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Copyright

Ireland: reshaping the law for the digital economy

1 December, 2010
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This article is also available in:
Deutsch: Irland: Neugestaltung des Gesetzes über die digitale Wirtschaft


EDRi-member Digital Rights Ireland, Google and the Institute of International and European Affairs co-sponsored an event in Dublin on 19 November 2010 which presented suggestions for the reform of Irish law to promote digital innovation.

Speakers were Niall O'Riordan (Google) who called for developing fair use at the Irish and European level, Kate O'Sullivan (UPC) who spoke on the topic of the difficulties faced by ISPs due to the music industry demands that they act as copyright police, Johnny Ryan (IIEA) who placed the growth of interactive media in a historical context, Nick Kelly (musician and auth

Macedonia: New copyright law

17 November, 2010
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This article is also available in:
Deutsch: Neues Urheberrechtsgesetz in Mazedonien


Prison sentences of up to five years for copyright infringement are projected in the new Law on Copyright and Related Rights adopted in September 2010 in Macedonia.

With this law, which in addition to authors' and artists' rights also regulates the rights of film and stage producers, radio and television organizations, as well as the rights of publishers and database developers, copyright infringement is actually becoming a crime.

With these changes to the law that was being prepared for four years, Macedonia now formally has the same copyright protection standards as the EU member states.

Kroes wants copyright as a building block, not a stumbling block

17 November, 2010
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This article is also available in:
Deutsch: Kroes will Urheberrecht als Baustein, nicht als Stolperstein


During the Avignon Forum for the international meetings of culture, economy and media that took place on 5 November 2010, Neelie Kroes, European Commission Vice-President for the Digital Agenda, expressed her very strong conviction that copyright regulations had to change.

The Commissioner believes the existing copyright rules are not adapted to the development brought by the Internet and that any big technological revolution brings forth the necessity for adaptation. In her opinion, the intermediaries between the artists and the public are those that must understand the change and adapt.

Belgian Court upholds Creative Commons licence

3 November, 2010
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This article is also available in:
Deutsch: Belgischer Gerichtshof bestätigt Creative Commons Lizenz


A local court in Nivelles, Belgium upheld in a case decided 26 October 2010 on the validity of the Creative Commons licence in a copyright infringement case when a music group published its music under CC BY-NC-SA.

In this case reported by Professor Séverine Dussollier of the University of Namur, a theatre adapted the music published by the band to make an advertisement for their theatrical season. The ad was broadcast on the national radio several times (with no attribution).

ECJ decides private copying levies are not allowed for business use

3 November, 2010
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This article is also available in:
Deutsch: 'Abgabe für Privatkopien' laut EuGH auf gewerbliche Nutzer nicht anwe...


On 21 October 2010, the European Court of Justice (ECJ) decided that private copying levies on blank CDs, MP3 players and other digital media are allowed under EU copyright law only when charged on goods sold to individuals but not to companies.

ECJ ruled that "the application of the 'private copying levy' to reproduction media acquired by undertakings and professionals for purposes other than private copying is not compatible with European Union law.

ENDitorial: ACTA endgame - The devil is in the detail

8 September, 2010
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This article is also available in:
Deutsch: ENDitorial: Endspiel um ACTA – Der Teufel steckt im Detail


The last week has seen a flurry of activity surrounding ACTA, with the leak of the latest negotiating text, as well as the adoption of a Written Declaration by the European Parliament.

Some parts of ACTA remain very problematic, such as the text related to statutory damages.

YouTube guilty of its users' copyright infringement says a German court

8 September, 2010
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This article is also available in:
Deutsch: Deutschland: YouTube wegen Verletzung von Urheberrechten verurteilt


On 3 September 2010, the German Hamburg state court ruled that Google's subsidiary YouTube had to pay damages for not having prevented and blocked the upload by its users of several videos of Sarah Brightman's performances, thus violating its copyright.

Although YouTube uses a standardized form to users regarding their right to publish materials, the court did not find this enough and considered YouTube as legally responsible for the content uploaded, especially as the platform can be used anonymously, in the court's opinion.

YouTube uses Content ID, an anti-pirating technology to check out video

ENDitorial: Leaked draft of the new Czech Copyright Act

25 August, 2010
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This article is also available in:
Deutsch: ENDitorial: Entwurf zum neuen CR-Urheberrechtsgesetz durchgesickert


A leaked draft of the new Czech Copyright Act was obtained by Pirate News at the beginning of August 2010, after the Ministry of Culture has initially declined the request of Czech Pirate Party to have access to the document three days after the draft was sent out for feedback to organizations affected by the proposal.

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