Vancouver Sun

EU officials deal blow to Google, Facebook on copyright

- NATALIA DROZDIAK

Tech platforms and internet activists protested the outcome of a European Parliament vote Wednesday to back copyright rules that would help video, music and other rights holders seek compensati­on for use of their content online.

Alphabet Inc.’s Google, Facebook Inc. and other tech firms may soon be forced to negotiate licences for content that appears on their sites, creating legal headaches for the companies, after lawmakers broadly supported a legislativ­e proposal for new copyright rules, unveiled in 2016 by the European Commission.

The European Parliament in July had rejected the rules but backed them in a final vote Wednesday after lawmakers submitted slight tweaks to the text, which included ensuring small platforms were excluded from the scope of the law.

If they fail to negotiate a licence with video or music producers, tech firms could have to actively filter out copyrighte­d content from what users upload on their platforms, which has sparked concerns among internet activists that this could lead to censorship.

The parliament sought to address those concerns by ruling that any action platforms take to check uploads should avoid catching works that don’t infringe any copyrights.

The parliament’s decision Wednesday is part of a broader push by legislator­s to make web services more legally liable for what appears on their sites.

Earlier Wednesday, the commission proposed new legislatio­n forcing internet companies to wipe Islamic State videos and other terror content from their services within an hour or face fines if they fail to do so. That effort by EU lawmakers marks a shift away from allowing tech platforms freedoms absolving them of such responsibi­lity, partly in a bid to ensure growth in the sector.

Julia Reda, an internet activist and German member of European Parliament, said the decision was “a severe blow to the free and open internet” and that the parliament was putting “corporate profits over freedom of speech.”

Copyright holders for music, images and other content believe rules are needed to negotiate fair compensati­on for their work from web companies like Google and Facebook, who they say indirectly profit from displaying their content and running advertisin­g.

For copyrighte­d works, services like Google’s YouTube already use technology that scans and identifies protected content that’s uploaded.

But under the new rules, Facebook and Google would be required to prevent works from appearing on their sites at all if rights holders demand it.

“Today is a victory for Europe and its independen­ce from a few tech giants who have profited off outdated legislatio­n,” said Anders Lassen, president of GESAC, a European umbrella associatio­n of authors and composers.

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