1. Introduction
1. Intellectual property is a
non-tangible property which typically belongs to the owner or rightholder
of creative or artistic works such as music, literature, pictures
or images. It also includes industrial design, computer software
and certain trade secrets. Intellectual property rights are mainly
copyrights, patents, trademarks and industrial design rights.
2. In today’s knowledge-based society, intellectual property
rights are extremely valuable business assets. On 6 May 2015, the
European Commission issued its Communication on “A Digital Single
Market Strategy for Europe” and an accompanying staff working document
which deals with “access to and use of copyright-protected content”.
It estimates that copyright-intensive industries generate 7 million
jobs and contribute approximately €509 billion to the gross domestic
product of the European Union.
3. However, there are noticeable factors which challenge intellectual
property rights today. First, they are threatened by the global
expansion of trade in counterfeit products and the technological
simplicity of sharing some types of copyright protected material
through the Internet. The Internet has become the pre-eminent medium
for selling counterfeit products globally. Between the launch of
its international co-operation project in this field in 2012 and
the end of 2014, Europol identified a total of 1 829 domain names
which were used for selling counterfeit products online.

4. For consumers, unlike in the analogue world, it has become
very easy (and is continuously getting easier through greater bandwidth
and accessibility of works on mobile devices) not only to access
works and to make digital copies thereof, but also to rediffuse
them on the Internet. This is often likely to occur without the authorisation
of the rightholders. To the extent that this occurs illegally, end
users may not only deprive rightholders of their revenues from exploitation,
but in fact may also step into the author’s or other rightholder’s shoes
as “distributors” of his work on the Internet by posting it on their
websites, in social media, blogs, etc. or when participating in
file sharing services. Internet service providers, such as online
platforms, might support consumers (even if not necessarily in a
directly visible way), given their regular financial benefits from
the operation of such platforms or other services without acquiring
licenses.
5. Secondly, many business models are based on the online exploitation
of copyright-protected works of other rightholders. In addition,
user-generated content, which is in principle copyright-protected,
becomes of growing business value for some online industries. The
International Chamber of Commerce in Paris stated in its Intellectual
Property Roadmap 2014 that “the emergence of new Internet applications
and platforms, the increasing ubiquity of mobile devices and Internet,
ever-increasing bandwidth and changing consumer behaviour are making
intellectual property owners reconsider their strategies and models
for distributing, commercialising and controlling their intellectual
assets in the electronic environment”. The European Audiovisual
Observatory of the Council of Europe showed through its MAVISE Database
that accessing digital copyright protected content is one of the
most popular online activities, with 35% of Internet users engaging
in playing or downloading games, images, films or music.
6. Thirdly, intellectual property rights are protected for a
certain duration and geographic territory; thus, as long as harmonised
international standards on intellectual property do not exist, the
Internet will in principle enable users in one country to access
content which would be lawfully inaccessible in other countries
due to different copyright protection. Even if legal standards on
intellectual property rights online and their territorial application
were clarified at international level, the enforcement of such standards
would still be a major challenge in a globalised market, where illegal
copies of such content can be accessed and purchased online.
7. As outlined in the background report by Professor Silke von
Lewinski (whom I particularly thank for her work and on which I
will draw extensively), it is difficult for rightholders to control
uses on the Internet and thus to implement their rights so as to
be able to benefit from them effectively. Although they may protect
their content by technical protection measures, such as by encryption
or copy-protection measures, and although the law legally protects
them against circumvention and related acts, the use of such measures
is unpopular with consumers, and the music industry in particular
no longer applies them to end users. Internet service providers
benefit from generous safe harbour provisions in the European Union’s
e-commerce Directive of 2001, according to which they are exempted
from liability for the use of infringing content via their services under
certain conditions, especially if they remain passive.
8. Not least, intellectual property may be restricted in the
public interest, such as for educational or scientific purposes.
In addition, the right to freedom of information has led to the
limitation of exclusive audiovisual transmission rights of major
events which are of public interest, such as the right to short
television reporting about major sports events.
9. Through discussions and opinion making in social media by
end users, pressure has been built up in favour of free access to
creative content; authors who wanted to defend their rights were
intimidated by offensive reactions (like for example the massive
wave of insults addressed to the musician and author Sven Regner).
Overall, public debate has shown a certain tendency towards putting
authors and other rightholders into a defensive position, and favouring
quite far-reaching rules in favour of free access by users and through certain
intermediaries (and their business models), to the detriment of
authors and other rightholders.
10. As proposed in the motion for a resolution underlying this
report (
Doc. 13448), we shall review the existing legal standards of intellectual
property rights (section 2 below) and discuss and propose strategies
for parliaments in all European States on how to ensure effective
protection of these rights at national, European and global levels
(sections 3 to 6 below).
2. The protection of intellectual property
rights by international treaties
11. At global level, intellectual
property rights are protected primarily by the revised Berne Convention
for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works, which has been
signed and ratified by virtually all the countries in the world,
and the conventions of the World Intellectual Property Organisation
(WIPO). In addition, the World Trade Organization (WTO) has set
standards through its Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property
Rights (TRIPS).
12. Article 15.1.
c of the
United Nations International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights recognises the fundamental right of everyone “to benefit
from the protection of the moral and material interests resulting
from any scientific, literary or artistic production of which he
is the author”. Therefore, the report of 24 December 2014 on copyright
policy and the right to science and culture

by the Special Rapporteur of the United
Nations in the field of cultural rights cannot convincingly claim
that intellectual property rights are not human rights. Cultural
diversity and individual creative freedom would be at stake if States
redirected financial support from proprietary publishing models
to open publishing models, as called for by the Special Rapporteur.
13. Article 1 of the Protocol to the European Convention on Human
Rights (ETS No. 9) protects property. The European Court of Human
Rights has stressed that intellectual property benefits from the
protection afforded by Article 1.

Moreover, the Court
reiterated the principle that genuine, effective exercise of the
rights protected by that provision does not depend merely on the
State’s duty not to interfere, but may require positive measures
of protection by States, which can include making copyright violations
a criminal offence.

14. Article 10 of the Convention on Cybercrime (ETS No. 185) specifically
addresses this issue by penalising the violation of copyright and
related rights “by means of a computer system”, for example by making
electronic copies accessible online or by selling online hard copies
or counterfeit products. Article 10 contains the obligation to establish
as criminal offences the infringement of copyright and related rights,
where such acts are committed wilfully, on a commercial scale and
by means of a computer system.
15. Article 17 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European
Union protects the right to property and includes expressly intellectual
property. The major copyright legislation of the European Union
can be found in Directive 2001/29/EC, which implements the Copyright
Treaty and the Performances and Phonograms Treaty of WIPO, as well
as Directive 2004/48/EC on the enforcement of intellectual property
rights. In addition, intellectual property questions are addressed
by Directive 2009/24/EC on the legal protection of computer programmes,
the Orphan Works Directive 2012/28/EU and the Collective Rights
Management Directive 2014/26/EU
16. On 9 December 2015, the European Commission presented its
proposal for a regulation on ensuring the cross-border portability
of online content services in the internal market as well as its
communication “towards a modern, more European copyright framework”.
As far as intellectual property rights constitute cultural expressions
in accordance with the UNESCO Convention on the Protection and Promotion
of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions, which has been signed
by the European Union, Article 167 of the Treaty on the Functioning
of the European Union confirms subsidiarity in this field.
3. Current
problems
3.1. Exceptions
to and limitations of intellectual property rights
17. Different user groups, often
backed by Internet service providers which have a commercial interest
in unrestricted circulation of works on the Internet, have expressed
their interest in new mandatory and broadly worded exceptions and
limitations of authors’ rights. However, exceptions and limitations
of a right must be justified by sound policy reasons, such as education,
research or news reporting. In contrast, for example, mere entertainment,
the mere technical possibility to access or use works in a given
way, or the pursuit of new business models by Internet service providers
as such may not generally be considered as sufficient reasons to
restrict the rights of authors, who need to be able to benefit from
their creations also on the Internet.
18. Furthermore, even where it is decided to remove an obstacle
to trade caused by different authors’ rights legislation, one should
take into account the fact that exceptions or limitations are not
the only possible means of doing so, but that a frequently appropriate
measure may instead be different kinds of licensing, including individual
or (voluntary or mandatory) collective licensing, which might be
encouraged.
19. In general, national rules on exceptions and limitations of
authors’ rights vary to a great extent, inter
alia due to their close link to culture and cultural
policy, and are based on different concepts. In particular, under the
Anglo-Saxon copyright system, the laws regularly contain very detailed
provisions on exceptions and limitations, supplemented by a number
of somewhat broader clauses called “fair dealing” to apply to certain well-defined
situations (unlike the much broader concept of “fair use” in United
States law). There is no tradition of statutory remuneration rights
as a compensation for the loss of exclusivity through exceptions
and limitations. In contrast, national laws under the authors’ rights
system in continental Europe only contain quite specific exceptions
and limitations rather than fair dealing or other flexible clauses,
and yet differ among themselves in several aspects, such as in the
scope and detail of the regulation of exceptions and limitations and
in the extent to which statutory remuneration rights are provided
in connection with exceptions and limitations.
20. It has been claimed that rendering facultative exceptions
or limitations mandatory would enhance legal certainty. However,
the mandatory or facultative character does not affect the legal
certainty; in both cases, a particular provision exists, be it a
different one in each EU member State or the same one in all of
them. Still, it is true that the mandatory character could facilitate
exploitation across borders by creating a similar legal situation
in the member States (although different interpretations may remain
for some time), while the facultative character in this case results
in the need to ascertain different national laws rather than one
law; at the same time, businesses always needed and will further
need to take into account the laws of countries to which they want
to export, including on issues other than intellectual property,
and will have to do so also for exploitation beyond the European
Union.
21. In the framework of the WIPO, certain countries have called
for a binding treaty on certain exceptions and limitations. While
a treaty on access to special format copies was adopted in favour
of visually impaired persons (Marrakesh Treaty of 2013), which relates
to a very narrow area of little economic importance, a treaty on
exceptions, in particular in the fields of education and public
libraries, meets major, justified objections including at governmental
level. Such objections are due not least to the larger, negative
economic impact of such a treaty on these culturally important fields,
but equally due to the close connection of these fields with general
cultural policy, which is and should remain a matter of sovereign,
national decision-making, which guarantees a certain level of cultural
diversity.
22. Another proposal backed in particular by Internet service
providers has been the introduction of broad, flexible clauses for
exceptions and limitations, following the US-American “fair use”-concept
or other kinds of flexible exceptions or limitations. It is argued
that this would facilitate a faster adaptation of copyright to the challenges
of new technologies, since judges could react faster than legislatures
in interpreting such broad clauses. However, the disadvantages of
this approach for all stakeholders are likely to prevail. In particular, flexible,
broadly worded clauses will result in reduced legal certainty; also
consumers will not easily know what is permitted and what is not.
As a consequence, problems will also arise regarding the application
of criminal law, which requires clear provisions regarding infringements.
In addition, problems will arise for the application of any statutory
remuneration rights related to such exceptions and limitations,
such as for private copying, since debtors of such remuneration
will try to argue that a particular use is not covered by the exception
or limitation and thus the related remuneration right does not exist.
Flexible exceptions or limitations will mean years of legal proceedings
needed to find clarification of their meaning, resulting in high
transaction costs, and this each time only for very specific situations
in individual cases brought before the courts. Therefore, clear and
final reactions to technical or other changes are likely to take
even longer through the courts than through legislative amendments.
23. In fact, the legal system on the European continent (and even
to a large extent in the United Kingdom and Ireland), which is based
on precisely drafted legal language in the field of authors’ rights
(while it can still be technically neutral) has shown that it has
so far successfully adapted to new technical developments. Furthermore,
too broad and flexible clauses may negatively affect the division
of powers between the democratically elected legislature on the
one hand and the judiciary on the other. Finally, flexible clauses
are likely to best benefit powerful users, such as major Internet
companies who may afford the best lawyers, and may disadvantage
small users within legal proceedings. They might also in a given
case result in decisions against users. They do not therefore appear
to be an option to be pursued.
3.2. Text
and data mining
24. Text and data mining is usually
done for business and scientific and other research purposes and involves
scanning (and thus reproduction) of large amounts of texts with
a view to automatic analysis thereof; the results of such processes
may then be used further for the development of new products or
services and often create enormous economic value. Relevant industries
such as the pharmaceutical industry have sought licences for such
uses. Then, certain Internet industries interested in mass digitisation
and mass use of digitised texts, later joined by libraries, have
claimed the need for a new exception or limitation for this purpose or
at least for clear rules on the possibilities of making these reproductions
and on how to document the validity of results obtained through
automatic analysis. The Reda report of the European Parliament on
the implementation of the Information Society Directive proposed
to consider the enabling of text and data mining for research purposes.
However, if such enabling were to be assured via an exception or
limitation, it could have far-reaching negative consequences for
the exploitation of contents in related markets by rightholders.
At the same time, in the field of commercial research, text and
data mining and further uses of the results already occur on the
basis of licenses;

there would appear to be no need
for an exception. As for non-commercial research, an appropriate
solution could be the application of a similar service, combined
with a commitment by rightholders to grant licences that are appropriate
for non-commercial research, in the framework of self-regulation.
3.3. “Geo-blocking”
and cross-border access
25. In broader terms, “geo-blocking”,
as understood by the European Commission in its Digital Single Market communication
of May 2015, refers to the practice of denying cross-border access
to works as a result of territorial exploitation of copyright in
certain fields, in particular of the audiovisual industry. As a
consequence, consumers may not access content that is available
on a given website for free (such as a television programmes via
Internet) or offered on the basis of a subscription (such as Netflix)
in one member State from another member State. This practice, according
to the film industry, enables and is essential for the financing of
European film productions. Before considering any interference with
the territorial exploitation of works on the Internet in order to
reach simultaneous availability of works throughout the European
Union or even beyond, one should therefore take into account the
likely negative impact on European cultural (and in particular film)
production and act so as to refrain from causing damage to European
culture, even if not every work would be available at the same time
beyond national borders.
26. In general, one should also take into account the fact that
territorial exploitation often corresponds to the demands of consumers.
To a broad extent, there is no “single market”, whether digital
or analogue, in European reality today, since most local films or
music in a given country are not in a measurable demand in other
countries; a licensee in these cases would not even want to have
(and pay for) an EU-wide licence if he cannot get clients who would
subscribe for such local films or music in another country – due
for example to the language barrier for foreign films (and disproportionate
costs for subtitles or dubbing) and lyrics associated with music,
and due to different cultural traditions. In fact, the mainstream
(mostly US) films or music would be best placed to survive any compulsory
rules that would prevent territorial licensing (and the Internet
platforms and other service providers who have driven the debate
on geo-blocking would benefit therefrom). This effect would seem
contrary to the aim of safeguarding and promoting cultural diversity
in Europe, to which the European Union and its member States, and
other European countries, have subscribed in the UNESCO Convention
on Cultural Diversity.
27. For these reasons, also the – separate – current reflections
of the European Commission on a possible extension of rules of the
EU Satellite and Cable Directive to on-demand offers by broadcasters
raise serious doubts: their extension to the Internet was already
rejected in the context of the e-commerce Directive 2001 and should
also now be avoided.
3.4. Portability
of content
28. To be distinguished from general
cross-border access described above is the case in which users who subscribe
to an online service in their home State would like to access the
service while temporarily present in another member State, for instance
while on holiday or away on business. Users who have a subscription
for example for online access to films or music with a provider
in their country have complained that often they cannot access these
works once they are in a foreign country; that content is thus not
“portable”. Rightholders or service providers may have restricted
such access on the basis of exclusive licences per country for economic
reasons; in particular in the film industry, financing largely depends
on territorial exploitation. It should be possible to reconcile
both interests in this very specific case, either on the basis of
a memorandum between the stakeholder groups on voluntary agreements
that would enable, despite otherwise exclusive licences, such uses
for their private purposes by the subscribed consumers, or by legislative
action; still, it is doubtful whether a new exception to exclusive
rights could be justified in this case by reasons of public interest. In
any case, account will have to be taken of existing exclusive licence
agreements.
3.5. Research
and education
29. Although most countries already
provide for exceptions and limitations for the purposes of research
and teaching, and Article 5.3.a of
the Information Society Directive allows member States to do so
within a given framework, some claim that respective exceptions
and limitations should be made mandatory and uniform in the European
Union, in order to facilitate cross-border teaching and research.
However, Article 165 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European
Union limits its legislative powers in the field of education.
30. To the extent that a real (or even possible) need exists to
use foreign rather than domestic material for school or university
teaching, it would seem appropriate to consider whether a system
of licensing would not be practicable and preferable. In fact, in
certain countries such as the United States, licensing is being
practised without noticeable problems for university course materials.
Also, it must be taken into account that for school books and part
of material used at universities, these educational uses constitute
the core possibility of exploitation, that is the core market, which
must not be negatively affected. Accordingly, a balanced exception or
limitation – for example regarding small parts of works (that are
not specifically made for school or other teaching use) to be used
for non-commercial online teaching that would not affect the market
for such works – may be useful where it does not yet exist, unless
a licensing mechanism can be established for this purpose.
3.6. Public
libraries
31. Public libraries, archives
and similar institutions have called for mandatory and broad exceptions
and limitations of authors’ rights, in particular to make full use
of digital technology without the need to acquire licenses. For
example, these institutions would like to digitise their collections
or make available online digitised works to users not only in their
own community or country, but across borders, both in the European
Union and – in the context of WIPO – worldwide. They have been co-operating
with major Internet companies which have a strong commercial interest
in digitising books from libraries, not least in order to get even
more content to search for on the Internet. In fact, well-known
United States companies have sponsored book digitisation in many
countries.
32. Not only since public libraries are funded by public money,
but also because of their role for the culture of a given country,
each country has an interest in regulating aspects related to public
libraries in the framework of its national cultural policy and to
keep this freedom in order to adapt the law in the best manner to
its national cultural policy. One may also observe that the infrastructure
for public libraries as well as their local importance varies enormously
among countries both within the European Union and beyond; a uniform,
mandatory regulation may thus not be appropriate.
33. Even if there were a considerable demand for cross-border
online availability of works, it is necessary to assess the impact
of any possible exception or limitation on authors’ rights. In particular,
if online availability, whether worldwide or not, of digitised works
through public libraries (and thus free of charge for users) were permitted
by law through an exception or limitation, it is likely that authors
would no longer have any real opportunities to market their works
normally and thereby to benefit from their rights. In fact, one
cannot economically compare lending in the analogue world (for which
in most EU member States a remuneration right rather than an exclusive
right exists) and making available books and the like by online
transmission. The uses in the analogue world are much less intense
than online uses; users need to visit the library instead of having access
from their home, and the borrowed book is not as vulnerable to further
uses as a digital copy. In the analogue world, a library would acquire
new copies after some years of use, while this would not be needed
in case of a digital copy. Given these differences, it would be
very risky to apply the same regime (a simple remuneration right)
as mostly applies to analogue public lending also to “e-lending”;
this is particularly true since in an economic crisis, public money
(from which such remuneration is paid) is usually restricted and rightholders
in this case would suffer from revenue cuts, while libraries could
legally continue to make available their collections online, with
a likely strong impact on the sales market.
34. At the same time, licenses for public libraries for the online
environment already exist; rightholders may thereby grant access
while trying to secure, on the basis of fine-tuned contractual conditions,
that uses will not negatively affect normal exploitation. If not
all publishers have granted such licenses for online uses yet, or
not all libraries can afford to pay for such licenses, one should
consider that also in the analogue world, not every public library
can afford to acquire all existing works for the purpose of lending.
35. Overall, any addition or widening of an exception or limitation
regarding digital uses by public libraries and similar institutions
would require very careful consideration of its possible impact
on the relevant market; the normal exploitation must not be affected
by any exception or limitation.
3.7. “User-generated”
content (UGC)
36. Users often combine their own
material, such as a home video, with protected works they access
from the Internet, such as music, or they may use their own text
to which they add pictures from a website, and make such content
available on the Internet themselves. They often do not acquire
the rights for such uses and thus, in principle, infringe these
rights. Some have called for an exception to the exclusive rights
of authors to allow such practices. However, this approach does
not seem justified. The fact that such practices have become widespread
and serve the entertainment of the Internet community does not appear
to be a sufficient public policy reason to restrict the rights of
authors. In addition, even if users’ activities are non-commercial,
the platforms on which they post them are usually commercial ones,
all the more so since they place advertising in context with content.
While some platforms are ready to acquire licenses, many of them
argue that they would enjoy a safe harbour under the e-commerce
Directive and are not ready to pay the appropriate license fees.
It would seem appropriate to clarify their often rather active role,
in order to refute this argument.
37. It should also be mentioned that there are already possibilities
for users to use protected works legally without a lot of effort.
For example, many authors have granted licenses to everyone, such
as Creative Commons licenses. Authors may also grant licenses through
websites to any individual user in a simple procedure, such as via
the Bridgeman Art Library.
3.8. Equitable
participation in remuneration for authors and performers
38. Often, authors and performing
artists cannot properly participate in revenues from the exploitation
of their works, since they are regularly not in a sufficiently strong
bargaining position vis-à-vis their contractual partners. In order
to improve this situation at least for Internet uses, one should
consider applying the model of Article 4 of the EC Rental Rights
Directive 1992 (now Article 5 of the Directive as consolidated in
2006). It has shown to be effective in the context of rental rights.
Basically, it guarantees that the author and performer keeps, when
licensing his exclusive right, a kind of statutory “residual right”
of equitable remuneration, which he cannot waive and which should
ideally be subject to mandatory management by a collective management organisation.
The latter, which has a stronger bargaining power than any given
individual author, would collect the money from the exploitation
businesses and transfer the money back to authors and performers.
3.9. Enforcement
of authors’ rights and liability of Internet service providers
39. The above-mentioned participation
rule for authors and performers may however only show the desired effect
if the overall revenues from exploitation are more than modest.
On the Internet, to date, revenues are often still modest, due to
insufficient enforcement possibilities and revenue streams that
go to Internet platforms and other intermediaries rather than to
rightholders. Rights enforcement is a challenge, since it is easy
for anyone to copy protected works in digital form and to upload
them on their websites or any other platforms to make them available
to the public. Although procedures exist to have illegal content
removed from such sites, such content is easily placed on new sites,
where infringements continue. Considerable costs are incurred to continuously
search for new illegal content and to follow these procedures –
costs that rightholders could better invest in new creative content
to enrich cultural diversity. The permanent existence of a considerable
amount of illegal content on the Internet, often offered free of
charge, renders it quite difficult for rightholders to compete with
their legal (paying) offers on the Internet.
40. Furthermore, under the e-commerce Directive, Internet service
providers enjoy quite comfortable safe harbours from liability for
infringements on their platforms through consumers, and regularly
reap considerable economic benefits from the circulation of protected
content on their platforms, in particular through advertising. Rightholders
are thus deprived of income from the exploitation of their content
to the benefit of intermediaries.
41. This imbalanced situation needs to be remedied by improving
enforcement measures and clarifying the broad safe harbour rules
of the Directive on electronic commerce. In particular, site-blocking
measures which are covered by Article 8.3 of the Information Society
Directive (application for an injunction against intermediaries)
are only available and applied effectively in some EU member States
(such as the United Kingdom) and function well there, but should
be so everywhere; in certain countries, restrictions of the right
to information on infringers may also be a stumbling block to enforcement
of rights on the Internet. In addition, the safe harbours under
the e-commerce Directive have often been applied to certain Internet
service providers that initially had not been foreseen by these
rules and for which these exemptions from liability do not seem appropriate.
In particular, platforms on which users place content should be
made subject to wide responsibilities, since they usually do not
just play a passive, but an active role in content dissemination.
Also, concentrating attention on companies that earn money from
sites with illegal content, such as through advertising or offering
credit card services (when payment is required, for example for
faster downloads or streaming of films), called the “follow-the-money”
approach, is to be strongly recommended in order to avoid platform
operators continuing to free-ride on right holders’ content without
their authorisation on a commercial scale.
42. Such protection is also justified against the background of
human rights. According to the European Court of Human Rights, the
protection of authors’ rights on the Internet may justify an interference
with the right of freedom of expression under Article 10 of the
Convention, in particular through enforcement measures and especially
where it is not a political debate that is at stake, but commercial
exploitation of cultural content.

4. Authors’
rights for journalists and news media
43. Freedom of expression and information
through the media is an essential requirement of a democratic society,
requiring transparency, pluralism and independence of the media.
The advent of digital online media has strongly changed the news
media markets and the employment situation of journalists. Newspapers
are seeing their revenues dwindling, hence causing a difficult economic
situation for several of them, and the number of professional journalists
is declining. At the same time, multinational Internet companies
have soaring shareholder values and produce immense amounts of cash
revenues, while producing virtually no original news content. European
politicians cannot be indifferent towards such a deterioration of
the news media situation in a sector which is of vital importance
for a democracy.
44. The European Newspaper Publishers’ Association (ENPA) prepared
in May 2015 10 policy recommendations concerning copyright in the
EU digital single market.

Text and data mining by users through
search engines and by specialised Internet service providers is
growing rapidly. Therefore, ENPA regretted that search engines and
text and data mining companies participated commercially in the
exploitation of news contents while refusing to pay for the use
of the copyrights. ENPA also saw legal uncertainties if the US-American
concept of “fair use” were to be introduced into European copyright
laws in order to restrict copyright and neighbouring rights. As
this concept was unknown in Europe, it would require lengthy and
costly litigation in order to clarify it through case law of the
highest courts in member States.
45. Instead, licensing agreements should be concluded; they provide
better, faster and more adaptable solutions than the introduction
of new exceptions. Such agreements are successfully used in the
United States for example. However, many news media are in a weaker
position when negotiating such agreements with large multinational
Internet companies.
5. The
digital economy
46. All sectors of the economy
have benefited from the advent of digital technologies and the Internet.
The media landscape has been changed dramatically through a technological
convergence of print and broadcast media with the Internet and mobile
telephony. Individual freedom of expression and information has
been advanced exponentially. These changes cannot be reversed.
47. Nevertheless, one has to recognise that digital companies
are flourishing enormously today, far beyond the “dot com bubble”
more than a decade ago. A true globalisation of the digital economy
would still appear to be a policy objective, due to the apparent
geographic concentration of the big market players. From a market economy
perspective, general support for the digital industry does not seem
necessary. Therefore, the economic impact of legislative changes
of intellectual property rights should be taken into account, because such
changes would create indiscriminate benefits for Internet companies
to the detriment of rightholders and traditional media.
6. Self-regulatory
industry initiatives
48. As stated by the Assembly report
on “The protection of freedom of expression and information on the Internet
and online media” (
Doc. 12874
Add), Internet piracy of copyright protected works became
a widely publicised issue through the huge sharing of files among
users on the YouTube network. YouTube was purchased by Google in
2006 for US$1.76 billion and subsequently developed a software programme
called Content ID that scans and compares videos to material provided
by copyright owners, for instance in order to place specific advertisements
on the screens of its users who have posted those videos. This software
allows YouTube to gain revenue from advertisements and identify
copyright violations when videos are posted by users. YouTube also
introduced the “YouTube Copyright School” for copyright violators,
who are asked to watch on its website a four-and-a-half minute video
and answer questions concerning copyright, as an educational exercise.
49. The Court of Justice of the European Union decided on 16 February
2012 that the owner of an online social network cannot be obliged
to install a general filtering system covering all its users in
order to prevent copyright infringements by users.

Nevertheless, Internet companies
which benefit commercially from copyright violations of their users
can be held liable under penal law, as the European Court of Human
Rights has found in the case concerning “Pirate Bay”.

Therefore,
technological initiatives for the protection of copyright do not
seem to be an undue burden for Internet companies which otherwise
benefit from the actions of their users.
50. Internet service providers hosting user-generated content
established in 2007 the self-regulatory “Principles for User-Generated
Content Services” against illegal user-generated content.

More Internet companies should adhere
to these principles. Social networks and platforms with user-generated
content should empower their users in this respect by providing
digital identification tools automatically by default.
7. Conclusions
51. Following the committee hearing
in Paris on 3 December 2015, I concur with Professor von Lewinski
that the Internet has brought enormous opportunities for global
dissemination of works to users. However, the main benefit from
the dissemination of works on the Internet still accrues to the
powerful Internet companies and indirectly their users, while authors,
performers, and other rightholders suffer dramatic losses of income. Therefore,
any legislative action with respect to exceptions and limitations
should be conducted on the basis of a thorough analysis of the relevant
situation and take into account all the consequences thereof. While
tailor-made and carefully drafted (rather than vague, flexible)
exceptions and limitations may be appropriate in given situations,
there is no overall need to redraft the existing ones, to render
them mandatory or to introduce new ones. Authors of creative works
should have a fair chance to benefit from the potential that the
Internet offers. This is the aim of the proposals included in the
draft resolution and draft recommendation.