Categories
Intellectual Property Piracy

The Dgital reader: Apple Raises iPad Prices in Germany to Cover a New a New “You Must be a Pirate” Tax

Posted from Diigo.

Categories
Business Models Case Law Intellectual Property

For Pandora, Ruling on Streaming Royalty Rates Is Crucial – The New York Times

Posted from Diigo.

Categories
Business Models Piracy

The Digital Reader: Google’s “Temporary” Shut Down of Its eBook Publisher Portal Approaches the Six-Month Mark

Posted from Diigo.

Categories
Intellectual Property

The IPKat: EU Commission due to issue legislative proposal on content portability in spring 2016, wants to make some exceptions mandatory, and dreams of full copyright harmonisation

Posted from Diigo.

Categories
Intellectual Property Libri

Corte di Giustizia UE: Digitalizzazione dei libri delle biblioteche pubbliche

  • “Uno Stato membro può autorizzare le biblioteche a digitalizzare, senza il consenso dei titolari dei diritti, determinati libri della loro collezione al fine di proporli su posti di lettura elettronica.

  • Gli Stati membri possono, entro certi limiti e a determinate condizioni qual i il pagamento di un equo compenso ai titolari dei diritti, autorizzare gli utilizzatori a stampare su carta o a memorizzare su una chiave USB i libri digitalizzati dalla biblioteca”

  • Posted from Diigo.
Categories
Intellectual Property

Julia Reda – Reda Report adopted: A turning point in the copyright debate

Posted from Diigo.

Categories
Intellectual Property

Copyright in the new Belgian Code of Economic Law: codification and new regulation | Kluwer Copyright Blog

Posted from Diigo.

Categories
Antitrust Intellectual Property

Second-hand e-book seller complains about Dutch publishers – POLITICO

Posted from Diigo.

Categories
Intellectual Property

Farida Shaheed, United Nations Special Rapporteur, on Copyright policy and the right to science and culture

Farida Shaheed, the United Nations Special Rapporteur in the field of cultural rights, delivered a very intense and straightforward Report on  Copyright policy and the right to science and culture (A/HRC/28/57)

She summarizes its key points:

“1) First, intellectual property rights are not human rights. This equation is false and misleading. In some ways, copyright policy falls short of adequately protecting authorship, in other ways it often goes too far, unnecessarily limiting cultural freedom and participation.

2) Second, authors must be distinguished from copyright-holders. The right to protection of authorship remains with the human author(s) whose creative vision gave expression to the work, even when the copyright interest has been sold to a corporate publisher or distributer. We should always keep in mind that copyright regimes may under-protect authors because producers/publishers/distributors and other “subsequent right-holders” typically exercise more influence over law-making than individual creators, and may have divergent and possibly opposing interests to those of the creators.

3) Third, protection of authorship as a human right requires in some ways more and in other ways less than what is currently found in the copyright laws of most countries. This holds true for both the moral and the material interests of authors.”

This is the second of a group of Reports by Rapporteur Farida Shaheed on that subject. The first focused on cultural rights, the third one will examine the connection between the right to science and culture and patent policy.

 

Categories
Intellectual Property Piracy

Using piracy data for marketing purposes – Future of Copyright

Posted from Diigo.