Canadian Copyright Law

[Updated: 20 Sep 2024]

Sources referenced: This page is adapted from , from the Canadian Intellectual Property Office, and , from Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada, for non-commercial use under the terms of use applicable to the original versions. Re-use of this document is governed by the terms applicable to the original sources.

 

 

Purpose

This page provides an introduction to the basics of copyright law in Canada. It is not intended as a complete reference, nor does it address issues relating to ownership of material created during the course of employment at the ÀÖÓ¯VI. To learn more about copyright ownership for works made in the course of employment, see For Content Creators.

 

What is Copyright?

Copyright is the exclusive legal right to reproduce, publish, and sell a work. The provides the legal framework for copyright protection to authors/creators and other rights holders in “works”.

Copyright in a work comes into existence when an original work is created in a fixed format. Protected works fall under the categories of literary (which includes computer programs), artistic, dramatic or musical works, as well as other subject-matter such as performer's performances, sound recordings and communication signals.

It is important to note that the Copyright Act does not protect ideas, concepts, or themes, but that it does protect original language used to express such ideas, concepts and themes.

To hold the copyright in a work is to hold the sole right to produce or reproduce that work or any substantial part of it in any form. It includes the right to perform the work or any substantial part of it or, in the case of a written lecture, to deliver it. If the work is unpublished, copyright includes the right to publish the work or any substantial part of it.

What is considered a substantial part can involve consideration of both quantitative and qualitative factors. To learn more, see the Substantiality page of this website.
 
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Benefits

The is usually presented as a balance between promoting the public interest in the encouragement and dissemination of works of the arts and intellect and obtaining a just reward for the creator (or, more accurately, to prevent someone other than the creator from appropriating whatever benefits may be generated). (Théberge v. Galerie d'Art du Petit Champlain inc. 2002 SCC 34, para 30)

Protecting Creative Expression

Poems, paintings, musical scores, performer's performances, computer programs – regardless of their merit or commercial value, Canadian law protects all original works, provided the conditions set out in the Copyright Act have been met.Copyright protection prohibits the copying of another person's work without their permission. This is intended to protect the interests of rights holders while encouraging creativity and promoting the exchange of ideas.

Protecting the Public Interest

An important goal of copyright is the enrichment of societal public interest. Canadian copyright law ensures rights holders can receive reasonable compensation for their creations for a lengthy but limited period of time. The law ensures that copyright protection eventually expires, so that original works become part of the public domain.

In addition, the public interest is served by statutory limitations and exceptions on the rights of copyright owners. The users of copyright-protected works have rights that are also protected under the law. Users' rights are not simply loopholes to get around copyright protection, they are an essential element to a fair and balanced copyright regime.

User Rights are not just loopholes. Both owner rights and user rights should therefore be given the fair and balanced reading that befits remedial legislation. (CCH Canadian Ltd. v. Law Society of Upper Canada, 2004 SCC 13, para 48)
 
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Protected Works

Copyright applies to every original literary, dramatic, musical and artistic work created by the author/creator using their own skill and judgment. It also applies to performer's performances, sound recordings and communication signals.

Each of these general categories covers a wide range of creations, and the applicable rights may differ somewhat. Examples of types of works are listed by category below.

 
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Literary Works

Literary works consist of material such as books, pamphlets, computer programs, software and other text-based works in both electronic and paper formats.

Examples of literary works:

  • Memoranda, email messages, letters, journals, books, magazines, newspapers, text books, talking books (the underlying work, not the recorded voice), periodicals, monographs, poetry;
  • Government records and reports, pamphlets, genealogical materials, statistics, statutes, law reports, judicial decisions, forms, court records databases;
  • Published and unpublished research papers, brokers' reports, stock reports, annual reports, industry standards, manuscripts, microforms (print on plastic), computer software;
  • Theses, conference proceedings, Braille, postings to Internet newsgroups, large print materials, compilations of literary works on CD-ROMs and databases.

Adapted from , from Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada, for non-commercial use under the terms of use applicable to the original versions.

Textual works in which a scenic arrangement or acting form is fixed in writing (e.g., a screenplay) fall within the dramatic category.

Dramatic Works

Dramatic works include motion picture films, plays, screenplays and scripts.

Examples of dramatic works:

  • Video recordings, documentaries, films, radio, television and cable programs, plays, choreography;
  • Any piece for recitation, choreographic work or mime, where the scenic arrangement or acting form is fixed in writing or otherwise;
  • Cinematographic works (having dramatic character or not);
  • Compilations of dramatic works on CD-ROM or other format.

Adapted from , from Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada, for non-commercial use under the terms of use applicable to the original versions.

Musical Works

A musical work is any work of music or musical composition (with or without words), including sheet music, songs, audiocassettes, audio CDs and compilations of musical works.

Adapted from , from Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada, for non-commercial use under the terms of use applicable to the original versions.

Artistic Works

Artistic works include creations such as paintings, drawings, maps, photographs, sculptures and plans.

 Examples of artistic works:

  • Paintings, drawings, illustrations, sketches, digital images, art prints, art slides;
  • Photographs (includes photo-lithograph and any work expressed by any process akin to photography), engravings (includes etchings, lithographs, woodcuts, prints and other similar works),
  • Patterns, stage and costume designs, mosaics;
  • Sculptures (includes a cast or model), works of artistic craftsmanship, architectural works (meaning buildings or structures or any model of a building or structure), architectural drawings, plans;
  • Maps, charts, atlases;
  • Compilations of artistic works on CD-ROMs and on websites.

Adapted from , from Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada, for non-commercial use under the terms of use applicable to the original versions.

 

Performer's Performances

The following are protected by copyright when done by a performer:

  • a performance of an artistic, dramatic or musical work, whether or not the work was previously fixed (recorded) and whether or not the work's term of copyright protection has expired;
  • a recitation or reading of a literary work, whether or not the work's term of copyright protection has expired; and,
  • an improvisation of a dramatic, musical or literary work, whether or not the improvised work is based on a pre-existing work.

Examples include recorded performances of actors, authors, singers, musicians and dancers on tapes, cassettes, CDs, CD-ROMs, video recordings and films, compilations of performances by performers on records, CDs and in audiovisual formats.

Adapted from , from Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada, for non-commercial use under the terms of use applicable to the original versions.

Sound Recordings

A sound recording is a recording consisting of sounds, whether or not a performance of a work, but excludes any soundtrack of a cinematographic work where it accompanies the cinematographic work.

Examples of sound recordings:

  • Talking books, audio books, oral history tapes, vinyl albums, phonograph records, audio cassettes, CDs;
  • Papers recorded at seminars, audio tapes of speeches and lectures, sound effects, spoken word recordings, language cassettes for ESL;
  • Compilations of sound recordings on CDs and other audio formats.

Adapted from , from Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada, for non-commercial use under the terms of use applicable to the original versions.

Communication Signals

Communication signals include radio waves transmitted through space without any artificial guide, for reception by the public (e.g., television and radio signals).

 

Duration

The duration of a work’s copyright term is based on factors such as the type of work, whether the author/creator is still alive, and the date the work was created or published. Once the copyright term expires, the work enters the public domain. A work in the public domain is free for anyone to use without permission or the payment of royalties. To learn more about the public domain, see the Public Domain page.

General Term

Generally, copyright lasts for the life of the author plus an additional 70 years. Specifically, this means the remainder of the calendar year in which the author dies, and for 70 years following the end of that calendar year. Therefore, if an author died on 01 July 2020, copyright protection in that author’s works will expire on 31 December 2090. The term length had