Auditor-General demands takedown of government report
Michael Geist points to a couple of very interesting Twitter posts fromĀ the editor of the Globe & Mail’s online politics section. Apparently the Globe had embedded a PDF version of one chapter of a report from Canada’s Auditor-General in this story on Canada’s temporary foreign worker policy. In response, the Auditor-General demanded that they take down the PDF, citing copyright infringement — all Canadian government publications are subject to Crown copyright.
The fact that Crown copyright exists is bad enough. In the US, government publications are in the public domain. This has practical value, insofar as Americans can and do use government information for all sorts of clever and useful purposes without worrying about “intellectual property” restrictions. But more importantly, it squares with the fact that the products of government belong to the public. That the Auditor-General would use the language of copyright to restrict access to public information is shameful.
The Globe has complied with the takedown request, but the PDF itself is still available on Scribd. I don’t know whether the Auditor-General intends to submit a takedown request to Scribd as well, but just in case, here’s a local copy of the report.
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