Ready for some licensed TV? |
Can the making available – following payment of an
IPTV subscription fee – of streams to unlicensed content amount to an
infringement of copyright/related rights?
This is the issue that the District Court of Limburg
(in Maastricht, The Netherlands) had to address in a recent case that
anti-piracy foundation Brein brought against Leaper (also acting as
‘Flickstore’, ‘Dump Die Deal’ and ‘Live TV Store’).
Unsurprisingly, the court answered in the affirmative.
The judgment (in Dutch) is available here.
What is interesting is the reasoning of the court,
which also reviewed the interpretation of Article 3 of the InfoSoc
Directive as provided by the Court of Justice of the European
Union (CJEU) in its fairly rich case law.
Leaper’s
service
The service offered by Leaper was structured as
follows: further to payment by the consumer of the subscription fee, Leaper
would send him a unique activation code (this, according to Brein, would
involve the provision of a hyperlink in a shortened and user-friendly form)
that would need to be inserted into a special Live TV app on the TV Box. This
would allow the consumer to obtain an .m3u file and access thousands of TV
channels on Leaper’s ‘FlickStore’, including subscription and film channels.
The subscription would also grant access to over 1,000 links to unlawful
offering of films.
The
judgment
According to the court the key issue was whether
Leaper itself would make an act of making available to the public (which is
part of the broader right of communication to the public ex Art 3(1)
of the InfoSoc Directive) within the meaning of Art 3(2) of the InfoSoc
Directive or whether instead, as Leaper claimed, it merely acted as an
intermediary between the wannabe users and those who make the content freely
and unlawfully available in the first place.
The court noted that the notion of communication to
the public is not defined in the directive. The CJEU held that the concept
should be interpreted broadly, so to comply with the objective of that
directive, which is to grant authors a high level of protection.
The court then referred to CJEU case law which has
stressed – amongst others – the relevance of considering whether the defendant
has made an ‘indispensable intervention’ and pursues a profit-making intention.
Both were found to subsist in the case at issue,
including Leaper’s awareness that the content linked to was not licensed (one
of the slogans used was “Also being fed up with the limited channel offer and
complicated television subscriptions that cost tons of money?”). The court
concluded that Leaper would be making unauthorized acts of communication/making
available to the public.
Also the argument that there would be no public because the activation codes
were sent to individual users was rejected by the court: with its actions,
against payment, Leaper would reach an indefinite number of potential
recipients who can access the protected content and constitute therefore a new
public.
Comment
As mentioned at the beginning of this post, this new
Dutch decision is not surprising, in that it correctly applies the CJEU
decisions on linking and communication/making available to the public,
including the one that is probably most similar – as far as its factual
background is concerned – to this case: Filmspeler [on which see
further here]
In that case the CJEU adopted a relaxed notion of what
constitutes an ‘indispensable intervention’ on the side of the user/defendant,
which it subsequently confirmed in its Ziggo decision [Katposts here].
To determine whether the user/defendant has played an essential role, when he intervenes, in full knowledge of the consequences of his action (ie accepting the possible consequences thereof), to give access to a protected work to his customers and does so, in particular, where, in the absence of that intervention, his customers would not, in principle, be able to enjoy the broadcast work. In this sense an intervention is indispensable not just when it is the sine qua non condition to access certain protected content, but also when it merely facilitates access to such content.
Dutch court rules that for-profit provision of links to unlicensed content is an infringement
Reviewed by Eleonora Rosati
on
Monday, June 04, 2018
Rating:
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