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Different approaches
have emerged in the EU and the US, and these seem sometimes difficult to
reconcile.
Béatrice Martinet, currently a research fellow at Stanford
and a regular contributor to the TTLF Technology Law & Policy News blog, has just published an intriguing paper
entitled 'Internet Intermediaries' Liability for
Copyright and Trademark Infringement: Reconciling the EU and U.S. Approaches', which can be accessed here.
Her contribution compares the legal
regulation of ISP liability for copyright and trademark infringements in the EU and the US, and provides guidelines and proposals on how to reconcile
the two approaches.
As explained by Béatrice:
"Over the past ten years, the potential liability of online service
providers for third party content has raised one of the most spirited and fascinating
debates in the legal arena, putting right holders, service providers and
Internet users at loggerheads.
In the United
States and in Europe, lawmakers have endeavored to resolve this tension by
enacting, more than ten years ago, a set of essentially consistent regulations
– most notably the U.S. D.M.C.A. and the EU E-commerce Directive – aimed at
fostering the growth of the digital economy, while not hampering the protection
of IP rights in the digital environment.
However,
courts in Europe and in the United States are facing increasing difficulties in
interpreting these regulations and adapting them to a new economic and
technical landscape that involves unprecedented levels of online piracy and new
kinds of online intermediaries. As a result, courts in Europe and in the United
States have reached contrasting conclusions and have failed to offer consistent
guidelines in an increasingly global market.
The present study purports to
show, after a short introduction (Part 1) that although the legal framework
regulating Internet intermediaries’ liability in Europe and in the United
States is globally consistent (Part 2), its interpretation by U.S. and
different courts in Europe has however been very different (Part 3). The last
part of this study offers a brief outline of the recently legislated and draft
reforms of copyright law in Europe and in the U.S. (Part 4.1) and concludes
that rather than through new legislative reforms, the U.S. and EU approaches to
online piracy could be reconciled through a more consistent interpretation of
our current legal frameworks and the implementation of a wide range of
business-driven solutions (Part 4.2)."
The 1709 Blog
welcomes such a timely contribution and hopes that its readers will enjoy it!
Béatrice is also on Twitter - follow @beamartinet to receive updates from her.
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