Like to ask questions? |
It is however difficult to think of consultations that have translated into actual reform proposals.
The 2008 Green Paper on Copyright in the Knowledge Economy included a call for comments (about 350 were received) on issues
pertaining to exceptions and limitations in Article 5 of the InfoSoc Directive.
Nothing changed as a result of this stakeholder exercise, unless you consider
the creation of the Content Online Platform, ie a “stakeholders’ discussion and cooperation platform”, an actual
step forward for EU copyright reform debate. The outcome of the 2009
Consultation on Creative Content Online
was not more encouraging. Despite being aimed at discussing the challenges facing
digitization of content and distribution channels, it attracted around 200
responses (more than 40% down on its 2008 predecessor), and passed unnoticed
outside niche – possibly too niche – circles.
Switching for a
moment away from public consultations, in its 2011 blueprint ambitiously titled
A Single Market for Intellectual Property
Rights boosting creativity and innovation to provide economic growth, high
quality jobs and first class products and services in Europe, the
Commission anticipated a number of (minor, I think) legislative initiatives (on
orphan works and collective rights management) and – again – a new round of
consultations on two topical copyright issues, ie further harmonization of copyright laws of Member States, and
re-opening the InfoSoc Directive. While the EU has adopted specific directives
on orphan works (Directive 2012/28) and collective rights management (Directive2014/26), no progress has been made on the front of the two really big policy issues
identified in the blueprint.
Enjoy daydreaming? |
This may not be the
worst case scenario though.
What is most
worrisome is the high – and at times fairly intolerable – degree of
partisanship of those involved in the copyright debate and the instrumental use
that the Commission itself has made of the instrumental data thus collected.
In a recent
briefing prepared for the European Parliament, Adapating the EU Copyright Rules to the Digital Transformation,
Stéphane Reynolds reviewed the implementation, application and effectiveness of
EU copyright policy over the past few years. He observed that public
consultations have featured prominently and have essentially served to gather
and confirm qualitative, rather than quantitative, data. In other words, you
were not mistaken in thinking that all those stakeholder exercises looked like sort
of a déjà-vu: they were.
There might be places where all this is daily business! |
Where is EU copyright policy heading? Besides
well-known refrains on competitiveness and effectiveness of the EU single
market, its direction remains unclear. Moreover, it seems that repeatedly asking
the same people might not help see the way.
The next Commission will hopefully appreciate the actual
legacy (if any) of these years spent consulting, as well as the quality of the
data used to carry out the most recent (minor) reform agenda. But will it?
NOTE: This post is a forthcoming Editorial for the Journal of Intellectual Property Law & Practice which - incidentally - has also a blog and Twitter account.
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