Labels

§512 DMCA 6th circuit 9th circuit Aasparagus Aerosmith alamy amazing Amerian Airlines anne frank APCA Conference appeal appropriation art ASACAP Axanar axl rose baidu BBC Benelux Berklee blurred lines Bolero BPI British Black Music Month BUMA Canada Captain Kirk Carol M Highsmith cars cayman islands china CJEU CMO Act colours Commissioner of Taxation v Seven Network Limited Congressman Bob Goodlatte content ID copyrght troll copyright Copyright Education and Awareness Symposium Copyright Hub; Richard Hooper copyright infringement copyright law copyright reform copyright term copyright troll copyright trolls copyright; copyright office cox CREATe Festival 2016 crockford cross border portability DCMA DeBanff deposition design rights designs disney Distance Learning Programme leading to a Postgraduate Diploma/Masters in UK EU & US Copyright Law DMCA duration of copyright Ed sheeran events fair use fan fiction FAPL FCCm crossword federal court footbvall freedom of panorama GEMA Germany getty images Ghostface killah Google Google Books grd Hong Kong IFPI IFPI GLOBAL MUSIC REPORT 2016 ILMC image rights In flight Inc IPO ISRC ITV Jennifer Urban Jim Sensenbrenner John doe julia reda justin bieber kickbacks King's College Klingon Kopcke languages protected by copyright law society of scotland led zepplin Lindsay Lohan LLC v. Varsity Brands loi Hadopi MADONNA making available Maurice Ravel monkey selfie naruto. selfie Nelly Furtado New York news NFL Notice and Takedown in Everyday Practice OMI online piracy oracle Pei Zhang PETA photocopies for education purposes photograph photography Pirate Bay plagiarism Prelude to Axanar prenda law PRO PRS for Music RIAA richard prince right of publicity rightscorp Robert Mapplethorpe royalties safe habor safe harbour sampling set top box sid vicious songwriters SoundExchange Spock spridningskollen stairway to heaven Star Athletica star trek state law subsistence of copyright substantial similarity Supreme Court Sweden take down takedown taurus the new public UGC UMG US user-generated-content Vantablack vimeo vogue we shall overcome Wikimedia wilful infringement of copyright YouTube

News from Scotland

A Glasgow bar has become the first in Scotland to be hit with a court penalty for showing English Premiership football matches via the unauthorised use of foreign broadcasts. The Football Association Premier League (FAPL) have issued a release saying that the Merchants Quay bar in Paisley Road faces having to pay the FAPL up to £6,000 for copyright infringement in damages and costs awarded in the Court of Session - although the final amount has yet to be determined. The FAPL says the judgement follows an 18-month long crackdown in Scotland against bars using foreign feeds to show matches from the top flight of English football. The Premier League says it has sent 31 'letters before action' to pubs in Scotland. It says that in the majority of cases the pubs  simply agreed to cease showing the matches. In five  cases the FAPL took legal action against pubs and interim interdicts were awarded, preventing unauthorised broadcasts until a court hearing.

The FAPL have pledged further strong action as it undertakes a programme to prevent 'the undermining of its deal with Sky Sports and BT Sport for coverage of Premier League matches'. Readers of this Blog will remember the case involving Portsmouth landlady Karen Murphy which established that individuals living in the UK are allowed to use digiboxes which provide authorised services from other EU member states to watch Premier League football in the UK However this case did not extent such a right to commercial premises.

A Premier League spokesman said: "The courts granted the judgment following failure by the defendants to engage in the case, despite several attempts to contact the publican."

And also from Scotland - and the Scottish Law Society - who have said that proposed EU legislation allowing holiday makers travelling in Europe to access online content, such as digital film and TV services is 'too timid'. Whilst the Society has welcomed the European Commission’s proposed legislation, which would allow EU residents travelling within the EU to access digital content services which they have paid for in their home country, they have called for the legislation on cross-border portability of digital content services to be extended to cover digital subscriptions purchased by EU residents anywhere in the EU.

Jim McLean, convener of the Law Society’s Intellectual Property committee, said: “We’re delighted that the European Commission is looking at ways to improve online content services for consumers and welcome the proposed regulation which will allow EU residents to access digital services such as Netflix, Sky and Amazon Prime, when travelling within the EU on holiday or business. But he added: “However we believe the proposed legislation is too timid and should also cover online content services purchased or obtained by a subscriber within the EU, even if that is outside of their home country" and “This would align with the Commission’s strategy to allow for wider online access to works by users across the EU and would be more straightforward for both the consumers and the providers.”

http://www.heraldscotland.com/news/14278737.Glasgow_pub__quot_first_in_Scotland_quot__to_receive_penalty_for_Premier_League_copyright_breach/

Joined cases C-403/08 Football Association Premier League Ltd and Others v QC Leisure and Others and C-429/08 Karen Murphy v Media Protection Services Ltd 

More on the Karen Murphy case here

http://www.lawscot.org.uk/news/2016/02/eu-proposals-for-tv,-music-and-sport-subscriptions-too-timid-says-law-society/

0 Response to "News from Scotland"

Post a Comment