27. 3. 2019
On 26 March 2019, the European Parliament passed a new
directive on copyright and related rights in the Digital Single Market,
which is to fundamentally transform the Internet in Europe. The Directive also
includes controversial Articles 15 (previously 11) and 17 (previously 13),
which have been highly criticised by both the public and experts.
Digital Single Market
The directive on copyright and related rights in the
Digital Single Market (the “Directive”)
is supposed to be one of the further steps that the EU has taken to strengthen
the Single Market and to harmonise conditions in all Member States.
Following the European Parliament’s vote on the
Directive in September last year and related dramatic public discussion, the
legislative process entered the stage of a “trialogue” between the Commission,
the European Parliament and the Council. The resulting wording was passed by
the Parliament on 26 March 2019 and can essentially be considered final.
Even though the Parliament voted on the option to
table amendment motions, the vote was lost by a margin of a few votes, to a
significant extent due to MEPs from the United Kingdom, which might not (or may
– who knows?) be affected by the new legislation at all.
While the Directive regulates numerous areas (e.g. text
and data mining for scientific research purposes, using works and other
protected subject-matter in distance learning and cross-border education activities,
appropriate and proportionate remuneration of authors), most of the public
attention was focused on Articles 11 and 13 (now Articles 15 and 17). It is
these Articles in particular that are affected by the complexity of the topic
and the difficult discussions preceding the adoption of the Directive.
The two articles fundamentally strengthen the liability
of providers of online services such as aggregation of article content from
other websites and content sharing platforms (e.g. Google, YouTube, Seznam.cz,
Facebook, ulož.to and many more Czech, Slovak and other European providers). In
general, we can expect the Directive to transform the Internet in Europe.
Article
15 – Print Publications Online
Article 15 regulates press publishers’ rights when
their publications are used online by information society service providers, in
particular the right to enable or prohibit reproduction of such content.
This protection is not supposed to apply to private or
non-commercial use by individuals or to insertion of hypertext links.
Publishers’ rights do not apply to the use of
individual words or very short extracts of press publications.
Article 17 – Hosting Platforms
Article 17 focuses on a major current phenomenon –
hosting platforms. While a hosting platform can be broadly understood as almost
every online service from blogs, discussion forums, webhosting to file storage
sites enabling further sharing, the Directive particularly regulates such
platforms that give public access to large amounts of content uploaded by their
users.
To this end, the Directive introduces a new definition
of online content sharing service
providers. These are information society service providers the main purpose
of which or one of the main purposes of which is to store copyright-protected
content uploaded by users and give public access to it, and who sort and
promote these works or other protected subject-matter to make a profit.
The definition of the Directive excludes non-profit
online encyclopaedias, non-profit educational and scientific repositories, open
source software developing and sharing platforms, electronic communication
service providers, online marketplaces, business-to-business cloud services and
cloud services enabling their users to upload content for their individual use.
Article 17 will not apply to these entities.
Safe
Harbour II?
As opposed to the current mode of shielding providers
from liability (Safe Harbour) under
Article 14 of the e-Commerce Directive (2000/31/EC), the new Directive provides
that it is the provider that performs the communication to the public or the
publication (and is hence fully liable for content stored by third parties – users)
if the provider gives the public access to works protected by copyright or
another right, for instance by the means of publication on a website.
The provider may exempt its liability if it meets the
following conditions set forth by Article 17(4) (a provision we can call Safe Harbour II), i.e. it has:
- made
every effort to obtain the rightholders’ authorisation,
- made,
in accordance with high industry standards of professional diligence, every
effort to ensure the unavailability of specific works and other subject-matter
for which the rightholders have provided the service providers with the
relevant and necessary information; and in any event
- acted
expeditiously, upon receiving a sufficiently substantiated notice from the
rightholders, to disable access to, or to remove from, their websites the
notified works or other subject-matter, and made every effort to prevent their
future uploads in accordance with point (ii).
In any case, in determining whether the service
provider has complied with the aforesaid obligations, the following elements
should be taken into account: the type and scope of the service, the target
audience and the type of works (or other protected subject-matter) made
accessible as well as the availability of suitable and effective means and
their cost for service providers.
Although the Directive states not to impose general
monitoring obligations in paragraph 8 of the same Article, this statement
actually appears to be considerably weakened by the aforementioned obligations.
Exception for Minor Providers
In respect of service providers the services of which have
been available for less than three years and which have an annual turnover
below EUR 10 million, the conditions under Article 17 only apply in
limited scope. Such service providers must make every effort to obtain the
rightholders’ authorisation, and upon receiving a sufficiently substantiated
notice, they must disable access to the notified works or other subject-matter (or
to remove them).
Once the number of unique users exceeds 5 million
per calendar year, such providers must demonstrate that they have made every
effort to prevent further uploads of the notified works and other protected
subject-matter on which they have received relevant and necessary information
Exceptions
for Users
In paragraph 7, the legislation makes sure that the
cooperation between rightholders and providers of affected services must not
result in the prevention of the availability of works or other protected
subject-matter uploaded by users which do not infringe copyright and related
rights, including where such works or other subject-matter are covered by an
exception or limitation. Exceptions guaranteed to users apply to quotations,
criticisms, reviews, or use for the purpose of caricature, parody or pastiche.
What You Can Expect
The Directive must now be discussed by the European
Council and published in the Official Journal of the European Union. Members
States must incorporate it in their national legislation within 24 months of
its entry into force (applicability).
Member States must now process the relatively dense
and complex text. Furthermore, there are many vague terms that need clarifying,
for instance what amounts of content must be shared online by service providers
to be considered “large”, what the unavailability of “specific works and other
subject-matter” means in case of the Safe
Harbour II mode and which extracts are short enough to allow for Article
15 exceptions. After all, the text has been criticised, among other things, for
being ambiguous.
Even though the Directive is supposed to enhance the
(Digital) Single Market, the prospects of the Czech or any other national
implementation of such a difficult text meeting this goal are anything but
sure; a certain degree of fragmentation can be expected. Similarly, when Act
No. 480/2004 Sb., on some information society services, incorporated the
e-Commerce Directive into Czech legislation in a way that was too creative and
considerably diverged from the wording of Article 14 of the e-Commerce
Directive, the Czech law has given the impression that it creates and not
excludes service providers’ liability. That is why it will be interesting to
follow the implementation process not only in the Czech Republic but also in
other Member States, particularly in Germany.
Our law firm has been following the regulation in
detail envisaged by the new Directive since its first proposal was presented. We
are ready to assist you in addressing the new piece of legislation, especially
analysing the specific impacts of the Directive (and the national law implementing
it) on your business, assessing and adjusting your terms and conditions for the
use of your services, introducing internal procedures in compliance with the
new rules as well as to provide you with legal assistance in individual cases.
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