Daily Dispatch

EU approves new digital copyright rules

-

Google will have to pay publishers for news snippets and Facebook will have to filter out protected content under new copyright rules aimed at ensuring fair compensati­on for the European Union’s $1-trillion (R14-trillion) creative industries.

EU government­s have backed the move launched by the European Commission two years ago to protect Europe’s creative industries, which employ 11.7 million people in the bloc.

“When it comes to completing Europe’s digital single market, the copyright reform is the missing piece of the puzzle,” the Commission’s president JeanClaude Juncker said.

Under the new rules, Google and other online platforms will have to sign licensing agreements with musicians, performers, author and news publishers to use their work.

The European Parliament gave a green light in March to a proposal that has pitted Europe’s creative industry against tech companies, internet activists and consumer groups. Wikipedia blacked out several European sites in protest in March, while the change was opposed by Finland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherland­s, Poland and Sweden.

But 19 countries, including France and Germany, endorsed the revamp, while Belgium, Estonia and Slovenia abstained.

Under the new regime, Google-owned YouTube, Facebook’s Instagram and other sharing platforms will have to install filters to prevent users from uploading copyrighte­d materials.

Google said the new rules would hurt Europe’s creative and digital economies, while critics said it would hit cashstrapp­ed smaller companies rather than the tech giants.

EU lawmaker for the European Pirate Party Julia Reda, who had campaigned against the reforms, said critics could take their case to court but it would be slow and difficult and that the best thing would be to monitor fair implementa­tion.

EU countries have two years to transpose the copyright directive into national laws.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa