Auteursrechten-federatie reageert tegen beslissing Europese Commissie

Dit is een gearchiveerd bericht

13.10.2008

De Europese Commissie besliste onlangs dat wie zich wil aansluiten bij een auteursvereniging, dat moeten kunnen doen bij gelijkwelke vereniging in Europa. Zo een systeem zou auteurs/componisten vrijheid van keuze bieden, door onderlinge competitie de managementkosten verminderen en efficiëntere rechtenpartities teweeg brengen. CISAC, de internationale federatie van auteursverenigingen, is tegen de beslissing.

De beslissing van de Europese Commissie kwam er na een klacht van RTL en de Britse groep Music Choice. Beiden leveren pan-Europese diensten en moeten  tot op heden onderhandelen met elke individuele auteursvereniging afzonderlijk. Zij pleiten dan ook voor één pan-Europese licentie.

Verschillende artiesten en auteursverenigingen veroordelen de beslissing en stellen dat competitie tussen de auteursvereningen ten koste zal gaan van de culturele diversiteit. CISAC publiceerde op 8 oktober dit persbericht:

CISAC, the International Confederation of Societies of Authors and Composers, has recently lodged an appeal against the European Commission Decision of July 16 in the Court of First instance of the European Communities.

Contrary to the European Commission’s findings in its Decision, CISAC considers European authors’ societies have not engaged in concerted practice that restrict competition and have therefore not violated European competition law provisions. The network of authors’ societies – organised through reciprocal representation agreements between societies – best serve creators’ interest. It is the result of pure common sense for the efficient management of creators’ rights worldwide and not a concerted practice to prevent competition, as alleged by the Commission.

“There is a perfectly good and practical reason that each bilateral Reciprocal Agreement has territorial restrictions. It has nothing whatsoever to do with concerted practices. It is at this point that the societies are pushed into competing by a “race to the bottom” on royalty value. This would do incalculable harm to the writer community,” argued Robin Gibb, the famous composer and songwriter who serves as President of CISAC in a Keynote speech at Popkomm today.

The EC Decision creates a climate of legal uncertainty for rights-owners and users. And one of the direct results of a Decision that forbids multilateral coordination between authors’ societies multi territorial licensing for internet, satellite and cable has been to put an end to promising initiatives of CISAC and its members to develop an alternative and consensual pan-European licensing model for online use of creative content.

“Since the pioneering Santiago agreements in 2000, CISAC and its members have long been committed to providing a new framework for multi-territorial licensing of musical works. Unfortunately, the confusing and flawed July Decision is not part of the solution but part of the problem. We hope that the court of first instance will provide the clarity that rights holders, music users and the public need for a thriving online content market in the EEA” commented Eric Baptiste, Director General of CISAC, during a EUobserver conference in Brussels the same day.

Although it was not an addressee of the Decision, CISAC is a party which is directly concerned by the confusion and the paralysis resulting from the flawed Decision. CISAC is requesting that the European courts annul the Decision. In parallel, 22 authors’ societies of the European Economic Area and member of CISAC have also appealed the EC Decision.

Ook op de afgelopen Duitse muziekbeurs Popkomm was dit dus natuurlijk een hot topic. Componist en songschrijver Robin Gibb (BeeGees) leverde er een vurige keynote speech rond auteursrecht af. Je kan de speech hier nalezen.

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