THE COURT OF JUSTICE OF THE EUROPEAN UNION’S DECISION IN POLAND V. EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT – THE LAST CHALLENGE DISMISSED, WHO WILL TAKE THE NEXT STEP FORWARD?

This article follows the Court of Justice of the European Union’s decision in Poland v. European Parliament and Council of the European Union (C-401/19), the ‘last-ditch’ effort made by the Republic of Poland to annul (in part, at least) art. 17 of the Digital Single Market Directive, which famously...

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Main Author: Paul-George BUTA
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nicolae Titulescu University Publishing House 2022-06-01
Series:Challenges of the Knowledge Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://cks.univnt.ro/download/cks_2022_articles%252F4_CKS_2022_INTELLECTUAL_PROPERTY_LAW%252FCKS_2022_INTELLECTUAL_PROPERTY_LAW_003.pdf
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author Paul-George BUTA
author_facet Paul-George BUTA
author_sort Paul-George BUTA
collection DOAJ
description This article follows the Court of Justice of the European Union’s decision in Poland v. European Parliament and Council of the European Union (C-401/19), the ‘last-ditch’ effort made by the Republic of Poland to annul (in part, at least) art. 17 of the Digital Single Market Directive, which famously captured both the legislative and public debate by proposing that online content sharing service providers be, where they have not secured a license from the relevant copyright and/or related rights holders, directly liable for the communication to the public of works or protected subject matter not by themselves but by their users. This very important shift in the liability regime for copyright infringement has naturally attracted a lot of criticism, with some of the critics’ arguments being used by Poland in their briefing the present case. In response, Attorney General Øe and then the Grand Chamber of the Court, in following his findings, allow the provision to stand but, by highlighting its qualification as a serious interference with the right to freedom of expression and information, subject it to a series of very stringent conditions, which would seem to make it, at least in light of current technology, only exceptionally applicable.
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spelling doaj-art-c96da2d661f64b6da2d0bd878d9e41e12024-12-02T07:30:14ZengNicolae Titulescu University Publishing HouseChallenges of the Knowledge Society2068-77962022-06-01151509518THE COURT OF JUSTICE OF THE EUROPEAN UNION’S DECISION IN POLAND V. EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT – THE LAST CHALLENGE DISMISSED, WHO WILL TAKE THE NEXT STEP FORWARD?Paul-George BUTA0Faculty of Law, “Nicolae Titulescu” University of BucharestThis article follows the Court of Justice of the European Union’s decision in Poland v. European Parliament and Council of the European Union (C-401/19), the ‘last-ditch’ effort made by the Republic of Poland to annul (in part, at least) art. 17 of the Digital Single Market Directive, which famously captured both the legislative and public debate by proposing that online content sharing service providers be, where they have not secured a license from the relevant copyright and/or related rights holders, directly liable for the communication to the public of works or protected subject matter not by themselves but by their users. This very important shift in the liability regime for copyright infringement has naturally attracted a lot of criticism, with some of the critics’ arguments being used by Poland in their briefing the present case. In response, Attorney General Øe and then the Grand Chamber of the Court, in following his findings, allow the provision to stand but, by highlighting its qualification as a serious interference with the right to freedom of expression and information, subject it to a series of very stringent conditions, which would seem to make it, at least in light of current technology, only exceptionally applicable.http://cks.univnt.ro/download/cks_2022_articles%252F4_CKS_2022_INTELLECTUAL_PROPERTY_LAW%252FCKS_2022_INTELLECTUAL_PROPERTY_LAW_003.pdfart. 17 of the digital single market directiveonline content sharing service providersliability regime for copyright infringementthe right to freedom of expression and informationthe exclusive right of communication to the public
spellingShingle Paul-George BUTA
THE COURT OF JUSTICE OF THE EUROPEAN UNION’S DECISION IN POLAND V. EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT – THE LAST CHALLENGE DISMISSED, WHO WILL TAKE THE NEXT STEP FORWARD?
Challenges of the Knowledge Society
art. 17 of the digital single market directive
online content sharing service providers
liability regime for copyright infringement
the right to freedom of expression and information
the exclusive right of communication to the public
title THE COURT OF JUSTICE OF THE EUROPEAN UNION’S DECISION IN POLAND V. EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT – THE LAST CHALLENGE DISMISSED, WHO WILL TAKE THE NEXT STEP FORWARD?
title_full THE COURT OF JUSTICE OF THE EUROPEAN UNION’S DECISION IN POLAND V. EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT – THE LAST CHALLENGE DISMISSED, WHO WILL TAKE THE NEXT STEP FORWARD?
title_fullStr THE COURT OF JUSTICE OF THE EUROPEAN UNION’S DECISION IN POLAND V. EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT – THE LAST CHALLENGE DISMISSED, WHO WILL TAKE THE NEXT STEP FORWARD?
title_full_unstemmed THE COURT OF JUSTICE OF THE EUROPEAN UNION’S DECISION IN POLAND V. EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT – THE LAST CHALLENGE DISMISSED, WHO WILL TAKE THE NEXT STEP FORWARD?
title_short THE COURT OF JUSTICE OF THE EUROPEAN UNION’S DECISION IN POLAND V. EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT – THE LAST CHALLENGE DISMISSED, WHO WILL TAKE THE NEXT STEP FORWARD?
title_sort court of justice of the european union s decision in poland v european parliament the last challenge dismissed who will take the next step forward
topic art. 17 of the digital single market directive
online content sharing service providers
liability regime for copyright infringement
the right to freedom of expression and information
the exclusive right of communication to the public
url http://cks.univnt.ro/download/cks_2022_articles%252F4_CKS_2022_INTELLECTUAL_PROPERTY_LAW%252FCKS_2022_INTELLECTUAL_PROPERTY_LAW_003.pdf
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