The Court held that Article 3(1) of the InfoSoc Directive "must be interpreted as meaning that, in order to establish whether the fact of posting, on a website, hyperlinks to protected works, which are freely available on another website without the consent of the copyright holder, constitutes a ‘communication to the public’ within the meaning of that provision, it is to be determined whether those links are provided without the pursuit of financial gain by a person who did not know or could not reasonably have known the illegal nature of the publication of those works on that other website or whether, on the contrary, those links are provided for such a purpose, a situation in which that knowledge must be presumed."
In other words, the provision of a hyperlink on a website to a copyright work that is (1) freely accessible and (2) was published without the author’s consent on another website, does not constitute a ‘communication to the public’, as long as the person who posts that link (i) does not seek financial gain and (ii) acts without knowledge that those works have been published illegally.
This conclusion is fairly bold and, while clearly aimed at 'not breaking the internet', might not have solved all the problems
The scope of the question(s) referred
First, the Court decided to group together the three questions referred by the Dutch Supreme Court, saying that - in a nutshell - they concerned "whether, and in what possible circumstances, the fact of posting, on a website, a hyperlink to protected works, freely available on another website without the consent of the copyright holder, constitutes a ‘communication to the public’ within the meaning of Article 3(1) of Directive 2001/29." [para 25]
Moving on: notion of 'communication to the public'
As usual, the CJEU began its analysis with a general discussion of the nature [preventative] of the communication to the public right [para 28]. It mentioned the lack of a definition in the body of the InfoSoc Directive and hence the need to refer to the objectives pursued by this piece of EU legislation: high level of protection of authors [para 30] but also a fair balance of contrasting rights and interests, as also protected by the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union [para 31].
The Court then recalled that the concept of ‘communication to the public’ includes two cumulative criteria: (1) an ‘act of communication’ of a work and (2) the communication of that work to a ‘public’. This said, it noted how a specific assessment is to be undertaken in specific instances by considering a number of complementary criteria, which are not autonomous and are interdependent. Since those criteria may, in different situations, be present to widely varying degrees, they must be applied both individually and in their interaction with one another.
Among other things, such criteria include:
- the indispensable role played by the user and the deliberate nature of its intervention;
- a communication using specific technical means, different from those previously used or, failing that, to a ‘new public’;
- the profit-making nature of the communication.
Svensson as ... Julius Caesar? |
Having exhausted its general overview of the communication to the public right, the CJEU turned to the most immediate and relevant decisions in the context of hyperlinks: Svensson and BestWater.
And here it said that from those cases it does not follow that "posting, on a website, hyperlinks to protected works which have been made freely available on another website, but without the consent of the copyright holders of those works, would be excluded, as a matter of principle, from the concept of ‘communication to the public’" [para 43].
Then, with quite an admirable twist [worthy of a real Brutus], it
However, they do not really go as far as suggesting that, lacking consent, a link would amount to an unathorised act of communication to the public. And the reasons for this scaling-down of Svensson and BestWater [which, in my opinion, indeed suggested this] are practical: to avoid 'breaking the internet'.
The Court noted in fact that:
- the internet is of particular importance to freedom of expression and of information, and hyperlinks contribute to its sound operation as well as to the exchange of opinions and information in that network characterised by the availability of immense amounts of information [para 45]
- it may be difficult, in particular for individuals who wish to post such links, to ascertain whether website to which those links are expected to lead, provides access to works which are protected and, if necessary, whether the copyright holders of those works have consented to their posting on the internet. Such ascertaining is all the more difficult where those rights have been the subject of sub-licenses. Moreover, the content of a website to which a hyperlink enables access may be changed after the creation of that link, including the protected works, without the person who created that link necessarily being aware of it. [para 46]
the picture the profit-making nature criterion and also added something apparently 'Made in Luxembourg': the subjective state of mind of the hyperlinker [profit-making nature and intention appear to require cumulative consideration].
In fact, according to the CJEU [paras 47-48], "[f]or the purposes of the individualised assessment of the existence of a ‘communication to the public’ within the meaning of Article 3(1) of Directive 2001/29, it is accordingly [?] necessary, when the posting of a hyperlink to a work freely available on another website is carried out by a person who, in so doing, does not pursue a profit, to take account of the fact that that person does not know and cannot reasonably know, that that work had been published on the internet without the consent of the copyright holder. Indeed, such a person, by making that work available to the public by providing other internet users with direct access to it ... does not, as a general rule, intervene in full knowledge of the consequences of his conduct in order to give customers access to a work illegally posted on the internet. In addition, where the work in question was already available with unrestricted access on the website to which the hyperlink provides access, all internet users could, in principle, already have access to it even the absence of that intervention."
The same is not however true for:
- a person who knew or ought to have known that the hyperlink he posted provides access to a work illegally placed on the internet [para 49], for example owing to the fact that he was notified thereof by the copyright holders;
- Links that allow users of the website on which they are posted to circumvent the restrictions taken by the site where the protected work is posted in order to restrict the public’s access to its own subscribers [para 50]
As promptly [and, in my opinion, correctly] observed on Twitter by my former student Adrian Wright, the CJEU appears also to have created a new notice-and-takedown system ... for primary liability.
At para 53 the Court wrote that "rightholders, in all cases, have the possibility of informing such persons [who? not only those who have published the copyright work without the rightholder's consent but seemingly also those who have 'published' the hyperlinks] of the illegal nature of the publication of their work on the internet and of taking action against them if they refuse to remove that link, and those persons may not rely upon one of the exceptions listed in Article 5(3) [of the InfoSoc Directive]".
All in all: CJEU as law-maker
Much will be written on this GS Media judgment, because - as a matter of fact - it marks a departure from previous case law on the communication to the public right.
First, this is so for to the emphasis posed on the profit-making nature criterion. Not many months ago in, Reha Training [here], the CJEU (in a Grand Chamber composition) had held that, although in some cases the profit-making nature (or its lack thereof) of the act in question has been taken into account, this is not a decisive factor to classify an act as one of communication to the public. Now this no longer appears so true ...
Secondly, and possibly most importantly, the Court has seemingly carried out a de facto harmonisation of the subjective element in (primary) copyright infringement cases, thus going well beyond the wording of relevant directives.
It would now seem that, at least in hyperlinking cases, primary copyright infringement should no longer be a matte of strict liability but rather, and similarly to the case of secondary liability, the defendant's state of mind should be considered. This may pose problems for the copyright systems of some Member States, including - at least until Brexit happens - the UK.
From the first read, it's a very reasonable judgement. The CJEU had to screen out unwillful infringers.
ReplyDelete'Financial gain + knowledge of illegality' is a good first approximation to that purpose.
The judgment is quite expected given that in Reha Training, C-117/15 para [70], [71] the CJEU has already approached
implicitly 'Financial gain + knowledge of illegality' criteria with respect to the 'communication to the public'.
I disagree that the two criteria "profit-making nature" and "knowledge of infringement" require cumulative consideration.
ReplyDeleteIn para 49, the CJEU says:
"In contrast, where it is established that such a person knew or ought to have known that the hyperlink he posted provides access to a work illegally placed on the internet (...), the provision of that link constitutes a ‘communication to the public’"
I don't see any "posting of hyperlinks carried out for profit" in this scenario. Therefore the only remaining criterion is "knew or ought to have known". When the link is posted "for profit", such knowledge is assumed.
Yes, I think Mirko is correct about that.
DeleteI am tempted to agree with Mirko's comment above; or at least there certainly seems to be something odd about the Court's "rebuttable presumption", because according to the rest of its argument surely it is enough for the hyperlinks to be created for profit, with liability following whether or not they actually knew that the content was unauthorised? So what difference does it make if a profit-making linker is able to rebut the presumption and show that it didn't know the content was unauthorised?
ReplyDeleteI like this decision of the CJEU even more than yesterday. It seems that via 'a person knew or ought to have known', for the first time, some sort of third-party protection is introduced with respect to the 'communication to the public'. It is particularly important for Internet space. The criterion for eligibility for such protection might refine with time, while here the start has been made for distinguishing between acts of communication.
ReplyDeleteFurther to my comment of 17.50 yesterday:
ReplyDeleteAlthough the way that the ECJ has expressed itself in the operative part of the judgment tends to imply otherwise, the logic of their reasoning in the main body of the judgment is that for hyperlinks to unauthorised content there is basically one test: did the person posting the link know or should they have reasonably known that the content was unauthorised ("illegal")?
The question of pursuit of profit then acts as a presumption in two directions:
- those not pursuing profit are presumed not to know and thus will not be liable (but the presumption can be rebutted, eg if it is shown they were put on notice)
- those pursuing profit are presumed to know and thus be liable (but this is in theory rebuttable, probably only in unusual circumstances).
This leaves the problem of the implication otherwise in the operative part of the judgment - no doubt there are previous cases where there have also been such conflict between the summary and the reasoning?
A (basic ?) question: the ruling refers to 'hyperlinks'; would there be a difference if the link was purely text without the underlying 'activating' html?
ReplyDeleteRe-anonymous at 02:56:00 Yes.
ReplyDeleteRe-anonymous at 12:25
ReplyDelete"Yes" - but how? Seems that the ECJ is saying that requiring a user to 'copy & paste' a 'text url' is not a communication to the public, while clicking on the same as hyperlink is!
Re Anon 12.25
ReplyDeleteI think you are reading way too much into it. (1) The judgment uses the word link and hyperlink interchangeably (e.g. para 46). (2) A hyperlink will have the URL to the infringing content in the html script. So the issue of whether a website links to infringing content is not going to matter if the URL is in the HTML script for the hyperlink or simple text form is irrelevant.
Re: Anonymous 13:37
ReplyDeleteOK - thanks; that was exactly the point of my original question. Does seem as if the court has either a poor understanding of the internet or a loose use of language, especially for a judicial judgement.
Your comments are extremely interesting but I think hyperlinks require to rethink about copyright.
ReplyDeleteCopyright was created in order to offer authors/copyright owners with an artificial state of scarcity. This state of scarcity enables authors to put a price on the works they license. Therefore, the reproduction and performance rights were fully relevant before the digital world because works of the minds merged with their mediums. However, hyperlink present a challenge since there is no reproduction (see art. 5.1 of the Infosoc directive) nor performance of the copyrighted work. It is therefore necessary to find a new way to create a state of scarcity in favor of authors.
The distinction that the Court made is relevant because it respects the principles on which the internet was built : a space free of laws and money. The GS Media case is consistent with that because it says that if you deal with the basic principles of the internet (i.e. you do not make money on it) you can freely link to contents online. However, if you make money on the internet and do not respect the 'spirit of the internet', then we will apply regular rules and you shall respect the artificial state of scarcity in favor of the author.