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Showing posts from March, 2021

Linking after VG Bild-Kunst ... in a table

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  A week ago, The IPKat   reported and commented   on the important   decision   of the Grand Chamber of the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) in   VG Bild-Kunst , C-392/19.  In that judgment, the CJEU admitted the possibility for rightholders to restrict linking  by contract , provided that any such restrictions are imposed and/or implemented through the adoption of effective technological measures, in accordance with Article 6(1) and (3) of the  InfoSoc Directive . According to the CJEU, this requirement - which, as I wrote, might raise questions of compatibility with the no formalities rule in the  Berne Convention  - is prompted by the need to "ensure legal certainty and the smooth functioning of the internet". Readers may be aware that, over the past few years, I have developed IP and study aid materials (they can all be accessed  here ) primarily aimed at my students. Among them, there was a table - first published on The IPKat  here  - summarising the treat

Jeff Koons loses (again) in France: his Fait d'Hiver found to infringe copyright in Franck Davidovici's own Fait d'Hiver

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 A little over a year ago, The IPKat  reported   on the then fresh decision of the Paris Court of Appeal, which had upheld the decision at first instance in a copyright infringement case originally brought by the estate of photographer  Jean-François Bauret  against the well-known (also to copyright litigators) US artist  Jeff Koons  and the  Centre Pompidou . The news has reached this blog that  another copyright decision  has recently been rendered against Koons. Background The case is once again one of copyright infringement. It was originally brought by artist and photographer Franck Davidovici and concerned the alleged reproduction of his work  Fait d’Hiver , which he realized as a freelance artist for a 1984 Naf Naf advertisement, in Koons’s 1988 porcelain work, also titled  Fait d'Hiver . Davidovici's  Fait d'Hiver Koons's  Fait d'Hiver Koons’s work, which is part of the  Banality  series  (one which copyright lawyers are well acquainted with) had been  inter

CJEU rules that linking can be restricted by contract, though only by using effective technological measures

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  Can a rightholder restrict linking by contract, eg by imposing the adoption of technological measures?  This, in a nutshell, is the core issue at the heart of the referral to the Grand Chamber of the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) in  VG Bild-Kunst , C-392/19, which was  decided  this morning. The Court answered in the affirmative. The referred question was: Does the embedding of a work – which is available on a freely accessible website with the consent of the rightholder – in the website of a third party by way of framing constitute communication to the public of that work within the meaning of Article 3(1) of [the  InfoSoc] Directive 2001/29/EC  where it occurs through circumvention of protection measures against framing taken or instigated by the rightholder? The ruling is important because it addresses an issue that was left outstanding after a string of CJEU decisions, starting as early as the 2014 ruling in  Svensson   and then continuing with  BestWater ,  GS M

Spanish Supreme Court applies Cofemel and rules that bullfighting cannot be protected by copyright

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Miguel Ángel Perera Díaz in a  faena A bullfight (in Spanish:  corrida ; the final stages are called  faena ) is a contest that involves a bullfighter (a  matador ) and a bull, in which the former seeks to subdue, immobilize or kill the animal in accordance with a set of rules. The best-known type of bullfighting is the  Spanish-style one , which has been traditionally regarded as both a sport and performance art. In relation to the latter qualification of bullfighting, a question that has recently arisen is whether a bullfight might be regarded as a work protectable under copyright law. The Spanish Supreme Court  answered this question in the negative  last month, when it delivered its judgment in a longstanding copyright saga, which had first begun after a well-known Spanish matador,  Miguel Ángel Perera Díaz , was refused registration – by the Extremadura Copyright Registry – of a  faena  of his. Background The bullfight in question was one which had taken place in 2014 at  Badajoz