James Love on Fri, 23 Sep 2005 16:02:34 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> [Random-bits] Webcasting -- what rights do the webcasters want? |
[originally to random-bits@lists.essential.org] Today's (September 20, 2005) Washington Internet Daily has a story on the WIPO webcasting treaty proposal (attached at end of this note). It begins with a summary of the CPTech letter to Congress, and ends with a rebuttal from John Potter, the Executive Director of the Digital Media Assn. Mr. Potter says "there's nothing radical about a treaty to stop pirates from stealing and repackaging webcast signals without paying companies that spent money to create, license and transmit the programming." What he does not note is that all of these things can be addressed under existing copyright laws, if the material being webcast is copyrighted material, and if the webcaster has obtained sufficient rights from the copyright owner. While Potter and the Broadcasters love to talk about pirates, as though copyright law did not prohibit such unauthorized uses of copyrighted materials, the major debates at WIPO are not about protection against signal piracy. Indeed, all the consumer/civil society NGOs and most copyright owners who attend the WIPO negotiations asked for a treaty dealing with signal protection only. But the broadcasters don't need or want a treaty on signal piracy, since there are plenty of existing ways to address it (under regulatory regimes, like the FCC, or through copyright law, assuming they have the appropriate rights from the copyright holder), and what they really want are expanded economic rights in the content they transmit (for which they do not have a copyright). There are eight separate rights. You cannot read the rights and still maintain this is about piracy of a signal. It is about the rights to control the commercial distribution of someone else's content. (If the broadcasters did have the copyright, they would not need these rights). The US and the webcasters are seeking parity between the broadcasters and the webcasters. Everything that says "Broadcasting organizations" would be extended to webcasters, under the US proposals. How much of the web that would be covered is unclear, but the current definition includes all combinations or representations of images and sounds, which covers just about everything. Because the text is still a negotiating document, there are many inconsistencies, and different options are still being considered. Politically, it is possible to knock the webcasting provisions entirely out of the treaty, and to narrow the rights for the broadcasters somewhat. In the current draft, the treaty provides for the following rights (reporting the strongest proposals for each of the draft articles), for 50 years. (Yahoo and DIMA want these rights extended to webcasting). James Love, CPTech <james.love@cptech.org> Article 6: Right of Retransmission Broadcasting organizations shall enjoy the exclusive right of authorizing the retransmission of their broadcasts by any means, including rebroadcasting, retransmission by wire, and retransmission over computer networks. Article 7: Right of Communication to the Public Alternative L Broadcasting organizations shall enjoy the exclusive right of authorizing the communication to the public of their broadcasts, if such communication is made in places accessible to the public against payment of an entrance fee. [weaker alternatives omitted] Article 8: Right of Fixation Broadcasting organizations shall enjoy the exclusive right of authorizing the fixation of their broadcasts. Article 9: Right of Reproduction Alternative N Broadcasting organizations shall enjoy the exclusive right of authorizing the direct or indirect reproduction, in any manner or form, of fixations of their broadcasts. [weaker alternative omitted] Article 10: Right of Distribution Alternative P (1) Broadcasting organizations shall enjoy the exclusive right of authorizing the making available to the public of the original and copies of fixations of their broadcasts, through sale or other transfer of ownership. (2) Nothing in this Treaty shall affect the freedom of Contracting Parties to determine the conditions, if any, under which the exhaustion of the right in paragraph (1) applies after the first sale or other transfer of ownership of the original or a copy of the fixation of the broadcast with the authorization of the broadcasting organization. [weaker alternative omitted] Article 11: Right of Transmission Following Fixation Alternative JJ Broadcasting organizations shall have the exclusive right of authorizing the transmission of their broadcasts following fixation of such broadcasts. [weaker alternative omitted] Article 12: Right of Making Available of Fixed Broadcasts Alternative R Broadcasting organizations shall enjoy the exclusive right of authorizing the making available to the public of their broadcasts from fixations, by wire or wireless means, in such a way that members of the public may access them from a place and at a time individually chosen by them. [weaker alternative omitted] Article 13: Protection in Relation to Signals Prior to Broadcasting Broadcasting organizations shall enjoy adequate and effective legal protection against any acts referred to in Article 6 to 12 of this Treaty in relation to their signals prior to broadcasting. Article 15: Term of Protection Alternative DD The term of protection to be granted to broadcasting organizations under this Treaty shall last, at least, until the end of a period of 50 years computed from the end of the year in which the broadcast took place. Article 16: Obligations Concerning Technological Measures Alternative MM (1) Contracting Parties shall provide adequate legal protection and effective legal remedies against the circumvention of effective technological measures that are used by broadcasting organizations in connection with the exercise of their rights under this Treaty and that restrict acts, in respect of their broadcasts, that are not authorized or are prohibited by the broadcasting organizations concerned or permitted by law. Article 17: Obligations Concerning Rights Management Information (1) Contracting Parties shall provide adequate and effective legal remedies against any person knowingly performing any of the following acts knowing, or with respect to civil remedies having reasonable grounds to know, that it will induce, enable, facilitate or conceal an infringement of any right covered by this Treaty: (i) to remove or alter any electronic rights management information without authority; (ii) to distribute or import for distribution fixations of broadcasts, to retransmit or communicate to the public broadcasts, or to transmit or make available to the public fixed broadcasts, without authority, knowing that electronic rights management information has been without authority removed from or altered in the broadcast or the signal prior to broadcast. (2) As used in this Article, "rights management information" means information which identifies the broadcasting organization, the broadcast, the owner of any right in the broadcast, or information about the terms and conditions of use of the broadcast, and any numbers or codes that represent such information, when any of these items of information is attached to or associated with 1) the broadcast or the signal prior to broadcast, 2) the retransmission, 3) transmission following fixation of the broadcast, 4) the making available of a fixed broadcast, or 5) a copy of a fixed broadcast being distributed to the public. --------------------------- TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 2005 WASHINGTON INTERNET DAILY P5 Capitol Hill Congress should force U.S. negotiators to stop pushing to include webcasting in a new World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) broadcast treaty, the Consumer Project on Technology (CPT) said Mon. The WIPO General Assembly is scheduled this month to debate whether to update the treaty to give copyright protection to broadcast signals and extend that protection to webcasting. The U.S. govt. has been pressing for both -- unsettling consumer, library and tech groups as well as developing countries (WID Nov 19/04 p2). CPT said in a letter it objects to efforts by the U.S. Copyright Office and the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office (PTO) for a global treaty creating a new intellectual property regime for Internet content. The letter went to Sens. Stevens (R-Alaska), McCain (R-Ariz.), Pryor (D-Ark.), Wyden (D-Ore.), Kerry (D-Mass.), Hatch (R-Utah) and Leahy (D-Vt.); and Reps. Smith (R-Tex.), Berman (D-Cal.), Conyers (D-Mich.), Goodlatte (R-Va.), and Boucher (D-Va.). The broadcasting proposals "are basically a vastly expanded version of the broadcasters protections from the Rome Convention -- a treaty the U.S. has never signed, and are problematic in their own right," said CPT. As now written, the treaty would give broadcasters more commercial rights, lasting at least 50 years, for broadcasting materials -- in addition to copyright owners' rights. The treaty aims to give "quasi-copyright rights" to broadcasters solely for transmitting works, not for creative work, CPT wrote: "As bad as the broadcasting treaty is, it will be far worse to extend this restrictive regime to the Internet." CPT said Yahoo is behind the effort to include webcasting in the treaty because it wants parity between broadcasters and "an ill- defined group of 'webcasters.'" The issue of parity is sometimes expressed as a policy objective of creating a technology-neutral IP scheme, it said. But neutrality "should not excuse policy-makers from considering the consequences of extending a regime designed for one platform -- the Rome Convention-type protection for broadcasting organizations -- to something that is completely different in character and tradition -- the Internet." CPT criticized the Copyright Office and the PTO for refusing to solicit public views on new rights for webcasting. In the WIPO treaty talks, webcasters have argued points that have found favor with the U.S. govt., Digital Media Assn. (DiMA) Exec. Dir. Jon Potter said. They include: (1) Webcasting is an essential tool in the fight against online piracy of copyrighted works because it gives consumers legal alternatives. (2) Large Internet firms spend heavily to create and compile compelling programming, as broadcasters do, and there's no reason to protect even small broadcasters but leave webcasters open to piracy. (3) Broadcasting and webcasting are essentially identical. (4) Convergence makes the mode of transmission irrelevant. Moreover, Potter said, webcasts are easier to pirate than terrestrial broadcasts because they originate over the same digital networks used to resend stolen streams. Webcasting is starting to compete with broadcast, he said -- but if broadcasters alone can protect their signals, webcasters will have a tougher time licensing high-value content. Contrary to CPT's comments, there's nothing radical about a treaty to stop pirates from stealing and repackaging webcast signals without paying companies that spent money to create, license and transmit the programming, Potter added. -- DS --------------------------------- James Love, CPTech / www.cptech.org / mailto:james.love@cptech.org / tel. +1.202.332.2670 / mobile +1.202.361.3040 _______________________________________________ Random-bits mailing list Random-bits@lists.essential.org http://lists.essential.org/mailman/listinfo/random-bits ------------------------------------------------------- # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net