Professional Documents
Culture Documents
JURISPRUDENCE – 2010
Presented by
INTRODUCTION .............................................................................................................. 1
1 – INTERNET .......................................................................................................................... 2
2 – ORIGINALITY .................................................................................................................... 2
3 – INFRINGEMENT ................................................................................................................ 3
5 – REGISTRATION ................................................................................................................. 6
6 – PROCEDURE ...................................................................................................................... 6
7 – CIVIL REMEDIES............................................................................................................... 8
10.1 Australia............................................................................................................ 24
10.2 Europe............................................................................................................... 28
10.3 United Kingdom................................................................................................ 31
10.4 Ireland............................................................................................................... 37
10.5 Singapore .......................................................................................................... 38
10.6 United States ..................................................................................................... 39
11 - INDUSTRIAL DESIGNS.................................................................................................. 46
CONCLUSION ................................................................................................................ 46
CANADIAN COPYRIGHT, DESIGN AND RELATED LEGISLATION AND
JURISPRUDENCE – 2009
Glen Bloom,1 Barry Sookman,2 Barry Fong,3 Jeremy Brisset,4 Christopher Scotchmer,5
and Mekhriban Mamedova6
INTRODUCTION
The highlight for copyright law in 2010 in Canada was the introduction into Parliament of Bill
C-32, the Copyright Modernization Act. Bill C-32 has been given second reading and is now
being considered by the Parliamentary Committee of the House of Commons on Bill C-32.
Whether Bill C-32 will pass into law will likely depend on the timing of the next federal election.
Bill C-32 seeks to amend the Copyright Act to enable Canada to ratify the WIPO Copyright
Treaty and the WIPO Performances and Phonograms Treaty. In addition, there are a number of
new exceptions including an extension of fair dealing to cover users for the purposes of
education, parody and satire and new exceptions for educational institutions. A discussion of
Bill C-32 is however beyond the scope of this paper.
Based upon the jurisprudence, the year 2010 can be known as the year of judicial review. There
were seven decisions of the Federal Court of Appeal on multiple applications for judicial review
of decisions of the Copyright Board. On the whole, the decisions of the Board stood up to
judicial scrutiny. Only one application was fully successful, but only in part.
This paper follows the format of the Law Society’s copyright update in prior years with an
exception in comparison with more recent years. This year the paper includes decisions of the
Copyright Board of Canada, as there is no separate paper on those decisions.
1
Glen Bloom is a partner of Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt LLP, and practises in the Ottawa office.
2
Barry Sookman is a partner of McCarthy Tétrault LLP, and practises in the Toronto office.
3
Barry Fong is an associate in the Ottawa office of Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt LLP.
4
Jeremy Brisset is a student-at-law in the Montréal office of Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt LLP.
5
Christopher Scotchmer is an articling student in the Toronto office of McCarthy Tétrault LLP.
6
Mekhriban Mamedova is an articling student in the Toronto office of McCarthy Tétrault LLP.
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1 – INTERNET
Broadcasting under the Broadcasting Act is not directed at retail ISPs, which
is similar to an earlier finding that ISPs do not communicate for purposes of the
Copyright Act: Broadcasting Act (Can.) (Re).7 The Canadian Radio-television and
Telecommunications Commission referred to the Federal Court of Appeal the
question “Do retail Internet service providers (ISPs) carry on, in whole or in part,
"broadcasting undertakings" subject to the Broadcasting Act when, in their role as
ISPs, they provide access through the Internet to "broadcasting" requested by end-
users?”. The Court answered no. Retail ISPs do not carry on “broadcasting
undertakings” under the Broadcasting Act. Drawing on an analogy on the word
“communicate” under the Copyright Act, “broadcasting” is directed at the person who
transmits a program. A retail ISP’s sole involvement is to provide the mode of
transmission not to transmit the program.
2 – ORIGINALITY
Sufficient originality was found in the plaintiff’s house design plan to benefit
from protection under the Copyright Act: Constructions Première Classe inc. c.
Beaulieu.9 A house designed and built by Construction Première Classe included
certain substantial characteristics which conferred originality upon the entirety of the
work and allowed them to benefit from protection under the Copyright Act. No
transaction was demonstrated which would have assigned or given a right to use the
copyrighted material to the defendant. The Quebec Court (Civil Division) held in
favour of the plaintiff and awarded $25,000 as compensatory damages and $6,000 for
judicial and extrajudicial fees. Moreover, the Court limited punitive damages to
7
2010 FCA 178.
8
2009 QCCS 6392.
9
2010 QCCQ 1710.
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$1,000, as the defendant only used the plans for the construction of his own
residence.
3 – INFRINGEMENT
10
2010 QCCA 1287.
11
2010 QCCS 4463.
12
2010 FC 27.
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3.3 Counterfeiting
A fine of $4000 and a six-month conditional sentence was imposed for a guilty
plea to breach of section 42(1)(b) of the Copyright Act: R. v. Hirani.15 The accused
plead guilty to an indictment of offering for sale an infringing copy of a work
contrary to section 42(1)(b) after electing to be tried in the Provincial Court. A
shipping container with boxes of fake brand name watches, purses, shoes and other
items was seized by Canadian Border Services Agency, and an undercover officer
attended at the store of the accused to purchase items and certificates of authenticity.
The accused had no criminal record, was remorseful, had had her life adversely
affected by the loss of her business, was not living off significant profits made from
illegal activity, and was unlikely to reoffend. The sentence included a fine of $4,000
and a six-month conditional sentence to be served in the community.
13
2010 FC 1099.
14
2010 FC 1099.
15
2010 BCPC 205.
-5-
16
2010 FCA 123.
17
2010 FCA 198.
18
2010 FCA 198.
19
2010 QCCQ 9886.
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5 – REGISTRATION
6 – PROCEDURE
Motions to set aside default judgments were dismissed where the defendants
failed to provide a reasonable explanation for their failure to file statements of
defence in a timely manner and bring their motions within a reasonable time:
Society of Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of Canada v. 564163 Ontario
Ltd. (c.o.b. Studio 4 Tavern).21 The defendants brought motions to set aside default
judgments granted by the Federal Court on January 22, 2009. The default judgments
were granted in actions commenced by the plaintiff seeking to recover unpaid
royalties for unlicensed use of musical works in adult entertainment clubs operated by
the defendants. The Court held that the defendants failed to satisfy the three
conjunctive elements of the test to be applied on a motion to set aside a default
judgment. There was no reasonable explanation for the defendants’ failure to file
statements of defence in a timely manner and the Court was not persuaded that the
motions to set aside the default judgment were brought within a reasonable time. The
motions were dismissed.
Summary judgment was granted where there was no genuine issue for trial
with respect to an allegation of copyright infringement in seven karaoke songs:
Entral Group International Inc. v. Mcue Enterprise Corp. 22 The plaintiffs brought a
20
2010 FCA 229.
21
2010 FC 905.
22
2010 FC 606.
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motion for summary judgment in an action in the Federal Court for copyright
infringement. The plaintiffs owned copyright in seven karaoke songs, and would
enter into licence agreements with various international record labels for exclusive
rights in exchange for licence fees. The defendant karaoke entertainment company
installed the songs on a specialized computer system without the consent of the
plaintiffs. Several cease and desist letters were sent, but aside from asking for
particulars, the defendant took no steps to licence the songs but continued to use the
works without authorization. As the defendants did not file materials in response,
there was nothing that questioned the accuracy or truthfulness of the plaintiffs'
account of the dispute. The evidence established infringement by the defendants, and
the declaratory and injunctive relief sought was appropriate in the circumstances. The
plaintiffs were awarded statutory damages of $105,000 on the basis of $15,000 for
each work infringed, plus punitive or exemplary damages of $100,000. This was
appropriate as the defendants engaged in extreme bad faith both before and during the
proceedings, and had persisted in ongoing and deliberate infringement despite the
receipt of several cease and desist letters.
A motion for summary judgment was dismissed where there was a genuine
issue for trial on the liability of the defendant and whether some claims were
statute barred: Society of Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of Canada v.
Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment.24 SOCAN had sued the defendant, Maple Leaf
Sports and Entertainment, for failure to pay royalties for 40 concerts held at the Air
Canada Centre. The defendant brought a motion for summary judgment on the
23
2010 FC 102.
24
2010 FC 731.
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grounds that some of the plaintiff’s claims were outside the limitation periods, the
plaintiff did not have the rights claimed, and the defendant was not liable to make
these payments if the Court found that the plaintiff held the rights claimed. The
Federal Court held that there were genuine issues for trial regarding the plaintiff’s
claims for infringement of copyright and for payment of tariff royalties, and the
applicability of limitation periods and the principle of discoverability. There were
evidentiary and credibility determinations best suited to a trial on the merits.
A motion for summary judgment was dismissed where there were issues best
left to a trial judge for determination: Concept Developments Ltd. v. Webb.25 The
plaintiffs brought a motion for summary judgment in an action for copyright
infringement. The plaintiff, a creator of home building designs, has registered
copyrights in plans and building designs for a bi-level home. The plaintiff alleged that
the defendant, Webb, authorized a third party, High Grade Homes Inc., to build a
home that was substantially similar to the plaintiff’s design. The motion for summary
judgment was dismissed for several reasons: (1) the necessary facts had not yet been
established and the issue of whether the defendant’s home design was substantially
similar to the plaintiff’s design was an issue of fact best left to a trial judge; (2) there
were serious issues of credibility; (3) the question of “authorization” was legally and
factually complex and best left to a trial judge to determine; and (4) the measure of
damages had not yet been established and the plaintiff had raised a novel proposition
for damages.
7 – CIVIL REMEDIES
A rolling Anton Pillar order was inappropriate where there was no evidence
that the actual or potential damage specifically related to Canada and was not
very serious, there was no evidence that the defendants would be likely to hide or
destroy relevant items, and some of the defendants were known before the ex
parte order was sought: Vinod Chopra Films Private Ltd. v. John Doe.26 Some of
the named defendants, who were small shopkeepers, sought a review of a rolling
Anton Piller order. The plaintiffs, Vinod Chopra Films and Reliance Mediaworks, the
copyright owner and licensee of a film entitled "3 Idiots”, had been successful in
obtaining and executing an ex parte rolling Anton Piller order, a form of civil search
warrant where all the defendants are not known at the time of issue. A handful of
unauthorized copies of the film were seized. The plaintiffs had submitted on the ex
parte application that the potential or actual damage was very serious as the Indian
economy had suffered job losses and revenue losses as a result of piracy, because
piracy would lead to the loss of sales of video products, and there was a real
possibility that the defendants would destroy any incriminating evidence in their
25
2010 FC 1315.
26
2010 FC 387.
-9-
possession. The Anton Pillar order was set aside because none of the evidence
regarding actual or potential damage specifically related to Canada, the motion
picture "3 Idiots" or the defendants. The handful of unauthorized copies of the film
that were seized sold at approximately one or two dollars per copy. The plaintiffs
failed to establish that the damage was or would be very serious. There was no
evidence that the defendants would be likely to hide or destroy relevant items, and
some of the defendants were known before the ex parte order was sought.
A motion for injunctive relief restraining the plaintiffs from preventing the
televising of a documentary was granted: Warner Chappell Music France c.
Beaulne.27 The plaintiffs sought damages for violation of copyrighted material and a
permanent injunction to prohibit the defendant from televising a documentary on the
life of Michel Legrand. The defendants alleged a breach of contract and sought an
injunction to restrain the plaintiffs from preventing the diffusion of the movie. The
Quebec Superior Court held in favour of defendants. The plaintiffs had not
demonstrated any clear proof with respect to the copyright violation, nor did the
plaintiffs demonstrate that Michel Legrand’s reputation would be jeopardized. Since
the movie was not then being shown, there was no violation of copyright. The
damages alleged by the plaintiffs were only potential damages, whereas those alleged
by the defendants were real and necessitated an immediate intervention.
27
2010 QCCS 2632.
28
2010 FC 1267.
29
2010 QCCS 2754.
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Trial judge’s order of injunctive relief was amended on the grounds that the
Copyright Act does not contemplate prohibitions against “use” or “operation”:
Target Event Production Ltd. v. Cheung.31 The appellants appealed a decision of the
Federal Court which held, among other things, that the appellants had infringed the
respondent’s copyrights in association with a Chinese night market operated by the
respondent in British Columbia. The trial judge enjoined the appellant from
“operating” a market which is a substantial reproduction of the respondent’s market
site plan. On appeal, the appellants submitted that the trial judge erred in granting the
injunctive relief because the only remedies available for copyright infringement are
those provided for under the Copyright Act. The statute does not contemplate
prohibitions against “use” or “operation”. The respondent agreed and suggested that
the injunction be amended. The Federal Court of Appeal held that the trial judge’s
injunction was too broad and amended the injunction to prohibit the appellants from
30
2010 FC 741.
31
2010 FCA 255.
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“further infringing the copyright of [the respondent] in the Market Site Plan by
reproducing it, or any substantial part thereof, in any material form whatever”.
Plaintiff entitled to only $500 in statutory damages for the defendant’s action
in posting a copyrighted report on website: Nicholas v. Environmental Systems,
(International) Ltd.33 See Section 7.2 ‘Civil Remedies – Permanent Injunctions’.
32
2010 QCCS 2754.
33
2010 FC 741.
34
2009 QCCS 6392.
35
2010 QCCQ 1710.
36
2010 QCCA 1287.
37
2009 QCCS 6392.
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his own residence: Constructions Première Classe inc. c. Beaulieu.38 See Section 2.1
‘Originality – Artistic Works’.
7.7 Costs
An award of solicitor-and-client costs was set aside where the trial judge
failed to provide explanation: Target Event Production Ltd. v. Cheung.42 The
appellants appealed a decision of the Federal Court which included, among other
things, an award of solicitor-and-client costs. The trial judge failed to provide an
explanation for awarding solicitor-and-client costs and there were no references in the
reasons to any reprehensible, scandalous or outrageous conduct on the part of the
appellant. The Federal Court of Appeal substituted the trial judge’s award of solicitor-
and-client costs with an award of party-and-party costs. See Section 27.3 ‘Civil
Remedies – Permanent Injunctions’ for additional discussion.
7.8 Contempt
38
2010 QCCQ 1710.
39
2010 FC 606.
40
2010 QCCA 1287.
41
2010 FC 741.
42
2010 FCA 255.
43
2010 FCA 151.
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discovery, and had failed to provide records despite being ordered to do so. The
Federal Court of Appeal dismissed the appeal, holding that the sentence was not
demonstrably unfit. The appellant's unlawful acts were violations of the Trade-marks
Act and the Copyright Act.
A motion to stay or sever third and fourth party proceedings in a class action
for copyright infringement was dismissed where the only prejudice was delay
and expense: Robertson v. Proquest Learning and Information LLC.45 In a class
action alleging infringement of the class members’ copyrights and moral rights by the
defendant print publishers, the plaintiffs brought a motion to severe or stay third and
fourth party proceedings. The defendants alleged that there were licensed by the class
members to publish electronically, and the third and fourth parties intended to rely on
express consents and licences given by the plaintiffs as well as licences to be implied
from the context provided by the nature and purpose of their particular publications.
The plaintiffs sought to stay or severe the third and fourth party proceedings on the
grounds that these proceedings would cause unnecessary delay. The Ontario Superior
Court of Justice dismissed the motion because there was no prejudice other than
additional delay and expense. This could be kept in check by effective case
management. Further, the third and fourth parties’ claims were relevant to the issue of
the terms of the licences between the class members and the defendants.
44
2010 QCCS 1574.
45
[2010] O.J. No. 3261.
46
2010 QCCA 1376.
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its iPods from $15 to $25. The decision of the Copyright Board was subsequently
overturned by the Federal Court of Appeal. Apple then instituted an internal policy to
reimburse consumers who had purchased iPods during the period in which it was
required to pay the levies. Despite the policy, a class action was instituted for all
consumers who purchased iPods during that period. The trial judge erred on
numerous counts. First, the class action had no basis in law. Apple’s decision to
reimburse consumers had no legal bearing on the consumers. Apple was rather only
legally obligated towards CPCC. Moreover, Apple demonstrated that its internal
policy was in fact the best solution and presented sufficient information to the
consumers, an adequate period to make a claim and a possibility for revision in
instances where a claim was rejected. Finally, instituting a class action in this case
would be contrary to the objectives of a class action which are: to manage the judicial
system, favour the access to justice and encourage change on the part of defendants.
Permitting a class action in this case, when Apple had already taken the best possible
means necessary to solve the issue, would go against those objectives.
A tariff for pay audio services was certified at the existing rate: Statement of
Royalties to be Collected by SOCAN and NRCC in respect of Pay Audio Services for
the Years 2007-200947. SOCAN and NRCC proposed tariffs for the communication
to the public by telecommunication of sound recordings of musical works by pay
audio services. The collectives and objectors to the proposed tariff agreed to
maintain, for 2007 to 2009, the status quo of the previous tariff for pay audio services
for 2003 to 2006. The Copyright Board certified the tariff for 2007 to 2009 in
accordance with the agreement.
draw the distinction between professional CDs used for business applications and
CDs used by consumers to make private copies. As long as a non-marginal number
of consumers use a type of CD for private copying in a fashion that is not marginal,
that type of CD will be leviable.
The Board found that the percentage of copying using audiocassettes had continued to
decrease with the percentage of Canadians using audiocassettes falling to 3 per cent
in 2008-2009. The use of audiocassettes to copy music had become marginal and
therefore they no longer met the definition of audio recording media. The tariff levies
did not extend to audiocassettes.
In calculating the levy rate for CDs at 29¢ the Board made an upward adjustment of
32 per cent to reflect the fact that 80 per cent of all tracks copied were selected from
one or more albums. The selection of an individual track provided additional value to
the tracks.
The costs of an audit and unpaid private copying levies plus interest were
awarded where an audit revealed under-reporting by an importer of black audio
recording media: Canadian Private Copying Collective v. Data Media Products
Inc.50 The Canadian Private Copying Collective (“CPCC”) claimed unpaid levies and
audit costs under sections 34(4)(c)(i) and 88 of the Copyright Act. The defendant,
Data Media, was an importer and seller of blank audio recording media. CPCC
sought unpaid levies of $10,797 and interest on sales of 80,170 units of blank audio
recording media that Data Media had not reported. CPCC also sought the costs of an
audit conducted to calculate this under-reporting of sales, along with a penalty under
section 88(2) of the Act of five times the amount of the unpaid levies. The Federal
Court allowed the application, and ordered Data Media to pay levies of $10,797 and
interest of $268 and awarded CPCC its audit costs and interest. The Court was not
49
Copyright Board, December 17, 2010
50
2009 FC 1277.
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satisfied that, taking into account the considerations listed in section 88(4) of the Act,
the maximum penalty was appropriate, but in light of the need for deterrence, a
penalty of two times the unpaid levies was appropriate.
The evidence showed that radio stations now rely upon electronic music delivery
systems (“MDS”) to source the sound recordings they use in their broadcasts. The
predominant system used, DMDS, allows radio stations to download digital releases
in encrypted form through its website. After decrypting the electronic files radio
stations make additional copies in their playback systems. Record labels and some
independent artists decide what material is made available for downloading. The
licences that a MDS obtains from a record label does not however obviate the need
for a radio station to secure a licence from CSI for the musical work or from ArtistI
for the performers’ performance. The agreements that record labels have with DMDS
authorizes radio stations to audition recordings and download tracks for the purpose
of adding them to their playlist. The rights are however limited to the initial
encrypted and decrypted copies. Subsequent copies made are not covered by the
DMDS agreements with the record labels and therefore radio stations must comply
with the AVLA/SOPROQ’s tariff with respect to subsequent copies.
51
Copyright Board, July 9, 2010
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The AVLA/SOPROQ tariff took effect January 1, 2008. The Board could not certify
an AVLA/SOPROQ tariff for the use of a sound recording reproduced prior to that
date. The remedy that the collective had with respect to those recordings was to
negotiate a licence or sue the radio stations for copyright infringement.
Although the Board had previously certified Re:Sound commercial radio tariffs with
a rate base of advertising revenues, it was not restricted to do so by section 68.1 of the
Copyright Act.
In certifying the tariffs the Board decided not to use any of the methodologies
advanced by the parties in order to maintain stability in the royalty rates. Although
the music use study conducted by SOCAN and Re:Sound showed an increase in
music use, the evidence did not establish that the increase was sufficiently permanent
to warrant an adjustment to their previously certified rates.
The previous CSI tariff rate was based upon the SOCAN rate prior to the Board’s
increase in the SOCAN rate for the period 2003 to 2007. The factors behind the
increase in the SOCAN rate also applied to CSI and therefore the Board increased
CSI’s rate with a further repertoire adjustment.
With respect to the AVLA/SOPROQ and ArtistI tariffs, the Board held that the value
to radio stations of the reproduction, right of musical works was equal to that of the
sound recording which encompasses both the makers’ and performers’ rights. The
Board therefore used the CSI rate for calculating the AVLA/SOPROQ and ArtistI
rates and then adjusted those rates as required in the circumstances.
For all five tariffs the Board adopted gross income as the rate base and rejected a very
low use rate category. The effective total royalty rate, taking into account the reduced
payment of $100 per year to Re:Sound on the first $1.25 million of advertising
revenue specified in section 68.1 of the Copyright Act, was 5.7 per cent with the five
tariffs generating in total $85 million for 2009.
under turn-key contracts does not prove that broadcasters have production
revenues which must be excluded from “advertising revenues”: AstralMedia
Radio Inc. v. Society of Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of Canada.52 The
appellant appealed summary judgement granting to the respondent a declaration that a
radio station is permitted to exclude the fair market value of production services that
the station provides to advertisers under turn-key contracts from the revenues it
generates from the broadcast of advertisements in calculating commercial radio
tariffs. Radio stations pay a tariff for playing sound recordings of musical works
based on the amount of advertising revenue earned. The evidence showed that, in
general, radio stations did not charge an additional fee for their production services on
top of the cost of their advertising services. On appeal, it was held that advertising
revenue did not include production revenues. The fact that a cost, such as the cost of
the production services, had been incurred did not mean that revenue had been
earned. Whether in a specific instance a broadcaster that had produced an
advertisement that had generated production revenues was a factual issue to be
determined at trial, and not on a summary judgment motion.
52
2010 FCA 16.
53
Copyright Board, February 12, 2010
54
Copyright Board, December 23, 2010
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SOCAN applied to the Supreme Court of Canada for leave to appeal the decision of
the Federal Court of Appeal. On December 23, 2010 leave was granted.
55
Copyright Board, April 23, 2010
56
2010 FCA 123.
57
2010 FCA 139.
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tariff for the communication of musical works over the Internet. SOCAN sought to
quash the Board's decision with respect to the proposed tariff dealing with the
residual category of "Other Sites." The Federal Court of Appeal held that the Board
was justified in refusing the tariff in respect of “Other Sites” as SOCAN had proposed
an ill-defined category of persons to whom the auditing, accounting and reporting
obligations associated with the tariff apply, and there was little evidence to enable the
Board to approve the tariff.
The application was allowed in part, however, on the issue of whether the copying
was exempt under section 29.4 of the Copyright Act as a “work or other subject-
matter as required for a test or examination” where the work is not “commercially
available in a medium that is appropriate for the purpose”. The Court held that the
Board had failed to interpret the words “in a medium appropriate for the purpose” and
remitted the issue back to the Board.
The applicants have applied to the Supreme Court of Canada for leave to appeal the
decision of the Federal Court of Appeal. A decision on the leave application is
pending.
58
2010 FCA 198.
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The first of the remaining issues was whether the Board erred in finding that video
game sites were subject to a tariff with respect to the communication of musical
works to the public, given the minor role which music plays in video games. The
Court held that the Board’s decision to impose a tariff was reasonable regardless of
how insignificant the use of music might be. The de minimis rule does not apply in
relation to the certification of copyright tariffs.
The second of the remaining issues was whether the Board erred in certifying a tariff
when SOCAN failed to present adequate evidence to justify the reasonableness of the
proposed tariff. The Court held that the Board’s decision was reasonable. The
collective administration regime seeks to balance the rights of creators and users.
SOCAN was not required to prove the reasonableness of the tariff. Furthermore, the
Court noted that the royalty rate set by the Board was initially suggested by the
objector.
The last of the remaining issues was whether the Board erred in failing to consider the
objector’s evidence of the contractual agreements between the objector’s members
and rights holders to secure rights to the musical content of video games. The Court
held that it was reasonable for the Board to certify a tariff since not all video game
publishers take the necessary steps to secure all the applicable rights to music used in
their games. In practice, the certified tariff would not apply to those that had the right
to communicate the music to the public. The application for judicial review was
therefore dismissed.
59
2010 FCA 221.
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The objector has applied to the Supreme Court of Canada for leave to appeal the
decision of the Federal Court of Appeal. A decision on the leave application is
pending.
The applicants have applied to the Supreme Court of Canada for leave to appeal the
decision of the Federal Court of Appeal. A decision on the leave application is
pending.
60
2010 FCA 220.
61
2010 FCA 322.
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create, promote, market and distribute recorded music. The objector did not challenge
the legal basis on which the Board claimed the right to impose the tariff. Rather, the
issue was whether the Board erred in applying the wrong standard of proof in relation
to the determination of certain costs in the digital music business, in accepting
inadmissible expert evidence, in calculating the royalty rate on a faulty basis, and in
failing to provide adequate reasons for its decision. The Federal Court of Appeal held
that the Copyright Board was not bound by the rules of evidence and did not err by
failing to apply those rules to the evidence which was put before it. It was clear from
the Board’s reasons that CRIA enjoyed full rights of procedural fairness with respect
to the evidence; the Board simply preferred the evidence of the respondent’s expert.
Thus, there was no basis in procedural fairness to challenge the manner in which the
Board dealt with the evidence. In addition, the Court held that the right of
communication to the public by telecommunication and the right of reproduction
were independently compensable. The Board did not err in establishing a value of
each right independently. Finally, the Board’s reliance on its own expertise, which it
applied to elements of the respondent’s expert evidence, did not make the Board’s
reasons inadequate. The application for judicial review was dismissed.
Two applications for judicial review of the Copyright Board’s satellite radio
decision were dismissed; the presumption against the authorization of an
infringing act was rebutted by the degree of control exercised by satellite radio
providers: Sirius Canada Inc. v. CMRRA/SODRAC Inc.62 The collective CSI and an
objector (“Sirius”) applied for judicial review of the decision of the Copyright Board
approving a tariff setting royalty rates to be paid by subscription satellite radio
services. CSI collectively administered certain reproduction rights for musical works
in Canada. The issue in Sirius’ application was whether the Board erred in law in
finding that a satellite radio service provider, by supplying a subscriber with a
receiver having an extended buffer or a block recording feature, necessarily
authorized the subscriber to copy musical works. The Court considered past
jurisprudence giving a narrow meaning to authorization within the context of section
3(1) of the Copyright Act, including the Supreme Court of Canada’s decision in CCH
Canadian Ltd. v. Law Society of Upper Canada. Following CCH, the Court held that
satellite radio service providers are presumed to authorize their subscribers to use all
the features of the radio receivers with which they are supplied. The presumption
was however rebutted by the degree to which the satellite radio providers controlled
the use of the receivers they supplied to their subscribers. The element of automatic
copying by the satellite receivers was determinative. Only the satellite radio providers
knew what was being broadcast and when, and what broadcast content was subject to
copyright. The radio receivers did not allow the subscriber to turn off the copying
functions of the equipment. The presumption against the authorization of an
infringing act was rebutted by the degree of control exercised by the satellite radio
providers over their broadcast content and the features included in the radio receivers
supplied to their subscribers. Sirius’ application was therefore dismissed.
62
2010 FCA 348.
- 24 -
In considering the various issues in the CSI application for judicial review, the Court
made two important rulings. First, the Copyright Act does not apply to acts of
reproduction that take place outside of Canada, even if the authorization took place in
Canada. The “real and substantial connection” test does not apply to acts that take
place wholly within another country. Second, the copying of small amounts of
buffered content was not a copy of an entire work or a substantial part of a work.
CSI’s application was therefore dismissed.
10.1 Australia
Copyright did not subsist in yellow and white page directories: Telstra
Corporation Limited v. Phone Directories Company Pty Ltd [2010] FCAFA 149.
Telstra, the publisher of the Yellow Pages Directory and the White Pages Directory,
appealed the trial judge’s decision that copyright does not subsist in the two directories.
The directories were the work of numerous individuals, but the compilation of each of the
directories was brought into form by an automated computerised process. Telstra, the
applicant, did not claim to own copyright in the rules or software that produced the
directories.
The Court held that the directories cannot be regarded as a work of joint authorship as the
individuals did not collaborate and their work was not part of the actual compilation. The
Court also held that the directories would have been protected by copyright had they been
created by human beings. But, they were not authored by human being, but by an
automated computer process. Accordingly, they were not protected by copyright.
63
2010 SKQB 320.
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According to the court” “The difficulty in this case is not that the efforts which might
have gone into the production of the galley file could not be sufficient acts of an
appropriate quality to count as acts of authorship. Rather, the difficulty is that those tasks
were not carried out by humans but by computer programs. The trial judge found – and it
is not disputed – that the production of the galley file was almost entirely automated.
There were some minor aspects of checking which subsequently occurred after the
production of the galley file but even these too were largely automated...”
The Federal Court of Australia held that the source codes to the HTML generating
routines produced by Infosafe that produced the pages were not protected by copyright.
They were computer generated and the authorship requirement was not met. Whether the
source codes for the MSDS files were authored or transcribed by Acohs staff, they were
not computer programmers, and there was no suggestion that they either understood or
ever saw the source code for each MSDS on which they worked.
There was copyright in each MSDS, however. Each Acohs employee was the copyright-
author, and the work created by him or her was original. Even in a case in which every
verbal and numerical element of an MSDS created by an author was to be found in the
centralised database, the author was still required to select from the menu of sub-headings
those that would be used and those that would be irrelevant. The electronic documentary
entity thereby brought into existence was not merely the result of copying from
something else.
Pty Ltd, [2010] FCA 984. The applicant publisher of The Australian Financial Review,
published in print and electronically in digital form to subscribers, sought a declaration of
infringement of its copyright and injunctions against further infringement by the
respondent, who provided abstracts of articles published in various newspapers and
magazines. Each abstract included the headline of the article, the by-line of the journalist,
and a short summary of the article. The applicant alleged that copyright subsisted in each
individual newspaper headline, in an article with its headline, in the compilation of all the
articles and headlines in a newspaper edition and in the compilation of the edition as a
whole. The respondent argued that if copyright did subsist, the abstracts did not
reproduce a substantial part of the articles, and raised the defences of fair dealing and
estoppel.
The Federal Court of Australia held that there was no copyright in headlines as a class, as
there was an established practice of denying copyright protection to titles. A headline is
meta-information about the work, not the work itself. As a proper citation of a newspaper
article requires reproduction of the headline, affording published headlines as a class
copyright protection as literary works would tip the balance too far against the interest of
the public to refer to articles by their headlines. Even if the headlines constituted a
substantial part of works in which copyright subsists, reproducing and communicating the
headlines as part of abstracts was a fair dealing for the purpose of reporting news such
that this would not constitute an infringement.
Copyright did not subsist in patient records and consultation notes: Primary
Health Care Ltd. v. Commissioner of Taxation, [2010] FCA 419. The respondent
Commissioner of Taxation denied the applicant Primary Health Care entitlement to claim
tax deductions with respect to copyright in patient records allegedly acquired by the
applicant after its purchase of medical and dental practices. The Income tax Assessment
Act permits a deduction for depreciating or writing off an interest in copyright that was
acquired and used or made available for use in the course of carrying on a business. As
part of assessing whether the applicant held rights as the owner of copyright, the Federal
Court of Australia considered whether copyright subsists in patient records and
consultation notes.
There was little evidence to support a finding that copyright subsists in the patient records
of the sample practices. Although intellectual effort and professional skill was needed to
form the diagnoses, select methods of treatment and understanding the significance of
clinical data that is recorded, copyright protects a form of expression in a work and not
this underlying expertise. The consultation notes, as a class, were not original literary
works in which copyright subsists. The entries in the notes are largely restricted to
notations of the names of medical conditions and medications as well as physiological
and pathological data such as blood pressure and blood count readings. Their expression
did not display the independent intellectual effort in their expression necessary for
copyright protection. Copyright was found only in the referral letters and consultation
notes for one patient, but there was no evidence that were assigned to or acquired by the
applicant. The applicant was not entitled to the tax deductions claimed.
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A flute riff that included two of the four bars of a round amounted to a
reproduction of a substantial part of that round because there was a sufficient
degree of objective similarity between the two: Larrikin Music Publishing Pty Ltd v.
EMI Songs Australia Pty Ltd, [2010] FCA 29. Greg Ham, a member of the band Men at
Work, improvised a flute riff on the song “Down Under”, which alleged included two of
the four bars of the round “Kookaburra sits in the old gumtree”. Larrikin Music
Publishing brought copyright infringement proceedings against the composers of “Down
Under”, the owner and licensee of the copyright in the work, EMI Songs Australia, and
against EMI Australia for the use of the orchestral version of “Down Under” in
advertisements for Qantas. Larrikin Music publishing also brought a claim that the
respondents misrepresented their entitlement to income from the Australasian Performing
Rights Association and that “Down Under” did not infringe any other copyright work.
The Federal Court of Australia held that there was a sufficient degree of objective
similarity between the bars of Kookaburra in Down Under to amount to a reproduction of
a substantial part of that work. This was based on an aural and visual comparison of the
songs, as well as expert evidence, and in respect of the melody, key, tempo, harmony and
structure. The difference in rhythm and harmony and the separation of the musical
phrases from the round in “Down Under” did not negate the finding that this was a
reproduction. The failure of the respondents to call as a witness Greg Ham, the musician
who incorporated the flute riff in “Down Under”, lead to an adverse inference that Ham
deliberately included the bars from the round to evoke an Australian flavour. The
advertisements for Qantas only contained one bar of the round, and that bar could not be
considered to be taking a substantial part of the round.
The critical issue was whether iiNet, by failing to take any steps to stop infringing
conduct, authorised the copyright infringement of certain iiNet users. The Court
answered such question in the negative for three reasons: first, because the copyright
infringement occurred directly as a result of the use of the BitTorrent system, not the use
of the Internet, and the respondent did not create and did not control the BitTorrent
system; second, because the respondent did not have a relevant power to prevent those
infringements occurring; and third, because the respondent did not sanction, approve or
countenance copyright infringement.
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10.2 Europe
It was held that the EU Member States that make use of the option provided in Article
5(2)(b) of the Directive must provide for the payment of fair compensation to authors
affected by the application of “private copying exception.” The concept of “fair
compensation” within the meaning of the Directive is an autonomous concept of EU law
which must be interpreted uniformly in all the Member States that have introduced a
“private copying exception,” irrespective of the power conferred on them to determine,
within the limits imposed by EU law and in particular by the Directive, the form, detailed
arrangements for financing and collection, and the level of that fair compensation. The
authors should be compensated “adequately” for the use made of their protected works
without their authorization, the determination of “adequately” meaning “fair
compensation” linked to the harm resulting for the author from the reproduction for
private use of his/her protected work. Finally, Article 5(2)(b) of the Directive must be
interpreted as meaning that a link is necessary between the application of the levy
intended to finance fair compensation with respect to digital reproduction equipment,
devices and media and deemed use of them for the purposes of private copying.
Consequently, the indiscriminate application of the private copying levy is incompatible
with the Directive.
As per the first question, whether the graphic user interface of a computer program is a
form of expression of that program within the meaning of Article 1(2) of Directive
91/250 and is thus protected by copyright as a computer program under that directive, the
ECJ ruled that the object of the protection conferred by that directive was the expression
in any form of a computer program, which permitted reproduction in different computer
languages, such as the source code and the object code. Thus, the object of protection
under the directive includes the forms of expression of a computer program and the
preparatory design work capable of leading, respectively, to the reproduction or the
subsequent creation of such a program. However, the graphic user interface does not
enable the reproduction of a computer program, for it is an interaction interface which
enables communication between the computer program and the user. Therefore, the
Court concluded that the graphic user interface does not constitute a form of expression
of a computer program within the meaning of Article 1(2) of Directive 91/250. It went
further to consider Directive 2001/29 and its application to the circumstances of this case
and concluded that the graphic user interface (“GUI”) can, as a work, be protected by
copyright if it is its author’s own intellectual creation, as long as the GUI is not
constrained by technical limitations.
Svea Court first underlined the concept of copyright: it covers such exclusive rights
which vest in the producers of sound and graphic recordings. The Court then dealt with
the law applicable to the copyright offences and whether the alleged offences were
proven under the applicable law. Although the Court agreed that the question of how to
localise geographically an act which included communications via the Internet and
according to which country’s law must be adjudicated was complex, it, nevertheless, held
that the Swedish law (Penal Code, Chapter 2) was the applicable law to the circumstances
of this case. “[T]he aiding and abetting acts to be determined, […] the principal offences
(the act of making the copyright-protected work available to the public, which the users
are alleged to have engaged in, must […] be criminal under Swedish law”, therefore, the
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court must adjudicate on the basis of that law, ”if a crime has been committed here in the
country (the “territoriality principle”).” The Court based its finding of applicable law on
the EU Directive 2000/31/EC (“e-commerce Directive”), in particular, the direct
exception to the “origin principle,” and on the Swedish “e-commerce Act,” stating that
Swedish law applies to the information society services which are provided by service
providers with Sweden as the country of establishment. Finally, it was held that,
although the fact that it was possible for the general public to obtain access to the works
in Sweden could not alone form the basis for the conclusion that the principal offences
were to be deemed to have been committed in Sweden, however, a crime could be
localised to Sweden as soon as a part of the criminal act was undertaken within the
county’s borders, which, effectively, happened in this case.
The Court explained that it was probably insufficient that the uploader (the original
seeder) created a torrent file which referred to the work which he or she stored on his or
her hard drive. “In order for the public to actually obtain access to the work, it must
normally be required that the seeder presents the torrent file in such a manner that
individual users in wider circles can find it via search engines or collections of links. The
claims relating to the respective principal copyright offences must be deemed to include
placing torrent files in TPB’s database. Thus, according to the Court of Appeal’s
approach regarding the construction of the main criminal acts, the placement of the
torrent files in TPB’s database (through its search functionality – uploading and storage
possibilities for torrent files – and tracker, which brokered contact between individual file
sharers) constituted an essential element of the main perpetrators’ criminal act.
The Court also found the site operators criminally liable for aiding and abetting
infringement. “The Court of Appeal shares the District Court’s conclusion that TPB’s
website, through its search functionality (uploading and storage possibilities for torrent
files, and tracker which brokered contact between individual file sharers), contained a
service which facilitated the principal offences. Even if the service was not a necessary
condition for the individual principal offences to occur, it has made it simpler and quicker
for the users to transmit the works to the general public through file sharing. Thus, any
person who provides such a service furthers the crime, which gives rise to liability for
aiding and abetting under the wording of Chapter 23, section 4 of the Penal Code.”
The court also rejected the argument that the operators were not liable for aiding and
abetting infringement because some non-infringing content could be shared using the
Pirate Bay site. The decision on liability raised a question of balancing multiple interests.
Here the massive level of infringement compelled a finding of liability. According to the
Court: “...irrespective of the share of legally presented works in the database, the file
sharing of protected works, which were not covered by the rights holders’ consent,
constituted the dominant activity amongst TPB’s users. In this respect, the users’ actions
involved an attack on the fundamental values of our legal culture... No safety measures
were taken and torrent files which referred to protected works were not removed even
after requests and warnings. In a weighing between the social benefit of providing a
service for file sharing of lawfully-provided material and the entirely obvious risk that the
activities, to a massive extent, would lead to infringement of copyright holders’
constitutionally protected rights, the Court of Appeal finds that a release from liability on
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the grounds of unwritten exception rules regarding social benefits and lack of criminal
intent cannot be relevant.”
Having considered domestic and EU law (Directives), as well as international treaties, the
Court held that: (i) copyright in computer programs does not protect programming
languages from being copied; (ii) copyright in computer programs does not protect
computer to computer interfaces from being copied where this can be achieved without
decompiling the object code; and (iii) copyright in computer programs does not protect
the functions of the programs from being copied. Therefore: (i) WPL did not infringe
SAS’s copyright in the SAS Components by producing WPS; (ii) WPL did not infringe
SAS’s copyright in the SAS Manuals by producing or testing WPS; (iii) WPL infringed
the copyrights in the SAS Manuals by substantially reproducing them in the WPL
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Manual; and (vii) WPL did not infringe the copyrights in the SAS Manuals by producing
the WPS Guides.
It was held that: (i) following the definition of database in Art. 1 of Council Directive
96/9, that Directive was seeking to harmonize copyright protection for systematically
arranged, individually accessible collections of independent works, data or other
materials, at the same time recognizing that the whole or parts of the contents might be
protected in their own right, independently of any reliance on the collection and
arrangement of independent works, data or other materials; (ii) there was a relevant
selection or arrangement, namely proceeding from the starting materials of the clubs in
the league and the dates of the rounds of matches, to produce an arrangement which
brought them together; (iii) the requirement of the “author’s intellectual creation” did not
mean that the reader of database had to be able to identify the author; (iv) the fixture lists
were the subject of database copyright; and (v) there was no scope for any other form of
copyright protection for the fixture lists.
In short, the Court concluded that the work of putting together the fixture lists was not
mere “sweat of the brow”: “In my judgment the selection or arrangement required by Art.
3(1) [of Council Directive] is not confined to selection or arrangement performed after
the data is finally created… I see no reason why selection decisions made about the
contents of the database in the course of arriving at the final version should not properly
be described as selection or arrangement… Nevertheless, it is necessary to focus on skill
and labour which is actually concerned with selection and arrangement, and to exclude
that which is not… More fundamentally, the database must, when these two factors
[selection and arrangement] are considered, constitute its author’s own intellectual
creation.”
2010). The defendant, Meltwater provides a commercial media monitoring service called
“Meltwater News” to business customers. That service is provided on-line only.
The issue in this case is whether the members of Public Relations Consultants
Association Limited (“PRCA”) require a license from the claimants in order to lawfully
receive and use Meltwater News. The sub-issues are framed as follows: (i) whether a
headline is, or is capable of being, a free-standing original literary work; and (ii) whether
a text extract constitutes a ‘substantial part’ of the article as a literary work.
In the Court’s opinion, headlines are capable of being literary works, whether
independently or as part of the article to which they relate. The Court referred to and
followed the ECJ “Infopaq” case. As per text extracts, the Court held that on the basis of
the “Infopaq” case that the text extracts, excluding the headline, are capable of being a
substantial part for the purposes of s. 16 of the Act [the Copyright Designs and Patents
Act 1988 – “CDPA”]. In fact, the effect of “Infopaq” is that even a very small part of the
original work may be protected by copyright if it demonstrates the stamp of individuality
reflective of the creation of the author or authors of the article. Whether it does so,
remains a question of fact and degree in each case. Further, the Court stated that the
“temporary copies exception” provided in s. 28A of CDPA cannot have been intended to
legitimise all copies made in the course of browsing, “or users would be permitted to
watch pirated films and listen to pirated music.” Therefore, the Court concluded that s.
28A CDPA (together with Article 5 of InfoSoc Directive) is inapplicable to permit the
End Users to make copies with impunity.
Therefore, the Court found that without a license from the Publishers there was
infringement of the Publishers’ copyright by the End Users in receiving and using
Meltwater News.
The court granted summary judgment in part, stating that s. 24 of the Act created a tort of
strict liability. It was no defence to show that the defendant did not know and no reason
to believe that the devices, in fact, would be used to make infringing copies.
Two important points were made in the decision: (i) the jurisdiction point; and (ii)
“ordinary copyright” point. The jurisdictional point was raised by the defendants
claiming that the accused devices were export sales, and therefore, they would only be
put to use in the country to which they were exported. The Court considered Sony
Computer Entertainment Inc. v. Ball [2005] F.S.R. 9 where it was stated that the rights
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afforded by s. 296 and s. 296ZD of the Act were not infringed when the “circumvention”
took place abroad, for in s. 296 there is a requirement that the person dealing in the
device knows or has reason to believe that it will be used to make infringing copies. The
Court then concluded that s. 296ZD of the Act was concerned with dealing in the UK in
devices capable of circumvention, whenever they may ultimately end up. It follows that I
consider that Nintendo is entitled to summary judgment on export sales under this
section.
As per the “ordinary copyright” issue, the alleged infringement, the Court noted that each
game card has the code relevant to the Nintendo installed on it. Therefore, it was
impossible for the Court to conclude that Nintendo authorised the copying of this into
RAM, and as a result, there was no authorisation of infringement as well as liability
under s. 24 of the Act found.
The Court held that it was clear that the right of communication of a work to the public
must be interpreted broadly so as to cover all communications to the public not present
where the communication originates. It includes, but is not limited to, broadcasting and
access on demand. It then went further to state that the protected work, the broadcast,
was the transmission of visual images, sounds and other information for reception by or
representation to members of the public. The restricted act is the communication to the
public by electronic transmission of all of those images, sounds and other information. In
the same way, s. 17 [of the Copyright Designs and Patents Act 1988] prohibits the
making of a copy of broadcast and s. 18 prohibits the issuing of copies of broadcast to the
public. There is no requirement that the copy itself must be a broadcast. Indeed, it may
be no more than a photograph (s. 17(4)).
license of the claimant: (i) reproducing the Work (or a substantial part of it) by copying it
onto their computer hard drive; (ii) making copies available on the Internet to third
parties for downloading using a P2P network; and (iii) operating, at the time of the
identified infringement an Internet connection router that was not secured either
adequately or at all, so as to enable another to carry out an act of copyright infringement
of the claimant’s Work via the Internet connection of the defendant.
The Court held that the claimant’s right to bring the claims at all may be entirely proper
but that did not emerge clearly from the statement of case. A key part of the plea of
infringement rests on an assertion that “allowing” others to infringe is itself an infringing
act, when it is not. There is no plea that the works qualify for copyright protection at all:
“[P2P] sharing which involves copyright infringement is an important and serious matter
and claimants with a proper claim are entitled to use the full machinery of the courts to
enforce their rights.”
The Court held that it was common ground that, where authorization of an act of
infringement of UK copyright was relied on, the act of authorisation did not have to occur
in the UK, provided that the primary act of infringement so authorised did. It was clear
that complete control was exercised by GmbH over the content of the pop-up windows.
This was not the case of mere supply, leaving it to the customer to choose what use was
made of the data.
As per infringement of database right, the court focused its discussion on the so-called
concept of “making available” [to customers]. “[N]either side suggested that there was or
could be any sensible distinction between the interpretations of making available to the
public of the work by an electronic or online transmission […].” The Court concluded
that ”the better view is that the act of making available to the public by online
transmission is committed and committed only where the transmission takes place. It is
true that the placing of data on a server in one state can make the data available to the
public of another state but that does not mean that the party who has made the data
available has committed the act of making available by transmission in the State of
reception. I consider that the better construction of the provisions is that the act only
occurs in the state of transmission.”
November 2010). This appeal dealt with the ownership of the UK and foreign copyrights
in 119 songs. The claimant was an American music publishing company seeking a
declaration of title. It acquired the copyright in 2006 by purchase from the defendant
publishing company, to which the writers had initially assigned their copyrights under a
succession of song-writing agreements between 1994 and 1998. The agreements were
expressed to be subject to English law. They conferred exclusive jurisdiction on the
English courts. The contractual term at the heart of this case made provision for an
automatic reverter of the copyrights to the writers in the event of material breaches of the
relevant agreement that had been notified. The trial judge drew no distinction between
the UK copyrights and the foreign copyrights. The appeal turned to two principal points
of law: (i) interpretation of s. 90(2) of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 (the
1988 Act), which governs transmissibility of rights under the 1988 Act; and (ii) to what
extent are disputes relating to foreign copyright justiciable in the English courts?
The Court started with the discussion of the nature of copyright, which was declared to be
central to the case: “It is property. It is the offspring of the 1988 Act, not an obligation
created by a contract... It does not limit valid legal assignments of copyright to absolute
assignments. It expressly permits assignments to be for part of the period of copyright
[which is] an assignment of less than the whole of the copyright. It is commonly called a
partial assignment… As an item of property, copyright can, in principle and in the
absence of an express restriction on its assignability, be disposed of in any lawful way
that the owner of it wants.” As a result of this analysis, the Court upheld the trial judge’s
decision that the automatic reverter provisions in the song-writing agreements were
compatible with the partial nature of the assignments of copyright permitted under s. 90
of the 1988 Act.
As per the second issue of justiciability of foreign copyright disputes, the Court stated
that the issue arises only in connection with the foreign copyrights. To support its
statement, the Court turned to the authorities, notably Lucasfilm, which was concerned
with the justiciability of claims for infringement of foreign copyright, they do not support
Crosstown’s submissions on the non-justiciability of the title issues to foreign copyrights.
“The issue of ownership of copyright as between the parties in this case turns on the legal
effect of contractual documents that, according to their express terms, have to be
construed according to English law and are subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of the
English courts, [for] a term in a contract which deals with copyright throughout the
universe, which has an express English law clause and exclusive English courts
jurisdiction clause, is binding on the question of the appropriate jurisdiction and the
applicable law.” As a result, the Court held that Lucasfilm did not compel it to hold that a
dispute arising out of an English contract as to the assignment of foreign (non-EU)
copyrights was not justiciable in an English court. Therefore, the Crosstown’s appeal in
relation to foreign copyrights was dismissed.
Internet piracy and accessorial liability doctrines: Twentieth Century Fox Film
Corporation v. Newzbin Ltd., [2010] EWHC 601 (Ch) (29 March 2010). The action was
brought for infringement of copyright arising from the operation of a website called
Newzbin on a worldwide Internet discussion system called Usenet. The claimants are all
well known makers and distributors of films. The defendant is the company that owns
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and operates Newzbin, access to which is restricted to members on two basic levels of
membership (fee-based).
The Court found that the main activity of Newzbin was focused on the binary content and
that the functionality of the web-site in relation to text content was still at an early stage
of development. This led to the conclusion that there was necessary “knowledge of
infringement” on behalf of the defendant, and that the defendant was liable to the
claimants for infringement of their copyrights because it has authorised the copying of
the claimants’ films, has procured and engaged with its premium members in a common
design to copy the claimants’ films, and has communicated the claimants’ films to the
public.
10.4 Ireland
Copyright as a human right and Internet piracy: EMI Records & Ors v
Eircom Ltd, [2010] IEHC 108. This decision dealt with enforcement of a settlement
between the plaintiff and defendant regarding diminishing the theft of copyright material
over the Internet. The judgement concerns the compatibility of what the parties have
agreed in relation to data protection legislation. The substance of the original case
concerned the infringement of copyright-protected sound and video recordings over the
Internet, mainly by peer-to-peer sharing groups.
The issues considered in this decision were three-fold. Firstly, whether, for the purposes
of Data Protection Acts, 1988-2003, collection of IP addresses by EMI or its agents must
comply with the specific requirements of the Data Protection Act 1988, as amended, as
they constitute “personal data” for the purposes of the Act. In answering this question,
the Court concluded that none of the plaintiffs had any interest in personally identifying
any living person who was infringing their copyright by means of the settlement and
protocol. Therefore, the entire purpose of this litigation was to uphold the law, and the
question at the issue was answered in the negative. Secondly, whether the settlement
furthers any legitimate interest pursued by Eircom and asserts a possible conflict with the
fundamental rights and freedoms of the data subject. The Court interpreted the Copyright
and Related Rights Act 2000 as extending to the making of an injunction against an
innocent third party in order to block the wholesale illegal destruction of the right to
livelihood through creative effort which copyright is designed to defend and to vindicate.
Thirdly, whether the processing by Eircom through warning and through cutting Internet
access involves sensitive personal data, thus, constituting a civil or criminal offence. The
Court was satisfied that neither the plaintiffs as owners or assignees of valuable
copyright, nor Eircom as the Internet service provider, are in any way interested in the
detection or prosecution of criminal offences. As a result, it was considered to refer this
issue, if necessary, to “an investigation by an authorised body, or a determination made
by a court of competent jurisdiction, following the conduct of a fair and impartial
hearing.”
Based on the analysis above, the Court authorised enforcement of the orders made in the
settlement between the parties.
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In the course of giving reasons for decision the Court held that protection of copyright
was a human right. According to the Court: “In dealing with this aspect of data protection
entitlement, I feel I must return, for a moment, to some basic principles of law. There is
fundamental right to copyright in Irish Law. This has existed as part of Irish legal
tradition since the time of Saint Colmcille. He is often quoted for his aphorism: le gach
bó a buinín agus le gach leabhar a chóip (to each cow its calf and to every book its copy).
The right to be identified with and to reasonably exploit one’s own original creative
endeavour I regard as a human right. Apart from legal tradition, the rights now enshrined
in the Copyright and Related Rights Act, 2000 were, under their previous legislative
incarnation, identified in Phonographic Performance Ireland Limited v. Coady, [1994]
I.R. 504 by Keane J. at 511 has having a pre-legislative origin and super-legislative
effectiveness as part of the unenumerated fundamental rights under the Constitution”
Internet piracy and graduated response: EMI Records (Ireland) Ltd v UPC
Communications Ireland Ltd [2010] IEHC 377. The plaintiffs sought injunctions against
the defendant, an Internet service provider, to prevent the infringements of their
copyrights by third parties illegally downloading it over the Internet. The application
sought to require UPC to implement a graduated response regimes to address online file
sharing.
The Court declined to make the order. It would have granted the relief, but found that
Ireland had not properly implemented its obligations under EU law.
10.5 Singapore
The Court of Appeal of the Republic of Singapore held that RecordTV did not copy the
MediaCorp shows, but rather the registered users requesting these shows did so. This
affirmed the High Court’s decision which followed the reasoning in Cartoon Network LP
v. CSC Holdings Inc., 536 F .3d 121 (2nd Cir. 2008), and found that if the end-user of the
maker of this time-shifted recording for the purposes of the VCR, it must remain that the
end-user is the maker of the recording in the context of the DVR, remote or local. The
Court of Appeal affirmed this conclusion because there was no material difference in
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recording shows on a traditional VCR/DVR and RecordTV’s iDVR, and that the iDVR is
a significant technological improvement on the VCR/DVR.
The Court of Appeal reversed the High Court’s decision that streams transmitted to
subscribers are communicated to “the public”, holding that RecordTV did not
communicate the MediaCorp shows to the public. The only MediaCorp shows that were
“communicated” were those shows that appeared on each registered user’s playlist, and
since the exact make-up of each playlist depended on the specific shows which the
Registered user in question had requested to be recorded, the person responsible for
determining the content of the communication at the time the communication was made
would be that Registered User himself. Each transmission was not to a “public” and the
aggregate transmissions were not to ‘the public” for the purposes of the Copyright Act.
Further, the communication to end users were not made by RecordTV.
RecordTV did not authorize the doing of any act comprised in MediaCorp’s copyright.
reproductions or communications. RecordTV’s Terms of Use granted a right to the
registered users limited to the right to use the iDVR for non-infringing purposes. There
was no evidence that RecordTV granted or purported to grant the right to copy or
communicate to the public any of the MediaCorp shows.
The Court considered public performance rights as applied to downloads, which confers
by the Copyright Act (§101) upon the owners of a copyright “bundle of discrete exclusive
rights,” each of which may be transferred or retained separately by the copyright owner.
It was undisputed that downloads created copies of the musical works, for which the
parties agreed the copyright owners must be compensated.
Having considered the definition of “to perform” provided for in the Copyright Act, the
Court concluded that downloads were not musical performances that were
contemporaneously perceived by the listener. They are simply transfers of electronic
files containing digital copies from an on-line server to a local hard drive: “The
downloaded songs are not performed in any perceptible manner during the transfers; the
user must take some further action to play the songs after they are downloaded. Because
the electronic download itself involves no recitation, rendering, or playing of the musical
work encoded in the digital transmission,” the Court held that such a download was not a
performance of the work, as defined by §101. Therefore, the downloads did not
constitute public performances of the downloaded musical works.
defendant’s direct customers and resold the Release 14 computer-aided design software
copies (used by architects, engineers, and manufactures) on eBay. The declaratory
judgment action was brought to establish that these re-sales did not infringe the
defendant’s copyright in Release 14 software copies.
This case required the Court to decide whether the defendant sold Release 14 copies to its
customers or licensed them instead. If the initial customer (Cardwell/Thomas &
Associates, Inc. – CTA) owned its copies of Release 14, then both its sales to the
defendant and defendant’s re-sales were non-infringing under the “first sale” doctrine.
The US “first sale” doctrine states that a copyright owner’s exclusive distribution right is
exhausted after the owner’s first sale of a particular copy of the copyrighted work.
Further, in order to decide whether a software user is a licensee, there are a number of
factors: (i) whether the copyright owner specifies that a user is granted a license; (ii)
whether the copyright owner significantly restricts the user’s ability to transfer the
software; and (iii) whether the copyright owner imposes notable use restrictions.
The Court held that a software user was a licensee rather than an owner of a copy, where
a copyright owner (1) specifies that the user is granted a license; (2) significantly restricts
the user’s ability to transfer the software; and (3) imposes notable use restrictions on the
software user. The Court, therefore, concluded that CTA was a licensee rather than an
owner of the copies of Release 14, and thus, was not entitled to invoke the first sale
doctrine or the essential step defence. As a result, both CTA’s and the defendant’s sales
infringed the plaintiff’s exclusive right to distribute copies of its works.
The Court considered the distinction between contractual covenants and license
conditions. Contractual terms are the terms that limit a license’s scope as “conditions,”
the breach of which constitute copyright infringement. All the other license terms are
considered to be “covenants” (contractual promise, manifestation of intention to act or
refrain from acting in a particular way). To establish a copyright infringement, Blizzard
must demonstrate that the violated term (TOU §4(B)) is a condition rather than a
covenant. For a licensee’s violation of a contract to constitute copyright infringement,
there must be a nexus between the condition and the licensor’s exclusive rights of
copyright.
Having considered the principles above, the Court concluded that TOU §4 contained
certain restrictions that were grounded in Blizzard’s exclusive rights of copyright and
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other restrictions that were not. Here, WOW players did not commit copyright
infringement by using Glider in violation of the TOU. Thus, MDY was not liable for
secondary copyright infringement, which required the existence of direct copyright
infringement.
The injunction enjoined the conduct of defendants wherever they may be found,
including without limitation in Canada. The scope of the injunction was in the following
terms: “The Court further clarifies that this injunction covers any acts of direct
infringement, as defined in 17 U.S.C. § 106, that take place in the United States. To the
extent that an act of reproducing, copying, distributing, performing, or displaying takes
place in the United States, it may violate 17 U.S.C. § 106, subject to the generally
applicable requirements and defences of the Copyright Act. As explained in the Court’s
December 23, 2009 Order, “United States copyright law does not require that both parties
be located in the United States. Rather, the acts of uploading and downloading are each
independent grounds of copyright infringement liability.”...Each download or upload of
Plaintiffs’ copyrighted material violates Plaintiffs’ copyrights if even a single United
States-based user is involved in the “swarm” process of distributing, transmitting, or
receiving a portion of a computer file containing Plaintiffs’ copyrighted content.”
ideas. The key question to be answered is: Are the works substantially similar beyond
the fact that they depict the same idea?
The Court found that MGA’s Bratz dolls could not be considered substantially similar to
Bryant’s preliminary sketches simply because the dolls and sketches depict young, stylish
girls with big heads and an attitude. Yet, this appeared to be how the district court
reasoned. The Court went on to hold that it might have been reasonable to hold that some
of the Bratz dolls were substantially similar to Bryant’s sketches, especially those in the
first generation. The decision of the district court was vacated, and the case was sent for
re-trial.
The United States Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit held that there was no copyright
infringement. The Toys R US pacifier holder was not substantially similar to the
protected elements of the Baby Buddies pacifier. An average lay observer would not
recognize the alleged copy as having been appropriated from the copyrighted work.
While both bears shared the basic anatomical features common to all teddy bears, there
were almost no similarities between the two pacifier holders beyond the general ideas of
including a teddy bear (with the requisite ears, eyes, nose, mouth, arms, and legs), a
ribbon bow, and a pastel-based color scheme on a baby's pacifier holder. Any reasonable
jury, properly instructed, would pick up on these differences and their cumulative effect
on the noticeably different aesthetics embodied in the two pacifier holders. Because no
reasonable jury could conclude that the pacifier holders were substantially similar at the
protected level, the district court had properly granted Toys R US's motion for summary
judgment on the copyright infringement count.
conclusion on this point, the Court considered Funky Films, 462 F.3d: “At a very high
level of generality, both works share certain plot similarities”. The Court also referred to
Berkic, 761 F.2d: “But general plot ideas are not protected by copyright law; they remain
forever the common property of artistic mankind.” The Court found that alleged
similarities between the screenplay and the motion picture (i.e., both works are based on
the same historical events, take place at the same time and in the same country, and share
similar themes) were largely between unprotected elements, such as historical facts,
characteristics that flow naturally from their shared premise, and scenes-a-faire.
Therefore, the Court concluded that the district court was correct in granting summary
judgment to the defendants.
The plaintiffs argued that the defendants copied the formers’ “expression of a
complicated physical phenomenon, consisting of 1) the Model formulation, 2) the related
full derivation of equations, and 3) two figures…”
The Court considered the conversion claim: “In Illinois, to establish a claim for
conversion a plaintiff must show: 1) defendant’s unauthorised or wrongful assumption of
control, dominion, or ownership over a plaintiff’s personal property; 2) plaintiff’s right in
the property; 3) plaintiff’s right to immediate possession of the property; and 4)
plaintiff’s demand for possession of the property.” The Court considered evidence
available (defendants only had copies of some of plaintiffs’ works) and concluded that
the plaintiffs’ claim for conversion of tangible goods could not survive summary
judgment: (FMC Corp. v. Capital Cities/ABC, Inc., 915 F.d 300) “possession of copies of
documents – as opposed to the documents themselves – does not amount to an
interference with the owner’s property sufficient to constitute conversion… the owner is
in no way being deprived of the use of his property. The only rub is that someone else is
using it as well.”
The Court also concluded that the Copyright Act did not provide protection to the
plaintiffs’ alleged copyright in the Model: “in no case does copyright protection for an
original work of authorship extend to any idea, procedure, process, system, method of
operation, concept, principle, or discovery, regardless of the form in which it is described,
explained, illustrated, or embodied in such work” (17 U.S.C. §102).
Scope of the DMCA safe harbour provision for a UGC site like YouTube:
Viacom v. YouTube, 718 F.Supp.2d 514 (S.D.N.Y. June 23, 2010). Defendant YouTube,
owned by defendant Google, operates its website (www.youtube.com) onto which users
upload video files free of charge. YouTube is considered a service provider for the
purposes of Digital Millennium Copyright Act’s (“DMCA”), 17 U.S.C. §512.
The defendants moved for summary judgment that they were entitled to the, “safe
harbor” §512(c) of DMCA protection against all of the plaintiffs’ direct and secondary
infringement claims, including claims for “inducement” contributory liability, because
they had insufficient notice, under the DMCA, of the particular infringements in suit.
The plaintiffs cross-moved for partial summary judgment that defendants are not
protected by the statutory “safe harbor” provision, but “are liable for the intentional
infringement of thousands of Viacom’s copyrighted works…”
The critical issue was whether the statutory phrases “actual knowledge that the material
or an activity using the material on the system or network is infringing,” and “facts or
circumstance from which infringing activity is apparent” in §512(c) of the DMCA mean
a general awareness that there are infringements or rather mean actual or constructive
knowledge of specific and identifiable infringements of individual items.
The Court examined the “safe harbor” provisions of the DMCA, which required that the
service provider “not receive a financial benefit directly attributable to the infringing
activity, in a case in which the service provider has the right and ability to control such
activity…” “The right and ability to control” the activity requires, in turn, knowledge of
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it, which must be item-specific. The provider need not monitor or seek out facts
indicating such activity. If “red flags” identify infringing material with sufficient
particularity, it must be taken down.
The Court also considered three arguments that did not affect YouTube’s safe harbour
coverage: (i) YouTube has implemented a policy of terminating a user after warnings
from YouTube that the user has uploaded infringing matter (“three strikes”); (ii) in its
“Claim Your Content” system, YouTube used Audible Magic, a fingerprinting tool which
removed an offending video automatically if it matched some portion of a reference
video submitted by a copyright owner who had designated this service. It also removed a
video if the rights-holder operated a manual function after viewing the infringing video;
and (iii) although the statute states that the “works” may be described representatively, it
also requires that the identification of the infringing material that is to be removed must
be accompanied by “information reasonably sufficient to permit the service provider to
locate the material.” As a result, the Court granted summary judgment to the defendants
stating that they qualified for protection under 17 U.S.C. §512 against all of the plaintiffs’
claims.
The Court found inducement liability based on the fact that the defendant engaged in
purposeful conduct that encouraged copyright infringement with the intent to encourage
such infringement. The evidence supported that the defendants, in fact, conducted
themselves with the purposes that fostered infringement, including that LimeWire created
and distributed the LimeWire software, which “users employ to commit a substantial
amount of infringement.” It was found that the defendants’ “intent to foster infringement
can be established by evidence of a defendants’ ‘clear expression’ of such intent, or of
affirmative steps taken to foster infringement.” Having considered several factors (the
defendants’ awareness of substantial infringement by users, efforts to attract infringing
users, efforts to enable and assist users to commit infringement, dependence of infringing
use for the success of its business, and failure to mitigate infringing activities), the Court
found that the test for inducement had been satisfied and that LimeWire infringed the
plaintiffs’ copyright. Therefore, the plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment on the
claim against LimeWire of inducement of copyright infringement was granted.
However, the plaintiffs’ claim for summary judgment for contributory infringement was
denied, stating that “a defendant who distributes a product that materially contributes to
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copyright infringement will not be liable… if the product also is widely used for
legitimate, unobjectionable purposes or is merely capable of substantial non-infringing
use.” LimeWire presented evidence of non-infringing content on the file sharing server,
and as a result, the Court found that it was not possible to determine whether the system
[LimeWire] was capable of such non-infringing use. The motion for summary judgment
on the issue of vicarious infringement was also denied: the second part of the two-part
test was not satisfied here (LimeWire had the right and ability to supervise the infringing
activity; but did not exercise any meaningful supervisory control, and failed to provide a
legitimate reason for not doing so). Finally, the LimeWire’s founder and chairman were
found jointly liable for infringement: individuals who had “the ability to supervise
infringing activity and ha[d] financial interest in that activity, or who personally
participate[d] in that activity [were] personally liable for infringement.”
Internet piracy – privacy of users and fair use defense: Arista Records, LLC v.
Doe 3, 604 F. 3d 110 (2nd.Cir.2010). The defendant contended that the allegations
against him (that the defendant’s downloading and/or distributing music over the Internet
in violation of the plaintiffs’ copyright and the plaintiffs’ need for the information in
order to enforce their rights) were not sufficient to overcome the defendant’s First
Amendment right of anonymity. There was found no merit in Doe 3’s contentions.
The Court considered the First Amendment principles as providing protection for
anonymous speech. The First Amendment, however, does not provide a license for
copyright infringement: it is “not a license to trammel on legally recognized rights in
intellectual property.” Thus, to the extent that anonymity is used to mask copyright
infringement or to facilitate such infringement by other persons, it is unprotected by the
First Amendment. Therefore, the Court concluded that the defendant’s contention had no
merit.
Finally, the Court considered the copyright doctrine of “fair use” defence, the
applicability of which presented mixed questions of law and fact: “Fair use presupposes
good faith and fair dealing,” and one consideration is “whether the user stands to profit
from exploitation of the copyrighted material without paying the customary price.” It
was found that three out of four elements (second to fourth) of the “fair use” doctrine
were present in Doe 3’s actions (the purpose and character of use, the nature of the
copyrighted work, the substantiality of the portion used in relation to the copyrighted
work as a whole, and the effect on the potential market for or value of the copyrighted
work), and therefore, his actions could not be defended by the doctrine.
11 - INDUSTRIAL DESIGNS
CONCLUSION
arising from a decision of the Board in SOCAN’s Tariff 22, but perhaps not until into 2012.
Leave applications are outstanding for two other matters that originated in the Board.
The big question for 2011 is whether this Parliament will survive long enough for Bill C-32 to
pass. If so, 2011 may be a year of adjustment for copyright owners and users.