A few months ago the Court of Justice
of the European Union ('CJEU') issued its decision in Allposters [Katposts here; 1709 Blog posts here].
Article 4(2) of
the InfoSoc Directive directive
provides that the authorised first sale of a work within the territory of the
EU exhausts the right of the copyright owner to control any subsequent
distribution of the work in question.
What the CJEU had been asked to clarify
in Allposters was
whether this rule also applies to works that, following their authorised first
sale, are subject to an alteration of their mediums and are then re-marketed in
this new form.
The court referred to
both Recital 28 in the preamble to the InfoSoc Directive and Article 6 of the WIPO Copyright Treaty, including the Agreed
Statement on Articles 6 and 7, to hold the view that exhaustion of the right of
distribution only applies to the tangible copy of a work.
In so doing, albeit
rooted within a very specific (analogue) background, the CJEU appeared to rule
out any possibility of having digital exhaustion under the InfoSoc Directive.
Whether EU law allows digital exhaustion arguably
remains however an unresolved issue, with diverging interpretations being
provided at the level of national courts. Yet, despite the legal and economic
relevance of allowing markets for second-hand digital works, current EU
copyright reform plans seem regrettably not to include any consideration of
issues facing general digital exhaustion, or its lack thereof.
If you are interested in this case and
its implications, I have just completed an article [available here] which
will be published in the Journal of Intellectual Property Law & Practice in
due course.
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