Have you ever found yourself
clicking-- ‘Yes I agree to these terms
& conditions’, without actually reading them? Probably yes [everyone does it…even lawyers]. Did that include your
registration with Twitter? If so, you may not have realized that you agreed to
a licence allowing Twitter (and its partners) to use at will any of the
copyright-protected content you created and uploaded on their site. But not to
worry, the Paris Tribunal, in a 236-page-long decision, "righted wrongs"
last month by going over Twitter’s terms and conditions with a [very] fine-tooth coomb (see for the decision in
French language: Tribunal
de Grande Instance, Décision du 07 août 2018, 1/4 social N° RG 14/07300).
The tribunal’s review declared ‘null and void’ most of the clauses challenged
by the claimant, including the contract’s copyright
licensing provisions for user-generated content.
Users are consumers, Twitter is not ‘free’
The case was brought before the
Paris Tribunal by the French Consumers’ Association-- ‘Union Fédérale des
Consommateurs - QUE CHOISIR’ (UFC), on behalf of the (claimed) collective
interest of Twitter’s users. This type of legal action is the closest thing to
a class action that exists in France. In this case, UFC’s eligibility to act on
behalf of Twitter’s users relied on Article L 621 of the French Consumer Law
Code, on the basis of which Twitter users were deemed consumers.
The status of Twitter users as
consumers was vehemently disputed by Twitter, which argued that its service is ‘free’,
making it impossible for its users to be ‘consumers’ (within the meaning of the
Consumer Law). According to Twitter, a person may be regarded as a ‘consumer’ only
if it pays for contracted products and services.
Twitter’s terms and conditions
are spread across three main contractual documents: the ‘Terms of Service’, the
‘Privacy Rules’ and the ‘Twitter Rules’ (see here
for the current English versions of these documents). In the decision, the
Tribunal reviews past and current iterations of these documents in the French
language. The judgment examines these contractual clauses, primarily in light
of the principles of unfair contract terms and data protection regulations. But
‘droit d’auteur’ (French copyright
law) also comes into play, as the Tribunal was asked to assess the lawfulness
of the licensing provisions contained in the ‘Terms of Service’ (ToS) document.
Copyright clauses: “what’s yours is yours”… but also theirs.
The ToS features a provision
according to which Twitter users license the copyright vested in all of the
“content” that they upload onto the platform (e.g. text, photos, and videos) to
Twitter and its “ecosystem partners” (i.e. third-party partners). The first sentence
of the licensing clause reads as follows:
“You retain your rights to any Content you
submit, post or display on or through the Services. What’s yours is yours — you
own your Content (and your incorporated audio, photos and videos are considered
part of the Content).” (here) [this is the English equivalent of the clauses in French as
considered by the Court]
Twitter’s licensing terms follow
this paragraph (see here for the current English
equivalent of the provisions considered in Court).
UFC challenged the licensing
provision on two grounds. First, the claimant argued that the opening sentence
gives the misleading impression that the licencing agreement is narrow in the
scope its grants to Twitter whilst in fact, it grants a world-wide, royalty
free licence for any use and for all content ever uploaded on the platform,
with the right for Twitter to sub-licence such uses to third parties within
their commercial “ecosystem”. In this Kat’s view, the licence granted to Twitter
falls short of being an assignment of rights only to the extent that it is
non-exclusive. The absence of exclusivity allows users to carry on using and
sub-licensing (non-exclusively) their own content as they see fit.
The claimant’s second objection
against the licensing clause is based on the French Intellectual Property Code
(IPC). UFC argues that the clause is so broad that it contravenes the IPC,
which provides for stricter treatment of what can be licensed or assigned than
what most common law countries do. These rules were introduced to safeguard the
authors’ interests.
It is worth stressing that the
IPC does not distinguish between assignments and licences in the applications
of these rules. Instead, the IPC refers to the notion of “transfer” (“cession”
in the original text), which is neutral and can encompass either a licence or
an assignment of rights as understood within most common law jurisdictions.
Thus, the IPC, Article L 131-1 prohibits
the assignment or licensing of future
works: “Total transfer of future works
shall be null and void”. The IPC also requires that transfers of rights
(assignments or licences) be recorded in writing and be very specific as to
their content. It is a legal requirement that each right being ‘transferred’
(i.e. assigned or licensed) be separately mentioned in the contract and that the
scope, purpose, place and duration of the exploitation for each of these rights
be clearly defined in the agreement for the provision to be valid (see, IPC
Article L 131-3). In other words, vague blanket assignments of present or
future works are null and void in France.
Twitter’s general licensing
provision did not meet any of these requirements. As such, the Paris Tribunal invalidated
the clause, writing as follows:
“The aforementioned clause which grants to
the service provider the right to use, for free, any content generated by the
user, including content which may be protected by authors’ rights, without
specifying in enough detail the content concerned, the nature of the rights
transferred and the nature of the commercial uses agreed upon, infringes the
provisions of Articles L 131-1, L 131-2 and L 131-3 of the Intellectual
Property Code”*
What now?
The judgment of the Tribunal
sends Twitter back to the drawing board on the terms of the copyright licence
agreement with its users. For Twitter to lawfully secure the right to reproduce
user-generated content, the company will have to be granted a licence as users
upload their content (i.e. upon each Tweet): is this feasible? The alternative,
of course, is that Twitter stops using users’ content for commercial purposes
or in ways which are not covered by copyright exceptions.
Likely? What will other social
media platforms do with their T&C's in this connection to comply with
French law? Will they seek to apply them world-wide?
Only time will tell… if the Paris
Tribunal’s decision is the start of a new era for the legal treatment of user-generated-contents.
* Author’s own translation.
Paris tribunal guts Twitter’s T&Cs… including the copyright clause for user-generated content
Reviewed by Mathilde Pavis
on
Wednesday, September 26, 2018
Rating:
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