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El. knyga: Private Copying [Taylor & Francis e-book]

(Brunel University, UK)
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"The scope and legitimacy of private copying is one of the most highly contested issues in digital copyright. While private copying was practiced in the analogue world too, it was tolerated due to its minimal impact and to the difficulties related to itsmonitoring. Yet, its permissibility is ambiguous in the digital environment; this is because digitalisation has enabled ordinary individuals to make and share copies of copyrighted works easily, for no cost and with no degradation in terms of quality. Scholars and lawmakers stress the decisive role of private copying in striking an adequate balance between the freedom to use copyrighted works and the protection of the rightholders' interests in the digital world. In Europe, private copying is explicitly permitted under Article 5(2)(b) of Directive 2001/29/EC on the harmonisation of certain aspects of copyright and related rights in the information society and the national laws that implement it. Despite being a lawful activity in the great majority of European Member States, digital private copying remains a highly controversial phenomenon and the scope of digital private copying remains legally unclear.This book offers an original analysis of private copying and determines the actual scope of private copying as an area of end-user freedom in the digital world. In particular, it examines the permissibility of digital private copying with a view to clarify the legal uncertainty as to its scope. The basis of this examination is Article 5(2)(b) of the Information Society Directive. Under this Article, the use of copyrighted works ought to be 'private' and 'non-commercial' to be permitted; these concepts, however, do not translate well, and tend to be less sharp, in the digital environment. Even though theirmeaning seems clear and self-evident, their legal boundaries are in practice very vague and not settled by law"--

"This book offers an original analysis of private copying and determines the actual scope of private copying as an area of end-user freedom in the digital world. The basis of this examination is Article 5(2)(b) of the Information Society Directive. Underthis Article, in order for copying to be permitted, the use of the intended use of the copyrighted works ought to be private and non-commercial in order to be permitted; these concepts, however, do not translate well, and tend to be less clear in the digital environment. With the permissible limits of private copying being contested and without clarity as to the legal nature of the private copying limitation, the scope of user freedom is being challenged. Private use, however, has always remained free incopyright law. Not only is private use synonymous with user autonomy via the exhaustion doctrine, but it also finds protection under privacy considerations which come into play at the stage of copyright enforcement. The author of this book argues that the rationale for a private copying limitation remains unaltered in the digital world and maintains there is nothing to prevent national judges from interpreting the legal nature of private copying as a 'sacred' privilege that can be enforced against possible restrictions. Private copying will be of particular interest to academics, students and practitioners of intellectual property law"--

Acknowledgements vii
Abbreviations viii
Table of cases
x
Table of legislation
xvi
Introduction 1(5)
1 Legal nature and rationale
6(22)
1.1 The legal nature of private copying
7(8)
1.2 The raison d'etre of the private copying limitation
15(13)
2 The permitted activities
28(21)
2.1 Reproduction and private copying
30(9)
2.2 The complexity of permitting reproductions for private use
39(10)
3 Defining `private'
49(30)
3.1 The scope of the term `private'
50(13)
3.2 A test in determining the private character of copyright use
63(16)
4 Defining `non-commercial'
79(20)
4.1 Defining `commerciality' in copyright
83(8)
4.2 `Ends that are neither directly nor indirectly commercial'
91(8)
5 Fitting private copying into the three-step test
99(19)
5.1 First step: private copying as a `certain special case'
103(2)
5.2 Second step: private copying and conflicts with normal exploitation
105(7)
5.3 Third step: private copying and prejudice to legitimate interests
112(6)
6 Levies on private copying
118(20)
6.1 The compensatory nature of fair compensation and the vague meaning of `harm'
124(9)
6.2 Does fair compensation reach an unfair compromise?
133(5)
7 Technological restrictions on private copying
138(21)
7.1 The legal protection against the circumvention of technological protection measures
139(7)
7.2 Technological protection measures and private copying
146(13)
8 Contractual constraints on private copying
159(14)
8.1 Private copying and contractual overridability
160(6)
8.2 Contractual restrictions to private copying
166(7)
Conclusion 173(6)
Appendix 179(7)
Bibliography 186(27)
Index 213
Stavroula Karapapa (LLB, LLM, PhD) is lecturer in intellectual property law at Brunel University and practicing Barrister at the Athens Bar, specialising in Intellectual Property and Internet law. Her chief research interests focus on the intersection of law and technology.