IPKat's friend Peter Munkacsi has brought to this Kat's
attention the comments that the Max Planck Institute has just made available as regards
the "Proposal for a Directive of the European
Parliament and of the Council on collective management of copyright and related
rights and multi-territorial licensing of rights in musical works for online
uses in the internal market" [don't worry,
says Merpel: if that was ever possible, the text of the proposal is actually
longer than its title].
As readers will remember (here and here), the
proposal was released last summer, following the Commission's announcement of a legislative
initiative in respect of collective rights management in its
2011 blueprint for intellectual property rights to
boost creativity and innovation. There it was highlighted that
While the
substantive scope of copyright has been largely harmonised, rights are still
licensed on a national basis. In view of the digital Single Market,
streamlining copyright licensing and revenue distribution is one of the most
important challenges that must be addressed.
A somewhat similar spirit seems to have
informed also the very recent initiative on Licences for Europe which is aimed at identifying, among other things, specific
solutions to address the difficulties experienced
by small businesses and users in obtaining the necessary licences for all
rights.
Going back to the proposed directive on collective
rights management, its key objectives seems to include:
1. The
promotion of greater transparency
and improved governance of collecting societies through strengthened reporting
obligations and rightholders’ control over their activities, so as to create
incentives for more innovative and better quality services.
2. The encouragement and facilitation of
multi-territorial and multi-repertoire licensing of authors' rights in musical
works for online uses in the EU/EEA.
|
Subliminal message to EU policy makers? |
So, what does the prestigious Max Planck Institute
think of the proposed directive? Apparently, the overall assessment seems to be
slightly below the percentage
required to get a First Class Honours mark.
While it
welcomes the initiative to adopt a binding legal instrument on collective
management of copyright and related rights in the EU and praises numerous
provisions, the Max Planck Institute holds the view that
"the
Commission seems to fail to take account of the full legal framework and
factual circumstances that have structured the current system of collective
rights management.
Disposing
of natural monopolies in a two-sided market ..., collecting societies ...
should not refuse to grant access to their services to rightholders and users.
Hence, it is strongly recommended that the European legislature follows the
experience of numerous Member States and proposes an obligation to contract
with rightholders ... as well as with users ...
The critique in the Commission's approach to cross-border licences
for online rights on musical works as set forth in the Recommendation of 2005 ... has unfortunately
not been duly considered and the Commission's assessment of the practical
effects of the Recommendation is mistaken ...
|
He is famous for creating the illusion that substantive copyright is sufficiently harmonised (but possibly he can make also other entertaining tricks) |
Differences of substantive copyright law among Member States still
constitute an obstacle to the establishment of an internal market for works.
This is why the Institute [and Merpel] deems
the Commission's sectorial approach to the regulation of cross-border licensing
to be problematic. Also such regulation would require further harmonisation of
substantive copyright law [according to the Max Planck Institute the Commission has to be
criticised, among other things, for creating the impression that substantive
copyright law has sufficiently been harmonised] ...
Moreover, the Proposal fails to take account of statutory
remuneration rights and cases of mandatory collective management ... Both
pursue specific protection of original rightholders. In this regard the
Proposal's refusal to distinguish between different categories of rightholders
raises concerns ...
Since collecting societies manage copyrights and related rights
arising from national law, and considering the benefits of an authorisation
system ..., which can be found in several Member States, the Institute advises
the European legislature to clearly state that the intellectual property
exception of article 17(11) of the Service Directive applies to collecting
societies ...
The Proposal endangers the balance both between different
categories of rightholders and between rightholders and users that the
established system of collective management of copyright in Europe
traditionally seeks to achieve ... It thereby compromises the laudable goal to
foster the establishment of an internal market for online uses of works across
Europe ..."
Will
the Commission take due account of what look like most
sensible recommendations? Merpel bets that this will be indeed the
case …
It is interesting that what this document actually does is espouse an EU model based on German law on collecting societies (which the Institute just about refrains from saying expressly).
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