In July 2016, the federal court ruled Rogers should be able to recoup its costs for finding the information, which takes a qualified person about 30 minutes at a cost of $100 per hour. The ISPs have complied, but argue they shouldn’t have to hand the information over for free given the labour involved. have taken their fight over who should foot the bill for identifying customers who allegedly infringe copyrights to the Supreme Court of CanadaĬanadian courts have ordered ISPs to hand over this information in a series of decisions since 2011. Voltage Pictures LLC, which owns the rights to The Dallas Buyers Club, and Rogers Communications Inc. To do so, they apply to the court for Norwich orders, which compel ISPs to disclose the name and address associated with an IP address. His clients, however, need to identify suspected infringers in order to actually sue them. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
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