September 10, 2020
By Foo Yun Chee
BRUSSELS (Reuters) –
Europe’s creative industry has criticised the European Commission’s
consultation on new EU copyright rules for departing from the original
directive agreed last year and being unworkable.
The new copyright
directive, which marked the first overhaul in two decades, had pitted
artists and news publishers against tech companies, internet activists
and consumer groups and aimed to provide fair compensation for the
bloc’s $1 trillion creative industries and its 11.7 million employees.
A
key provision, Article 17, backed by the creative industry would
require Google-owned YouTube, Facebook’s Instagram and other sharing
platforms to install filters to prevent users from uploading copyrighted
materials.
The platforms can be sued for making
copyright-infringing content available to the public, even where it has
been uploaded by their users. Critics however say filters are costly and
could lead to erroneous blocking.
The Commission sought feedback
from the online platforms and rights holders on how to apply Article 17,
with the consultation ending on Thursday.
“In its consultation
paper, the Commission is going against its original objective of
providing a high level of protection for rightsholders and creators and
to create a level playing field in the online Digital Single Market,”
said 23 trade bodies representing publishers, music industries and film
and TV producers in a joint letter to EU digital chief Thierry Breton
and seen by Reuters.
Sporting event organisers, TV and radio broadcasters, distributors,
photo agencies, cinema operators and Telefonica were also among
signatories to the letter.
They complained that the proposals were incompatible with the original directive and unworkable.
“The
proposed guidance amounts to an attempt to rewrite the Directive and
amend EU copyright law without due legislative process,” the trade
bodies said.
They urged the Commission to take their concerns into account when drafting its final guidance.
The Commission said it “was mindful of the letter, context and purpose of Article 17”.
It
said its consultation document proposes a balanced approach on how to
avoid infringing content on the platforms while safeguarding legitimate
uploads by users, such as uses under an exception to copyright.
https://www.oann.com/europes-creative-industry-slams-eu-commission-for-rewriting-copyright-rules/