, period.

Right, however that amounts to the same as “if you want to do business here you must…”

Because if Google wasn’t doing business in Canada, they wouldn’t even need to respond, right?

nasch (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: Been thinking about this one.

Because if Google wasn’t doing business in Canada, they wouldn’t even need to respond, right?

There is no meaningful way in which Google is doing business in British Columbia (theoretically, the jurisdiction of this court). They have no servers, no facilities of any kind, and no employees there. Yes, they could just ignore the order, but for good reasons they like to play nice with courts and work with them rather than blowing them off.

albert says:

court order

Datalink was a distributor of Equustek product and secretly developed a copy known as the GW1000 with the assistance of a prior employee of Equustek. BC Supreme Court orders have been issued which should prevent Datalink from operating its business and a warrant for the arrest of Morgan Jack, the only known employee, director, and shareholder has been issued. As is evident, Datalink has lied to its primary supplier, the courts, governments, customers and others.More info on http://www.equustek.info & http://www.equustek.com

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