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The spectacular success of electronic commerce in recent years has
seen an explosion in the availability of information and
entertainment products on the Internet. This distribution of
`content' is expected to continue as one of the major sources of
growth on the Internet in the years ahead, raising concerns over
the protection of content owners' rights. While the complex
copyright problems of the Internet have generated plenty of
literature and legislative initiatives, many important issues still
remain unresolved. Rights holders in the online marketplace thus
remain vulnerable to digital piracy and other forms of unauthorised
use. Concerns over the effectiveness of the copyright system in a
digital environment have inspired content providers to look for
alternative protection regimes or strategies. These alternatives,
such as the protection afforded by contract law and information
technology, comprise important elements of the Electronic Copyright
Management System (ECMS), a fully automated system of secure
distribution, rights management, monitoring and payment of
copyright-protected content currently being developed. Perhaps the
largest multidisciplinary study conducted on ECMS to date is the
IMPRIMATUR project, which was subsidised by the European
Commission's Esprit Programme, and for which the Institute for
Information Law of the University of Amsterdam (IViR) produced a
series of legal studies. This volume collects six fully revised and
updated studies relating to copyright and electronic commerce which
have resulted from the IViR's research. As well as examining the
legal issues crucial to the development of electronic copyright
management systems, the contributions address issues with wider
implications for the law of copyright in general. Other aspects of
information law are also considered, such as defamation, data
protection, privacy and freedom of expression and information, as
are general questions of contract and tort law.
The presence of a robust public domain is an essential precondition
for cultural, social and economic development and for a healthy
democratic process. But the public domain is under pressure as a
result of the ongoing march towards an information economy. Items
of information, which in the old-economy had little or no economic
value, such as factual data, personal data, genetic information and
pure ideas, have acquired independent economic value in the current
information age, and consequently become the object of property
rights making the information a tradable commodity. How and to what
extent does the commodification of information affect the free flow
of information and the integrity of the public domain? Does the
freedom of expression and information, guaranteed inter alia in the
European Convention on Human Rights, call for active state
intervention to 'save' the public domain? What means - both legal
and practical - are available or might be conceived to guarantee
and foster a robust public domain? These were the main questions
that were addressed in a major collaborative research project led
by the Institute for Information Law of the University of Amsterdam
(IViR) in co-operation with the Tilburg Institute for Law,
Technology and Society (TILT) of Tilburg University, and funded by
ITeR, the Dutch National Program for Information Technology and
Law. Thirteen contributions from academia worldwide make up the
present book, addressing the future of the public domain from a
different angle. In addition, all authors were invited to reflect
upon the notion and role of the public domain in the context of
information law and policy. Should this concept be limited to that
of a 'negative' image of (intellectual) property protection, i.e.
all publicly available information not subject to a property right,
and therefore freely (i.e. gratis) available, or should a broader
approach be taken, e.g. all information available from public
sources at affordable cost? Should information policies be aimed at
maximizing the public domain or optimizing information flows? To
what extent are these aims congruent? This book takes a broader,
'information law' oriented approach towards the question of
preserving the public domain, in which a wide range of interrelated
legal questions converge. Issues treated in this book include:
economic analysis of the public domain; fundamental rights analysis
of the public domain; impact of the application of technological
protection measures and contractual restrictions on the public
domain; the impact of the expansion of copyright, database right
and patent rights on the public domain; the impact of the
commodification of private data, government information, indigenous
knowledge on the public domain; and the capacity of the Open Source
and Creative Commons Movements to preserve the integrity of the
public domain. "The Future of the Public Domain" is an important
work for all those interested or involved in the regulation of the
knowledge economy. Legal scholars, academic and research
institutions, corporate counsel, lawyers, government policymakers
and regulators - all these and more will benefit enormously from
the thoughtful and incisive discussions presented here.
Nobody likes today's copyright law. Widespread unauthorized use of
copyright material proliferates with impunity, while citizens and
users protest that intrusive copyright and related rights law
stifle cultural expression. Equipment manufacturers and
intermediaries complain about yet more 'security' features that
complicate their products and services and encumber marketing,
while content owners desperately want enforcement to work. And of
course it is crucial that whatever regulatory instruments come into
play must not age prematurely in Internet time. The European Union
faces the daunting challenge of articulating coherent copyright
policies that satisfy these contradictory multiple demands. Yet the
legal framework must conform to the European Union's remit of
fostering economic growth in a common market, while respecting the
national traditions of its still growing family of Member States.
Clearly, an extraordinary balancing act is called for if justice is
to be done to all of the private and public interests affected. So
how has the European acquis communautaire scored on these issues so
far? In this groundbreaking study the Institute for Information Law
of the University of Amsterdam brings its extensive academic
expertise to bear on this question. The authors scrutinize the
present law as laid down in the seven copyright and related rights
directives, against the background of the relevant international
standards of the Berne Convention, the TRIPs agreement, and the
WIPO Internet Treaties. They map out in detail the degree to which
certain areas of copyright have been harmonized as they expose the
gaps and inconsistencies in the acquis and the urgent unresolved
issues that persist. They identify the EU's ambitions in relation
to its present and future competences (following the Lisbon Reform)
to regulate copyright, and to its Better Regulation agenda.
Following a comprehensive analysis of almost two decades of
regulatory intervention, they move on the salient current trends
that point toward a more coherent and balanced European copyright
law. This book will be welcomed by all those interested or involved
in the regulation of copyright and related rights law. Legal
scholars, academic and research institutions, corporate counsel,
lawyers, government policymakers, and regulators - all these and
more will benefit enormously from the profound analysis presented
here.
International Copyright surveys and analyzes the legal doctrines
affecting copyright practice around the world, in both
transactional and litigation settings. It provides a step-by-step
methodology for advising clients involved in exploiting creative
works in or from foreign countries. Written by two of the most
esteemed experts of copyright law in the United States and Europe,
this volume is a unique synthesis of copyright law and practice,
taking into account the Berne Convention, the TRIPs Agreement, the
ongoing harmonization of copyright in the European Union, and the
impact of the Internet. National copyright rules on protectible
subject matter, ownership, term, and rights are covered in detail
and compared from country to country, as are topics on moral rights
and neighboring rights. Separate sections cover such important
topics as territoriality, national treatment and choice of law, as
well as the treaty and trade arrangements that underlie substantive
copyright norms.
International Copyright: Principles, Law, and Practice surveys and
analyzes the legal doctrines affecting copyright practice around
the world, in both transactional and litigation settings. It
provides a step-by-step methodology for advising clients involved
in exploiting creative works in or from foreign countries. Written
by two of the most esteemed experts of copyright law in the United
States and Europe, this volume is a unique synthesis of copyright
law and practice, taking into account the Berne Convention, the
TRIPs Agreement, the ongoing harmonization of copyright in the
European Union, and the impact of the Internet. National copyright
rules on protectible subject matter, ownership, term, and rights
are covered in detail and compared from country to country, as are
topics on moral rights and neighboring rights. Separate sections
cover such important topics as territoriality, national treatment
and choice of law, as well as the treaty and trade arrangements
that underlie substantive copyright norms.
This book is essential for all those with an active interest in the
challenges to copyright posed by the Internet and the emerging
information superhighway. It contains a unique collection of
papers, written by the world's foremost copyright scholars and
practitioners, presented at the colloquium on The Future of
Copyright in a Digital Environment in Amsterdam on July 6-7, 1995.
This colloquium was organized by the Royal Netherlands Academy of
Sciences (KNAW) and the Institute for Information Law at the
University of Amsterdam. The collection of papers is the first to
cover the complete range of problems involved, including the scope
of protected rights on the information superhighway, the
application of exemptions and limitations, the collective
administration of rights, resolving conflicts of law in an
environment where territoriality is obsolete, alternatives to
copyright protection and designing copyright for the future. This
book will prove a useful source of information for all those
investigating the profound impact of the emerging digital
environment on copyright law.
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