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Reflections on the ‘State of Exceptions & Limitations: Copyright Flexibilities in the EU and its Member States’ Event

July 16, 2021/0 Comments/in Activities, Past Events /by Rosie Allison

To coincide with the implementation of the CDSM Directive, the State of Exceptions & Limitations: Copyright Flexibilities in the EU and its Member States webinar took place on 1 June 2021 from 10:00 to 13:30 CEST. The webinar was designed to tackle the complexity of copyright protection in Europe and present the preliminary results of activities within the ReCreating Europe project. It attracted a large and diverse audience and included keynote speeches, panel discussions, and presentations.

Keynote

The event kicked off with opening remarks from Professor Caterina Sganga, coordinator of ReCreating Europe. In a presentation titled ‘Rethinking digital copyright law for a culturally diverse, accessible and creative Europe – A brief introduction’, Sganga outlined the aims, members, activities, and expected impact of the project. Additionally, Dr Giulia Priora, postdoctoral researcher at Sant’Anna School of Advanced Studies, illustrated the work conducted within the framework of the ReCreating Europe project. This presentation focused on mapping EU and national legal sources on copyright flexibilities that generated the preliminary results shared during the webinar.

 

The workshop began with a keynote speech from Prof Séverine Dusollier, member of ReCreating Europe’s Advisory Board, titled ‘Looking for flexibility in exceptions’. Prof Dusollier shared her views on the system of copyright exceptions in the EU, highlighting how inflexibility stems from their scope, strict interpretation, and geographical fragmentation. On the contrary, emphasis was put on the flexibility embedded in the system of copyright economic rights, permitting to significantly expand them. Prof Dusollier’s conclusion was an inspiring one that suggested we conceptualise exceptions not as limits, but rather as substantial parts of the EU copyright legal framework. These take the form of privileges or “enabling devices for socially legitimate uses”.

 

Panel Sessions

Following the keynote, three concurrent panel sessions were dedicated to specific topics of relevance to the ReCreating Europe project.

 

The first panel focused on parody and quotation exceptions. Julien Cabay shared his views on the required public knowledge or familiarity about work to harmonise national parody exceptions with the presentation titled, ‘I don’t get it, is that a parody? Why autonomous and uniform interpretation will never lead to autonomous and uniform application’. Philipp Homar presented on ‘Parody and quotation: status quo and recent developments in Austria’, discussing recent national case law and the key role of ‘purpose of the use’ (rather than of the indication of the authors and source) in the case-by-case assessment. Kacper Szkalej presented on ‘The Swedish parody doctrine – ensuring legal certainty through flexibility’, drawing conclusions on the ‘fitness’ of this national legislative and judicial approach.

 

The second panel focused on teaching and scientific research uses. Ana Lazarova illustrated the need to ensure an adequate scope and applicability of the teaching exception across the EU, the technological neutrality of Art.5(3)(a) InfoSoc Directive, and the attempt to fix its optional nature by way of Art.5 CDSM Directive. Bernd Justin Jütte followed by outlining the weaknesses of the most recent provision, bringing to the table insights from the pre-CDSM Irish experience on the digital teaching exception. Katarzyna Klafkowska-Waśniowska shared her views on the consolidated flexibility displayed by the state-of-the-art teaching exception in Poland with a presentation titled ‘Educational needs and Polish solutions in the EU legal framework’. Finally, Ivana Kunda spoke about teaching exceptions in Croatia, pre-dating the proposed implementation of the CDSM Directive, and its prospective impact on the inflexibility of the exception in the national legal landscape.

 

The third panel focused on statutory licensing schemes and, in particular, on extended collective licenses (ECL). Eetu Huhta gave a detailed overview of the structure and functioning of ‘Extended Collective Licensing in Finland’. Rita Matulionyte reflected on the question: “ECL for out-of-commerce works in Lithuania: is it worth the effort?”, pointing out the uncertain outcomes and potential pitfalls of the system in Finland. Lastly, Matěj Myška shared his views on the ‘Czech Republic – case study: (Re)introducing ECL for out-of-commerce works’, with emphasis on national developments brought about by the CDSM Directive.

 

A presentation by Peter Mezei followed. He shared findings of ReCreating Europe’s study on copyright flexibilities and the end-user licensing agreements (EULAs) of selected online platforms and services. Throughout his presentation, he developed a structured end-user assessment of the terms and conditions relevant to user-generated content, family sharing, contractual modification, and procedural safeguards.

Roundtable

The webinar concluded with a roundtable discussion focused on the future of copyright flexibilities in the EU. Lionel Bently stressed the need to focus on the fundamental goals and purposes of EU copyright law and interrogating ourselves about the subsequent adequacy of its breadth and shape. In this light, he commented on the role, nature, and recent interpretation of the quotation exception by the CJEU. Next, Tatiana Synodinou presented soft law norms as instruments to bring flexibility into the EU copyright landscape and their roles vis-à-vis formal legislative intervention. Maurizio Borghi further added to the discussion, sharing views on achieving flexibilities in the construction of the scope of exclusive rights, especially reproduction and communication to the public, as an alternative, if not complementary, perspective on copyright flexibility. Martin Senftleben gave his take on the distinction between unremunerated permitted uses and the prohibition power of the copyright owners, suggesting that the EU should move towards remunerated use privileges.

 

To close the event, Caterina Sganga reflected on the need to find a common ground around the notions defining and characterising flexibilities in EU copyright law. She suggested that the re-systematisation currently carried out by ReCreating Europe could act as a valuable starting point to tackle some of the gaps and weaknesses in the current legal landscape.

 

To learn more about the project, its activities and upcoming events, please visit the news section of this website. If you’d like to watch the webinar online, please visit the project’s YouTube channel.

https://www.recreating.eu/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/recreating-webinar.png 788 940 Rosie Allison https://www.recreating.eu/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/recreatingEurope-logo.png Rosie Allison2021-07-16 09:11:392021-07-19 12:34:03Reflections on the ‘State of Exceptions & Limitations: Copyright Flexibilities in the EU and its Member States’ Event

Reflections on ‘The Implementation of the CDSM Directive: Snapshots into the Future of the EU Copyright Law’

July 16, 2021/0 Comments/in Activities, Past Events /by Rosie Allison

We recently held The Implementation of the CDSM Directive: Snapshots into the Future of the EU Copyright Law Conference digitally on the 21st of June 2021 from 14:00 to 19:00 CEST. At this conference, interim results of research conducted by ReCreating Europe partners were discussed. The event coincided with ReCreating Europe’s cross-disciplinary and transnational research activities, specifically, the implementation of the DSM Directive.

Keynotes

The event commenced with two introductory keynotes by Raquel Xalabarder, Professor of Intellectual Property at Universitat Oberta de Catalunya, and Maciej Szpunar, First Advocate General at the Court of Justice of the European Union.

During the first keynote speech – ‘The aftermath of CDMSD: where do we stand, where shall we go?’ – Raquel Xalabarder shared her thoughts on the CDSM Directive and its wanting implementation process, emphasising the key role of CJEU in the harmonisation of copyright in the EU. She highlighted some ‘good news’ within the Directive – the new mandatory exceptions, new rules on copyright contract law, and the de facto ‘choice-of-law’ rule overcoming territoriality in copyright. Moreover, she went on to warn of the risks of ‘bad laws’ that might stem from this, such as an overly restrictive and market-oriented interpretation of the digital teaching exception and the complex nature of Art.17.

During the second keynote speech, Maciej Szpunar, First Advocate General at the Court of Justice of the European Union, addressed the following question: “The future of EU copyright harmonization: which role for the CJEU?”. He shared his remarks on the challenge faced by the CJEU in assessing what should be decided by the legislator, and what the Court can express when it comes to digital technologies and digital markets. Considering recent CJEU judgements, he highlighted the centrality of the question of how to reconcile the need for effective copyright enforcement and the need for allowing the Internet to work smoothly, without hindering or disincentivising the activity of intermediaries and users. From a legal and copyright perspective, the Internet has been disruptive in many ways. For example, by enabling every demand to meet every supply, it has deeply challenged the notion of territoriality and international private law in general. According to AG Szpunar, the CJEU is looking closely into the modalities of the violation of copyrights and sui generis rights (e.g., in CV-Online Latvia) and into the way users operate online (as in Mircom International).

These two keynotes were then followed by an intermezzo, during which Martin Kretschmer, Professor and Director, CREATe at the University of Glasgow, and Paul Keller, President at Communia, presented two tools used to obtain quality information about the evolution of EU copyright law: the CDSMD implementation tracker, and the new copyrightexceptions.eu web tool.

Panels

Four panel sessions followed, in which speakers presented the results of ReCreating Europe’s research. Discussants expressed their views on the research and ways to move forward. Each represented different stakeholder categories, from legal experts to policymakers and civil society.

Panel 1 focused on remuneration and reversion rights. Rebecca Giblin, Associate Professor, University of Melbourne and Director, IP Research Institute of Australia (IPRIA), chaired the panel. This session began with a presentation by Ula Furgal, Research Fellow, CREATe at the University of Glasgow, on the implementation of Art.21 CDSMD, the ‘use it or lose it’ logic underlying the right of revocation and the related legal mapping conducted across Europe. Thereafter, Joost Poort, Associate Professor and Vice-Director, IViR University of Amsterdam, presented on the evolving creators and performing artists’ perspectives on copyright and digitisation as well as the upcoming ReCreating Europe survey on this issue.

Eanna Casey, Chairman of the Board, Societies’ Council for the Collective Management of Performers’ Rights (SCARP) highlighted the key importance of Art.18, acknowledging the need for protection and just remuneration to artists and performers, the risk of its fragmented implementation, and the missing effort by representation organisations to tackle more comprehensively other provisions relevant to artists and performers.

Cecile Deniard, Vice-President of ATLF and its representative with the European Council of Literary Translators’ Associations (CEATL) stressed the ‘creator-friendly’ nature of the final version of CDSMD which recognises their weaker position in the market. Moreover, CEATL ran a flash survey to their members, finding a lack of awareness and transparency with regard to EU copyright reform processes. For good implementation of Art.18 CDSM, transparency and collective bargaining are key to achieve fair and proportionate remuneration to individual authors and artists. The right of revocation is not a goal itself for creators, but rather a last-resort measure, with practicality still in question.

Panel 2 focused on copyright exceptions and limitations and was chaired by Christophe Geiger, Professor of Law, CEIPI University of Strasbourg. Caterina Sganga and Thomas Margoni, Research Professor at KU Leuven and Fellow at CREATe, presented on the legal mapping of EU copyright flexibilities (that has been ongoing within the framework of ReCreating Europe and will be made available in the form of an encompassing public database by the end of 2022) and, more specifically, on the assessment of the new text and data mining (TDM) exceptions. Thereafter, Agustin Reyna, Director, Legal and Economic Affairs at BEUC advocated a consumer-oriented approach to EU reform. This approach is not quite fully embraced by the EU legislator, even though proposals have been made in the past to elevate exceptions and limitations to user’s rights. Current exceptions could fail to comply with EU consumer law safeguards and remedies.

Jeremy Rollinson, Senior Director of European Government Affairs at Microsoft, highlighted TDM exceptions and praised how provisions significantly improved and expanded their scope in the final draft of the Directive and are now being transposed into national laws mostly by ‘copy-paste’. By and large, Articles 3 and 4 provide much more clarity to users on what they are allowed to do with machine-readable data for research purposes. Microsoft is following this closely. They believe the European Commission took the correct approach on TDM exceptions, supporting the development, among others, of Artificial Intelligence.

Panel 3 focused on the rules for automated content-filtering. The chair of the panel was Eleonora Rosati, Professor of Intellectual Property Law, University of Stockholm. João Pedro Quintais, Assistant Professor, IViR University of Amsterdam, and Sebastian Schwemer, Associate Professor, CIIR University of Copenhagen, offered a detailed analysis to reconcile right holders, end-users, and platforms’ interests promoted by Art.17 CDSM Directive and its interplay with the Digital Services Act (DSA).

In response to the abovementioned presentation, Cédric Manara (Head of Copyright, Google) pointed out that the regulatory scene related to Art.17 CDSM Directive is still very much in flux, and that filtering is just one of the options that platforms have at their disposal to comply with Art.17 of the new Directive. This is also evident in the Guidelines recently released by the European Commission. National parliaments, and national courts, in turn, play a key role at this stage by transposing Art.17 at a political and legal level. The impact of platforms, which will have to implement mechanisms to manage the workflow occurring on them and manage all the sorts of claims (licensing claims, blocking claims, etc.), depends on the national implementations of the Directive as well as on the level of activity of right holders: the extent to which they will bring claims ex Art.17 and requests to the platform will significantly shape the post-CDSM online scenario.

Furthermore, Martin Husovec (Assistant Professor at LSE), focused on the question of fragmentation, suggesting that the CDSM Directive might have actually enhanced the level of fragmentation, rather than fostering harmonisation of the Digital Single Market. Art.17 represents an applicable example in this regard, with a decisive role being played by the CJEU Peterson decision on it.

Panel 4 focused on the preservation of cultural heritage, chaired by Andrea Wallace, Senior Lecturer in Law, University of Exeter. Giulia Dore, Research Fellow, University of Trento, and Marta Iljadica, Lecturer in Law, CREATe at the University of Glasgow, discussed the role and implementation of Art.6 CDSM Directive and the preservation of cultural heritage. They shared the preliminary results of the GLAM survey conducted by ReCreating Europe’s WP5. Serving as a discussant, Ariadna Matas, Policy Advisor at Europeana, spoke of the importance of having a new exception, helping to enhance harmonisation in GLAM sector regulation. However, he also stressed the need to take a more complete and holistic approach to help digitisation processes in cultural preservation. Additionally, Benjamin White, Chair of the Copyright Working Group at LIBER, picked up on the thread of the discussion on Art.6 CDSM Directive and further commented on the empirical data collected by ReCreating Europe. He drew attention to the need to embrace a global perspective over the preservation of cultural goods that particularly looks at approaches towards types of work, formats, and additional limitations to such uses. He asserted that this must assess the steps undertaken by the CDSM Directive as a good European development overall.

The conference concluded with remarks from the host, Caterina Sganga, and a call to explore the work of the project and possibilities to collaborate.

To learn more about the project, its activities and upcoming events, please visit the news section of this website. If you’d like to watch the webinar online, please visit the project’s YouTube channel.

https://www.recreating.eu/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/204403441_381316743412975_964604098483429152_n.png 788 940 Rosie Allison https://www.recreating.eu/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/recreatingEurope-logo.png Rosie Allison2021-07-16 08:52:072021-07-19 12:41:17Reflections on ‘The Implementation of the CDSM Directive: Snapshots into the Future of the EU Copyright Law’

Web conference on CDSM Directive

June 3, 2021/0 Comments/in Activities, Creative industries, End users, Galleries, Libraries, Museums & Archives, Intermediaries, News, Stakeholders /by Rosie Allison

“The implementation of the CDSM Directive: snapshots into the future of EU copyright law”

21 June 2021, 2:00 – 6:00 PM (CEST)

 

To register: CLICK HERE

 

In the context of our cross-disciplinary and transnational research activities, we are glad to invite you to our next web conference on the process of implementation of the CDSM Directive.

The conference will feature two keynote speakers, Professor Raquel Xalabarder (Universitat Oberta de Catalunya) and the First Advocate General Maciej Szpunar (Court of Justice of the EU), two presentations of CDSMD implementation trackers, and four thematic panels. Each panel will be devoted to a topic that is touched by the Directive and has been subject to ReCreating Europe’s research (exceptions and limitations, authors’ remunerations and reversion right, automated content-filtering, preservation of cultural heritage). The presentation of our interim results will be commented upon by respondents representing stakeholders, policymakers, legal experts and the civil society. We look forward to your participation in the discussion!

 

PROGRAM

2:00-2:05 pm – Greetings, introduction of reCreating Europe (Caterina Sganga, Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna – Coordinator, reCreating Europe)

Keynotes

2:05-2:20pm – The aftermath of CDMSD: where do we stand, where shall we go? (Raquel Xalabarder, Professor of Intellectual Property, Universitat Oberta de Catalunya)

2:20-2:35pm – The future of EU copyright harmonization: which role for the CJEU? (Maciej Szpunar, First Advocate General of the Court of Justice of the European Union)

2:35-2:45 Q&A

Intermezzo: implementation trackers

2:45-2:55pm – CDSMD implementation tracker (Martin Kretschmer, Professor and Director, CREATe – University of Glasgow)

2:55-3:05pm – The new copyrightexceptions.eu (Paul Keller, President, Communia)

Panel sessions

3:05-3:45pm – Panel 1: Remuneration and reversion rights

  • Chair: Rebecca Giblin (Associate Professor, University of Melbourne; Director, IP Research Institute of Australia (IPRIA))
  • Presenters: Ula Furgal (Research Fellow, CREATe – University of Glasgow), Joost Poort (Associate Professor and Vice-Director, IViR – University of Amsterdam)
  • Respondents: Eanna Casey (Chairman of the Board, Societies’ Council for the Collective Management of Performers’ Rights (SCARP)); Cecile Deniard (Vice-President, European Council of Literary Translators’ Associations (CEATL))

3:45-4:00pm Virtual coffee break (in breakout rooms)

4:00-4:40pm – Panel 2: A new era for copyright exceptions and limitations?

  • Chair: Christophe Geiger (Professor of Law, CEIPI – University of Strasbourg)
  • Presenters: Caterina Sganga (Associate Professor of Private Comparative Law, Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna), Thomas Margoni (Research Professor, KU Leuven; Fellow, CREATe)
  • Discussants: Agustin Reyna (Director, Legal and Economic Affairs, BEUC), Jeremy Rollinson (Senior Director of European Government Affairs, Microsoft)

4:40-5:20pm – Panel 3: Setting the rules for automated content-filtering

  • Chair: Eleonora Rosati (Professor of Intellectual Property Law, University of Stockholm)
  • Presenters: João Pedro Quintais (Assistant Professor, IViR – University of Amsterdam), Sebastian Schwemer (Associate Professor, CIIR – University of Copenhagen)
  • Discussants: Cédric Manara (Head of Copyright, Google), Martin Husovec (Assistant Professor, LSE)

5:20-6:00pm – Panel 4: Preservation of cultural heritage

  • Chair: Andrea Wallace (Senior Lecturer in Law, University of Exeter)
  • Presenters: Giulia Dore (Research Fellow, University of Trento), Marta Iljadica (Lecturer in Law, CREATe – University of Glasgow)
  • Discussants: Ariadna Matas (Policy Advisor, Europeana); Ben White (Chair of Copyright Working Group, LIBER)

 

https://www.recreating.eu/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/Copyright-law.jpg 620 935 Rosie Allison https://www.recreating.eu/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/recreatingEurope-logo.png Rosie Allison2021-06-03 16:03:392021-06-15 16:24:00Web conference on CDSM Directive

ReCreating Europe Celebrates World Intellectual Property (IP) Day 2021

April 25, 2021/0 Comments/in Activities /by Rosie Allison

Today more than ever, digital technologies are revolutionising our everyday life, the ways in which we express our creativity, access culture, information, and knowledge. Digital technologies carry the potential to enable unprecedented democratisation of our cultural practices related to both the production and consumption of music, literature, news, movies and so many other intellectual and artistic works.

Copyright law plays a fundamental role in turning this potential into reality. The discipline boasts an enduring European history, having traditionally interacted with the offline world for over three centuries. The entry into the scene of digital technologies represents a disruption that cannot be ignored. On the contrary, it needs to be taken seriously, as it represents a unique opportunity to modernize the European copyright legal framework.

We at ReCreating Europe are working in this direction. By bringing researchers, institutions, copyright experts, policymakers, and other stakeholders together, we investigate what is needed to support the emergence of a new effective system of sustainable norms for digital copyright.

It is in this spirit that today, which is the World IP Day 2021, our project joins the IP community worldwide to celebrate the importance of copyright for fostering creativity, innovation, and growth, and for promoting a culturally diverse production and inclusive access to cultural goods in Europe.

For us, IP does not just stand for intellectual property, but also for Inclusiveness Project. Modern intellectual property was born to include, not just to exclude. With our research and activities, we want to help legislators and the market to make sure that digital copyright law remains inclusive for all the stakeholders involved. This means for:

  • All end-users, also the most vulnerable ones, to ensure access and accessibility. We study the interplay between technology, digitalization, and regulation taking into account that end-users are not an anonymous and homogeneous bulk of consumers, but they are individuals with different preferences, characteristics, and backgrounds;
  • Individual authors and performers, no matter where they live and what they create, to ensure adequate remuneration and access to the market. We are specifically looking at the impact of new digital technologies, such as Artificial Intelligence, on creators and creative processes;
  • Creative industries, from the smallest and most isolated creative community to the big company, treasuring all forms of cultural and creative contributions. We are working with lawyers, geographers, and sociologists to investigate, among others, the effects of the territorial nature of copyright law in the EU Digital Single Market, new emerging business models in creative sectors that do not necessarily rely on intellectual property incentives, and best practices in reusing audiovisual materials in documentary filmmaking and other sectors.
  • Cultural heritage institutions, to empower their role of hubs of cultural democracy. We work closely with Galleries, Libraries, Archives and Museums to understand their position and collect their feedback, conducting quantitative and qualitative empirical research to determine the impact that copyright law and open policies have on the digitization of Europe’s cultural heritage;
  • Intermediaries, to make them lawful catalysts of information and creative expressions, and not dark censors. Our research focuses on copyright content moderation in online platforms and its impact on access to culture in the Digital Single Market. We look into how the law and the privacy practices, mechanisms and structures of different sized platforms interact and shape the ways in which users disseminate and access content cultural and creative expression through online platforms.

Listen to what our research team leaders have to say about their work towards ‘ReCreating’ European digital copyright:

If you want to know more and keep posted about ReCreating Europe’s research and activities, subscribe to our newsletter, and follow us on Twitter and Facebook.

A culturally diverse, accessible, and creative Europe is possible. Happy World IP Day to everyone!

 

 

[Photo by Everyday basics on Unsplash]

https://www.recreating.eu/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/everyday-basics-GJY1eAw6tn8-unsplash.jpg 899 600 Rosie Allison https://www.recreating.eu/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/recreatingEurope-logo.png Rosie Allison2021-04-25 09:00:462021-06-07 19:47:43ReCreating Europe Celebrates World Intellectual Property (IP) Day 2021

ReCreating Europe and COMMUNIA: together for European copyright exceptions and limitations

March 9, 2021/0 Comments/in News, Activities, Mapping, Measuring, Studying, WP2, WP5 /by Rosie Allison

 

In these lively times for copyright legislation across the EU, the work at ReCreating Europe is proceeding at full steam! We are happy to announce a collaboration with COMMUNIA within the frame of the legal mapping of copyright flexibilities in the EU and the 27 Member States, carried out by our Work Package 2 “End-users and access to culture”.

The synergy between ReCreating Europe and COMMUNIA stems from a fruitful exchange and mutual openness towards building meaningful digital resources of great informative impact and high-profile research quality. Both teams working respectively on the ReCreating Europe’s mapping on copyright flexibilities and COMMUNIA’s page copyrightexceptions.eu joined efforts in closely following the evolution of EU and national copyright provisions, relying on the expertise and participation of national legal experts, and providing an updated picture of copyright exceptions and limitations across the EU.

ReCreating Europe forthcoming database on copyright flexibilities will make available an unprecedented selection of legal provisions, private ordering mechanisms, and case law for stakeholders, researchers, users, and citizens. COMMUNIA is currently updating its masterful page on copyright exceptions, focusing on current legislative reforms and opening towards expert inputs from any interested users and page visitors. The updated page will be available in May of this year.

The collaboration represents a unique occasion for bringing the research on European copyright exceptions and limitations up to the next level. ReCreating Europe and COMMUNIA are glad to be together in the front line and genuinely committed to raise awareness and facilitate dialogue between national copyright cultures. Besides the resulting datasets that will be soon available online (and advertised on our ReCreating Europe website), further occasions of participation and exchange with stakeholders are about to follow: stay tuned!

https://www.recreating.eu/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Copyright-map.jpg 601 554 Rosie Allison https://www.recreating.eu/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/recreatingEurope-logo.png Rosie Allison2021-03-09 21:23:062021-03-10 08:35:26ReCreating Europe and COMMUNIA: together for European copyright exceptions and limitations
measuring

New survey

September 10, 2020/0 Comments/in Activities, Mapping, Measuring, Studying, WP5 /by niguli

ReCreating Europe is launching a survey to analyse the impact of copyright law and open policies in relation to digitisation in the GLAM sector. Read more

https://www.recreating.eu/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/measuring-g.png 54 54 niguli https://www.recreating.eu/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/recreatingEurope-logo.png niguli2020-09-10 17:33:292020-10-25 20:03:28New survey
Public and Regulatory Framework of Online Intermediaries: Workshop Report

Public and Regulatory Framework of Online Intermediaries: Workshop Report

May 19, 2020/0 Comments/in Activities, Past Events, Workshops & Conferences, WP6 /by niguli

Following what can only be described as a long and tortuous process, the EU legislative bodies adopted the Copyright in the Digital Single Market (CDSM) Directive in June 2019. Article 17 (former Article 13) on the new liability regime of online content sharing service providers (OCSSPs) occupies the center stage of the discourse on CDSM. Read more

https://www.recreating.eu/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/H2020-reCreating-Europe-WP6-Online-Workshop_5-May-2020_Pagina_001-770x510-1.png 510 770 niguli https://www.recreating.eu/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/recreatingEurope-logo.png niguli2020-05-19 14:47:112020-11-06 18:06:59Public and Regulatory Framework of Online Intermediaries: Workshop Report
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This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 870626

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