Blog
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Let’s get Europe’s audiovisual works out
And by out, we mean out there, being watched.
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Asking the Trillion Euro Question
In every copyright debate in Brussels everyone always agrees that legislation needs to be fair and balanced, and that creators should be paid.
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To negotiate or not to negotiate
Last week the European Parliament made a very strong statement.
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Hearing both (or more) sides of a tale
Janine Lorente, the chair of SAA’s board of directors, spoke at the European Parliament’s legal affairs committee hearing on collective rights management on Monday. She was one of 13 stakeholders in a detailed programme which showed just how many different stakeholders will be affected by the directive when it comes into force. Out of the 13 presentations, only Janine looked at the issue from a non-music point of view.
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Creators’ contracts don’t work but let’s rely on them anyway
SAA has been promoting the idea of an unwaivable remuneration right for the last two years. Performers organisations have also called for a similar right. Our analysis, put simply, is that while it would obviously be better to strengthen the negotiating position of screenwriters and directors by introducing standard contracts or changing contract law, the reality is that this is unlikely to happen at EU level. Antonio Vitorino recognised this issue in his recommendations on private copying levies: “I was, however, also made aware of the fact that authors and performers often transfer their exclusive rights in a work or other protected subject matter to the producer or the publisher.
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Licences for Europe - Trying to nip it in the bud?
So, Licensing Europe is up and running and already being criticised by those who want copyright reform.
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Licensing Europe – Will it be a red carpet for global online operators...?
....or will it help European creators reach their audience? Following the European Commission’s orientation debate on copyright on 5th December 2012 and its conclusions on the way forward to modernising copyright in the digital economy (see last post Creators make themselves heard), the Commission published a communication on Content in the Digital Single Market on 18th December. The communication detail its “Licensing Europe” initiative, a stakeholder dialogue whose assigned objective is to deliver, by the end of 2013, practical industry-led solutions.
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Creators make themselves heard
On 28th of November we launched a petition. We were hoping to get 5,000 signatures within a week as the college of Commissioners was meeting on Wednesday 5th December to decide on their future approach on copyright. The meeting was the culmination of months of evident discord within the college of Commissioners on the best approach for Europe to fully take advantage of one of its key assets – its creative industries – in the digital world. President Barroso sought to set things straight and work out the path to the end of the current Commission term. We decided that the creators should be heard on this issue.
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Private copying – sense and sensibility?
1/3 of the world’s population meet daily on networks powered by digital technology, apparently. A large proportion of them do so to listen to music or to watch a video. What is the value of this digital technology without the creations?
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Where to start the authors’ rights balancing act?
The Socialist group of the European Parliament organised a conference last week entitled “Copyright: What is Broken and How to Mend it?”. Such debates are necessary if we are to escape the confrontation we have seen over the last year.
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Remuneration and audiovisual works online
September in Brussels is always a funny thing.
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Creation, Freedom and the Internet
Next week I am going to participate in a breakfast panel entitled “Striking the balance between IP protection and Internet freedom in Europe”. The line-up includes two rightsholder representatives (myself and Sylvie Forbin from Vivendi), a Pirate Party MEP (Mr Engström) and three organisations who promote the freedom of the internet (Marco Pancini from Google, Philippe Aigrain from the Quadrature du Net and Markus Kummer from the Internet Society). I accepted to join this debate because I fundamentally believe that the “balance” mentioned in the title can be found.
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