Sunday 29 December 2013

Internet legal developments to look out for in 2014 (Updated)

[Updated with progress as at 20 December 2014 and further updated 7 October 2015]

And see: Cyberlaw Memes and Themes for 2014

2013 has been a busy year for cyberlaw. But what does 2014 hold? Here are some developments in the UK and EU pipeline.

1.  Defamation Act 2013. This legislation comes into force in a few days’ time, on Wednesday 1 January 2014.   

  • It provides website operators with complete defamation immunity for identifiable third party posts and qualified protection for anonymous posts.
  • As a result of the 2009 European Court of Human Rights judgment in the Times Newspapers internet archive case we will now have a single publication rule which puts an end to rolling limitation periods for online defamation. 
  • The new ‘booksellers defence’ bars defamation actions against secondary publishers unless it is not reasonably practicable to proceed against the author, editor (if any) or commercial publisher (if any). This will include online intermediaries.  
  • There will now be a bar on proceedings against non-European defendants, unless of all places in which the statement has been published, England and Wales is clearly the most appropriate place in which to bring an action. While this is framed as a general restriction on forum-shopping, it will be especially relevant to actions founded on the mere accessibility in England and Wales of a foreign internet publication. 
The Act does not apply to Northern Ireland, nor do the provisions discussed apply to Scotland.

2. New copyright exceptions. Following the Hargreaves Report new and amended copyright exceptions are slated to come into force by 6 April 2014. These will cover archive & preservation, quotations, educational use, disabled access, private study, text and data analytics, parody and private copying (format shifting). Draft statutory instruments for all these were published for technical review during 2013. Separately, new provisions for orphan works, extended collective licensing schemes and regulation of collecting societies are in the pipeline. And don’t forget the European Commission’s Public Consultation on its review of EU copyright rules, which closes on 5 February 2014. [The copyright exceptions were intended (per the Minister in the IP Bill 2nd Reading Debate) to be laid before Parliament in February 2014 for debate under affirmative resolution procedure. Draft regulations were in fact laid before Parliament and published, together with a response to the technical review, explanatory notes, guidance and other supporting documents, on 27 March 2014 with a view to coming into force on 1 June 2014. All except the parody and private copying exceptions did so. These two exceptions were deferred following questions from the Joint Committee on Statutory Instruments. The drafts were then reissued for debate in Parliament, passed and come into force on 1 October 2014. Following a challenge by judicial review the private copying exception regulation has since been quashed.] [The European Commission Consultation response date was extended until 5 March 2014 and is now closed. 11,117 submissions were received.]


3. Blocking ordersConstantin Films v UPC is pending in the CJEU. This is a case on copyright blocking orders. The Advocate General issued his Opinion on 26 November 2013. In the continuing absence of an English version, here are the Court’s Press Release and my summary of the Opinion. A judgment during 2014 is likely. [The CJEU issued its judgment on 27 March 2014. Comments here.]

4. Copyright and linking. Three cases pending before the CJEU are about whether various types of linking can infringe the copyright communication to the public right. These are Svensson, C More Entertainment and BestWater. BestWater has been stayed pending Svensson, which appears to be heading towards judgment, probably during 2014, without the benefit of an Advocate General’s Opinion. Svensson has provoked two bodies, the European Copyright Society and the International Literary and Artistic Association (ALAI), to issue conflicting opinions on how linking issues should be decided. Also look out for Football Dataco v Stan James in the UK Supreme Court, a database right case under appeal on the question of joint liability. [Svensson judgment issued on 13 February 2014. Discussion here.]

5. Online copyright jurisdiction. Pez Hejduk is a pending reference to the CJEU concerning cross-border jurisdiction over online copyright infringement.  Most likely it will regard Pinckney as having already answered the Pez Hejduk questions. Also look out for Blomqvist, a CJEU case which has online aspects concerning the territoriality of the copyright distribution right and of trade marks. [Blomqvist judgment issued on 6 February 2014. Summary here. AG Opinion in Pez Hejduk issued on 11 September 2014 (not yet in English). CJEU judgment in Pez Hejduk issued on 22 January 2015. Opted for mere accessibility as the threshold for jurisdiction over online copyright infringement.]

6. Intermediary liability. Papasavvas, another pending CJEU reference, asks questions about the scope of the Electronic Commerce Directive provisions on internal market and intermediary liability. The internal market questions look very similar to those already answered in eDate/Martinez. Some aspects of the intermediary liability questions may provide the CJEU with an opportunity to comment on the Delfi decision of the European Court of Human Rights. [17 Feb 2014 ECHR Grand Chamber decides to refer Delfi case (i.e. hear an appeal). Hearing on 9 July according to AdVox. Papasavvas judgment issued 11 September 2014. No surprises. Confirms previous CJEU caselaw, including application of eDate/Martinez to defamation. No mention of Delfi.]

7. Copyright and temporary copies The pending NLA v PRCA reference to the CJEU should determine whether a user’s web browsing is an activity that requires the permission of the copyright owner. The UK Supreme Court thought not, but decided that the question required an EU-wide answer from the CJEU. [CJEU judgment issued 5 June 2014. Browsing permission not required.]

8. PRISM, TEMPORA, Snowden. Watch out for the legal challenges launched by various public interest groups following the Snowden revelations. These include two applications (by Liberty and Privacy International) to the Investigatory Powers Tribunal and a case taken (by Big Brother Watch, the Open Rights Group, English PEN and Dr Constanze Kurz) direct to the European Court of Human Rights. [In the latter the ECtHR requested the UK Government to provide written observations on admissibility and merits by 2 May 2014. The complaint has been stayed pending the outcome of the IPT cases (hearings July 2014). The IPT found that the challenged activities (PRISM intelligence sharing and the hypothetical use of RIPA S.8(4) warrants for TEMPORA were,
 in the light of disclosures of practices and policies made by the government during the proceedings, 'in accordance with the law' going forwards. The position prior to the disclosures would require further consideration. In a further judgment the IPT found that PRISM intelligence receipt prior to the disclosures made in the proceedings contravened Articles 8 and 10 ECHR. In the meantime the CJEU on 8 April 2014 invalidated the Data Retention Directive. As a result the UK government substantially relegislated the Data Retention Regulations 2009 in the Data Retention and Regulatory Powers Act (DRIPA). On 8 December 2014 MPs David Davis and Tom Watson (represented by Liberty) were granted permission to proceed with a judicial review of S.1 DRIPA, with the Open Rights Group and Privacy International intervening. The High Court disapplied S.1 on 17 July 2015, suspended until 31 March 2016. My mindmap of the UK interception legal landscape as at 7 October 2015:]





9. The saga of the Digital Economy Act 2010. The May 2013 Online Infringement of Copyright Roundtable minutes state that letters are not contemplated to start going out until ‘the latter half of 2015’. None of the necessary cost sharing statutory instruments has yet been laid before Parliament, a Treasury approval mechanism seems to be in play, and there is a General Election between now and then.  It could cost participating rightsowners collectively up to £10 million (to March 2015) in OFCOM cost sharing charges to take it forward. [Voluntary letters scheme 'Creative Content UK' announced 19 July 2014.]

See also: Cyberlaw Memes and Themes for 2014


1 comment:

  1. I am not sure it is fair to say "As a result of the 2009 European Court of Human Rights judgment in the Times Newspapers internet archive case we will now have a single publication rule ..." since the court found that the interference with article 10 caused by our existing rules on publication were "necessary in a democratic society" particular on the grounds that a Loutchansky notice is possible.

    While I absolutely see problems with the existing situation, the "single publication" rule as drafted assumes a model that one publishes and then "archives" that publication. But that is not how the internet works. Something may be (say) blogged but unnoticed and then suddenly tweeted/found by google etc and achieve prominence. The single publication rule really doesn't do justice to such situations.

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