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TWN Info Service on Intellectual
Property Issues (Mar08/03)
13 March 2008
Third World Network
Please find below our latest news story on Copyright Exceptions and
Limitations in view of the fact that this topic was discussed at the
Standing Committee on Copyright and Related Rights (SCCR) that began
on Monday.
The news story was first reported in SUNS and is reproduced here with
permission.
News stories on past discussions at the SCCR can be found at
http://www.twnside.org.sg/IP_wipo.htm
Best Regards
Sangeeta Shashikant
Third World Network
email: ssangeeta@myjaring.net
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WIPO: ACTION NEEDED TO EXPAND COPYRIGHT EXCEPTIONS AND LIMITATIONS
Published in SUNS #6433 dated 12 March 2008
Geneva, 11 Mar (Gwen Hinze*) -- This week, the World Intellectual Property
Organization's Standing Committee on Copyright and Related Rights meets
in Geneva to begin talking about exceptions to, and limitations on,
rights granted to copyright holders by international instruments, a
topic which is of vital importance to developing countries.
These discussions flow from two proposals submitted to WIPO by the government
of Chile
at the initiative of the Chilean Ministry of Education. In November
2004, Chile asked WIPO to include the subject of exceptions and limitations
to copyright and related rights for the purposes of education, libraries
and archives, and disabled persons on the agenda of the Committee and
"to strengthen international understanding of the need to have
adequate limitations, learning from existing models and moving towards
agreement on exceptions and limitations for public interest purposes,
which, like minimum standards, were to be envisaged in all legislation
for the benefit of the international community". (SCCR/12/3).
In November 2005, Chile
suggested three types of work that the SCCR could undertake in this
area (SCCR/13/5):
• Identification, from the national intellectual property systems of
WIPO Member States, of national models and practices concerning exceptions
and limitations.
• Analysis of the exceptions and limitations needed to promote creation
and innovation and the dissemination of developments stemming therefrom.
• Establishment of agreement on exceptions and limitations for purposes
of public interest that must be envisaged as a minimum in all national
legislations for the benefit of the community; especially to give access
to the most vulnerable or socially prioritized sectors.
In recent years WIPO has commissioned three studies on Exceptions and
Limitations: Study on Copyright Limitations and Exceptions for the Visually
Impaired by Judith Sullivan (SCCR/15/7); Study on Limitations and Exceptions
of Copyright and Related Rights in the Digital Environment by Professor
Sam Ricketson (SCCR/9/7); and Automated Rights Management Systems and
Copyright Limitations and Exceptions by Nic Garnett (SCCR/14/5).
PUBLIC POLICIES SERVED BY EXCEPTIONS AND LIMITATIONS
From the earliest days of the Berne Convention, the international copyright
system has recognized exceptions and limitations to copyright. All copyright
systems across the world, to varying degrees, are focused on promoting
the creation and dissemination of knowledge.
Exceptions and limitations are an important part of an efficiently functioning
copyright system. They allow creators to access, and build upon the
knowledge generated by others. Without exceptions and limitations, the
copyright system would not be able to achieve its fundamental purpose
of spurring creation and innovation for the benefit of all humankind.
Exceptions and limitations also serve a second critical function. They
allow countries to create tailored access regimes, to meet national
needs and public priorities, such as exceptions for distance education
to foster learning, capacity building and development.
THE INTERNATIONAL LEGAL FRAMEWORK
Reflecting this, the Berne Convention contains various exceptions and
permits signatories to set limitations on the scope of copyright protection.
It contains a mandatory and uncompensated exception to copyright owners'
exclusive rights, permitting quotation of copyrighted works in accordance
with "fair practice", in Article 10(1).
It also gives signatory countries the discretion to create uncompensated
exceptions and limitations, subject to certain conditions, for use of
copyrighted works for illustration in publications, broadcasts and sound
recordings for teaching purposes (Article 10(2)); and news reporting
on current events (Article 10bis(1) and (2)); and compensated exceptions
and limitations for re-broadcasting (Article 11bis(1)) and for recording
musical works (Article 13), and a special compulsory licence regime
for reproduction and translation of texts by developing countries, subject
to strict conditions (the Berne Appendix). These exceptions are available
to signatories of the TRIPS Agreement, which incorporates the Berne
Convention.
While the Berne Convention recognizes an exception for "teaching
purposes" in Article 10(2), there is presently no recognition in
the international copyright framework for exceptions to facilitate education
(which includes both imparting knowledge by educators, and the ability
of students to learn by accessing and interacting with information),
nor specific exceptions for libraries and archives, or uses by persons
with disabilities.
The Berne Convention also allows signatories to create additional uncompensated
exceptions to rightsholders' reproduction right if they meet the controversial
Three Step Test (Article 9(2)).
Article 13 of the TRIPS Agreement adopted the same test. To what exclusive
rights it applies is still the subject of much debate. Legal commentators
who take a maximalist approach claim that it applies to all exclusive
rights of copyright owners and conditions the creation of any new copyright
exceptions and limitations on meeting that test (following the WTO Panel
Decision in United States - Section 110(5) of the US Copyright Act),
concerning section 110 (5) of the US Copyright Legislation).
However, other legal commentators read it more narrowly, as applying
only on top of existing Berne exceptions,
when the test is compatible with the requirements of those of the Berne
Convention.
The history of the negotiation of the Stockholm Conference of the Berne
Convention also supports the interpretation that the Three Step Test
does not apply to those areas where discretion is given to Member States
to create exceptions recognized in the Berne Convention, such as Articles
10 (1) and (2).
That is also supported by the standard principles of interpretation
in international law. As a result, there is a sound argument that countries
can create exceptions for teaching purposes under Article 10(2) of Berne
that do not have to be conditioned on a decision about satisfaction
of the Three Step Test.
The Three Step Test was included in the 1996 WIPO Copyright Treaty (WCT
Article 10) and WIPO Performances and Phonograms Treaty (WPPT Article
16) and governs the creation of exceptions and limitations to rights
newly granted under those treaties. The WCT and WPPT formulation also
applies to existing exceptions under the Berne Convention.
Developing countries expressed concern during the negotiations of the
1996 treaties about the impact of this provision's impact on national
sovereignty over national copyright law exceptions (which the Berne
Convention had traditionally reserved to Member States) and the ability
of countries to create new exceptions and limitations to facilitate
domestic needs.
As a result, the following Agreed Statement was adopted by Member States:
"It is understood that the provisions of Article 10 permit Contracting
Parties to carry forward and appropriately extend into the digital environment
limitations and exceptions in their national laws which have been considered
acceptable under the Berne Convention. Similarly, these provisions should
be understood to permit Contracting Parties to devise new exceptions
and limitations that are appropriate in the digital network environment.
It is also understood that Article 10(2) neither reduces nor expands
the scope of applicability of the limitations and exceptions permitted
by the Berne Convention."
The statement made clear the intention was to preserve countries' existing
copyright law exceptions and give countries the flexibility to introduce
appropriate new copyright exceptions and limitations appropriate for
the digital environment in order to meet domestic needs, such as distance
education.
The Agreed Statement also expressly shields Berne Convention exceptions
from scrutiny under the TRIPS Agreement's Three Step Test, affirming
that Article 10 of the WCT does not expand or reduce the scope of existing
exceptions under the Berne Convention.
However, in practice, the uncertainty surrounding the interpretation
of the Three Step Test and the linkage between national IP regulation
and trade law under the TRIPS Agreement, has resulted in the creation
of relatively low levels of exceptions and limitations, particularly
in developing countries' national copyright laws.
EXPANSION OF THE SCOPE AND DEPTH OF COPYRIGHT LAW IN THE DIGITAL ENVIRONMENT
A new multilateral instrument recognizing mandatory minimum exceptions
and limitations to copyright law is required to provide guidance to
developing countries and address political uncertainty surrounding the
Three Step Test, and to re-balance the international copyright regime
following the expansion of the scope and depth of international copyright
law in recent years.
While there has been successful international harmonization of rightsholders'
norms over the last 20 years, this has not been matched by a parallel
harmonization of limitations and exceptions that serve the public interest.
As a result, the international copyright regime is less balanced than
it has been at any point in the past.
First, the range of rights granted to copyright owners has expanded.
For instance, the 1994 TRIPS Agreement created a new right to control
rental of copyrighted works and extended copyright to computer software.
The 1996 WIPO Copyright and Phonograms and Performances Treaties created
a new right of making available, expanded the right of communication
to the public, and extended the right of reproduction into the storage
of data in digital form.
Second, the length of copyright term has also expanded in recent years.
Although the internationally harmonized term is 50 years after the life
of the author, many countries have now adopted the higher term of life
of author plus 70 years (or in some cases 95 years), as a result of
recent bilateral trade agreements with the United States and /or the
European Community.
Third, while also creating new opportunities for the creation and dissemination
of copyrighted works, new developments in Information and Communication
Technologies have challenged the traditional balance embodied in the
copyright system.
The 1996 WIPO Internet Treaties required signatory countries to provide
legal protection to technological protection measures (TPMs) - technologies
that can be used by rightsholders to control access to, and use of,
digital copyrighted works. Private rightsholders have been able to use
legally-enforced TPMs to control what level of access information users
can have, and on what terms.
As the US
experience with the 1998 Digital Millennium Copyright Act has made clear,
over-broad TPM legal regimes can override existing national copyright
law exceptions and limitations. They can also hamper countries' ability
to create new exceptions and limitations to meet their domestic needs.
NEW ICTs COULD PROVIDE NEW OPPORTUNITIES FOR EDUCATION, CAPACITY
BUILDING AND DEVELOPMENT
At the same time, the development of innovative new ICTs offers the
possibility, for the first time in human history, of providing the world's
citizens with access to the collective knowledge of humankind. New technologies
are helping to digitize the collections of the world's great libraries.
Volunteer efforts such as Project Gutenberg have made available on the
Internet over 10,000 books in the public domain in the United States. Other new collaborative
software technologies - wikis - have helped to create the world's most
comprehensive and globally relevant free encyclopedia, Wikipedia (www.
wikipedia. org).
Any student who has access to the Internet anywhere in the world can
now watch university lectures on content hosting platforms such as YouTube,
and listen to free downloaded audio recordings of lectures on their
mobile phones. Other new ICTs could provide access to global online
education platforms, and to materials that could be used to create locally-relevant
curricula to help educate citizens that have no access to books.
However, all of these projects face obstacles because of current international
copyright law. First, different countries have varying exceptions and
limitations in their national copyright regime so students and teachers
who want to use digital copyrighted information obtained from outside
of their home country cannot be sure that they can use it legally within
their country.
Second, providers of information such as online libraries, Project Gutenberg,
Wikipedia and content hosting platforms such as YouTube, also face uncertainty
about what information they can make available without fear of legal
liability because of variations across national copyright laws, the
national territorial limits of copyright regimes, and the lack of internationally-harmonized
copyright exceptions and limitations.
Appropriate exceptions and limitations to international copyright law
are required in order to build internationally-accessible digital libraries
and archives, and make use of copyrighted works for cross-border education.
THE NEED FOR INTERNATIONALLY RECOGNIZED MANDATORY MINIMUM EXCEPTIONS
AND LIMITATIONS
A new multilateral means of creating mandatory minimum exceptions and
limitations to international copyright law is required to foster education,
libraries and archives and to facilitate uses by disabled persons, and
to re-balance the international copyright regime to serve the needs
of all the world's citizens.
There are various mechanisms for providing formal recognition of an
international consensus on mandatory minimum exceptions and limitations.
For instance, this could be done by adoption of a soft norm, such as
WIPO Guidelines, or a Joint Statement of the WTO TRIPS Council and WIPO
Standing Committee on Copyright and Related Rights, as recommended in
a thoughtful study recently published by Professor Ruth Okediji of the
University of Minnesota (USA) and Professor Bernt Hugenholtz of the
Institute for Information Law at the University of Amsterdam (The Netherlands).
[The study, "Conceiving an international instrument on exceptions
and limitations to copyright", is at
But
the first step towards a multilateral instrument is increasing understanding
in the international community of the need for such a re-balancing instrument,
and the economic and social value that it would bring for all stakeholders.
Hopefully, this week's WIPO copyright meeting will provide the forum
to start that important discussion.
(* Gwen Hinze, an attorney specializing in IPR policy issues, is International
Policy Director of the Electronic Frontier Foundation (www. eff. org).
She contributed this article to the SUNS.) +
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