Study on emerging issues on collective licensing practices in the digital environment external link

Bulayenko, O., van Gompel, S., Handke, C.W., Peeters, R., Poort, J., Quintais, J. & Regeczi, D.
2021

Abstract

Collective management of copyright and related rights is an important element of the copyright system. First and foremost, it can ensure that rightholders reap greater rewards. By exploiting economies of scale and network effects, collective management can also make markets for copyright licences more efficient, to benefit users and other stakeholders. This study examines two central aspects of collective management of copyright and related rights in Europe. Part I documents the development of multi-territorial licensing of online rights in musical works in the European Economic Area (EEA) under Title III of Directive 2014/26/EU on Collective management of copyright and related rights and multi-territorial licensing of rights in musical works for online use in the internal market (CRM Directive). It highlights the consequences of legal and regulatory reform, based on pervasive quantitative and qualitative data – produced in surveys, interviews and a workshop with stakeholders – and collected among collective management organisations (CMOs), rightholders, online music service providers, and national competent authorities. Part II examines national mechanisms of collective licensing with an extended effect and comprehensive network of national experts, complemented by surveys of CMOs, as well as interviews with national competent authorities. The present study provides a legal and economic analysis that can serve as input for the European Commission to draft the reports required by Article 40 of the CRM Directive and Article 12(6) of the Directive 2019/790/EU on copyright and related rights in the Digital Single Market (DSM Directive).

Auteursrecht, collectief beheer, collectieve licenties, digitalisering, Europe, frontpage, Naburige rechten

Bibtex

Report{nokey, title = {Study on emerging issues on collective licensing practices in the digital environment}, author = {Bulayenko, O. and van Gompel, S. and Handke, C.W. and Peeters, R. and Poort, J. and Quintais, J. and Regeczi, D.}, url = {https://www.ivir.nl/publicaties/download/Study_on_collective_practices_in_the_digital_environment.pdfhttps://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/library/reports-collective-management-and-extended-licensing}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.2759/611658}, year = {2021}, date = {2021-11-25}, abstract = {Collective management of copyright and related rights is an important element of the copyright system. First and foremost, it can ensure that rightholders reap greater rewards. By exploiting economies of scale and network effects, collective management can also make markets for copyright licences more efficient, to benefit users and other stakeholders. This study examines two central aspects of collective management of copyright and related rights in Europe. Part I documents the development of multi-territorial licensing of online rights in musical works in the European Economic Area (EEA) under Title III of Directive 2014/26/EU on Collective management of copyright and related rights and multi-territorial licensing of rights in musical works for online use in the internal market (CRM Directive). It highlights the consequences of legal and regulatory reform, based on pervasive quantitative and qualitative data – produced in surveys, interviews and a workshop with stakeholders – and collected among collective management organisations (CMOs), rightholders, online music service providers, and national competent authorities. Part II examines national mechanisms of collective licensing with an extended effect and comprehensive network of national experts, complemented by surveys of CMOs, as well as interviews with national competent authorities. The present study provides a legal and economic analysis that can serve as input for the European Commission to draft the reports required by Article 40 of the CRM Directive and Article 12(6) of the Directive 2019/790/EU on copyright and related rights in the Digital Single Market (DSM Directive).}, keywords = {Auteursrecht, collectief beheer, collectieve licenties, digitalisering, Europe, frontpage, Naburige rechten}, }

Digitale anonimiteit is ook bij gebruik van de bitcoin een gevaarlijke illusie: Subtielere consequentie van cryptogeld is versterking machtsconcentratie internetgiganten external link

Het Financieele Dagblad, vol. 2017, pp: 11, 2017

anonimiteit, bitcoin, cryptogeld, digitalisering, frontpage, Internet, machtsconcentraties

Bibtex

Article{Arnbak2017b, title = {Digitale anonimiteit is ook bij gebruik van de bitcoin een gevaarlijke illusie: Subtielere consequentie van cryptogeld is versterking machtsconcentratie internetgiganten}, author = {Arnbak, A.}, url = {https://www.ivir.nl/publicaties/download/FD_07sep2017.pdf}, year = {0907}, date = {2017-09-07}, journal = {Het Financieele Dagblad}, volume = {2017}, pages = {11}, keywords = {anonimiteit, bitcoin, cryptogeld, digitalisering, frontpage, Internet, machtsconcentraties}, }