copyright & ipr

77
Intellectual property rights 8/12/2015 Jacques Folon, Ph.D. www.folon.com Partner Edge Consulting Maître de conférences Université de Liège Chargé de cours ICHEC Brussels Professeur invité Université de Lorraine ESC Rennes

Upload: edge-consulting

Post on 19-Jan-2017

562 views

Category:

Law


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Copyright & IPR

Intellectual property rights8/12/2015

JacquesFolon,Ph.D.www.folon.com

PartnerEdgeConsulting

MaîtredeconférencesUniversitédeLiègeChargédecoursICHECBrusselsProfesseurinvité

UniversitédeLorraineESCRennes

Page 2: Copyright & IPR

Available on line www.fedweb.belgium.be in French & Dutch

Page 3: Copyright & IPR

Some IPR Criticisms

3http://pyersedandridge.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/website-home-page-critique-550x322.jpg

Page 4: Copyright & IPR

A short history of copyright

Page 5: Copyright & IPR

80% of the Internet Users do consider that Pyracy is not theft

5

Page 6: Copyright & IPR

6

COPYRIGHT LENGHT INCREASES

Page 7: Copyright & IPR

7

IPR is outdatedBeaumarchais created

the first copyright society in 1777

FRANCE IS THE

« DROIT D’AUTEUR» COUNTRY

Page 8: Copyright & IPR

IS IPR a property like any other one?

• No, it is limited in time

8

Page 9: Copyright & IPR

• No, it creates a temporary monopoly position

9

IS IPR a property like any other one?

Page 10: Copyright & IPR

IPR limits art

10

Page 11: Copyright & IPR

What is the purpose of IPR?

• It allows the possibility for an author to live

• It gives various type of protection

11

Page 12: Copyright & IPR

Février 2008

IDEAS

Ideas are not protected works. They are not

subject to property and are free as far as they are not proposed in an

external way (CA Paris 12 sept

1989)

Page 13: Copyright & IPR

IPR

• Inventions – Patents – GMO – IT Chips

• Signs – Trade mark – Names – Geographical protection

• Esthetical objects & design – Design

• Copyright, droit d’auteur & neighboring rights

13

Page 14: Copyright & IPR

« Droit d’auteur »

Original • « shows the personality of the author » • Plagiarism is not original

Concretization • Ideas are not protected • A minimum of concretization is enough

• two criteria needed

Source: Lionel Maurel http://www.slideshare.net/calimaq/droit-de-linternet-et-de-linformation-complet

Page 15: Copyright & IPR

15

Questions to raise before using protected works

• Are these protected works? • Are we authorized to use them? • Do we have a written agreement?

=> what are the basic principles?

Page 16: Copyright & IPR

16

Basic principles

•Exclusive right •70 Years after author’s death •Preliminary authorization • transfer of rights • forbidden by law !!

Crédit image: http://www.tetedequenelle.fr/2010/03/droit-dauteur-mal-tourne/

Page 17: Copyright & IPR

17

Page 18: Copyright & IPR

18

Categories

« Droit d’auteur » « copyright system » creative commons assignment of rights Public domain

Page 19: Copyright & IPR

What is protected ?

TextConferences

theatrechoreography

circusmovie

paintingsmusicphotomaps

architecturesoftwaredesignfashion

Page 20: Copyright & IPR

20

Protection of the work

•Official declaration in the copyright system

•Nothing for « droit d’auteur »

Page 21: Copyright & IPR

25

The Author Copyright system the producer

Droit d’auteur: the individual

Page 22: Copyright & IPR

22

• The author has the exclusive right – to make a copy or accept reproduction – communication to the public – translation – adaptation – sales

• Duration in EU: 70 years after the author’s death

Crédit image: http://www.rtbf.be/culture/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/AFPgoncourt1.jpg

Page 23: Copyright & IPR

27

reproduction right

•A copy of the work •Xerox copy •3D printing •Recording •copy of a film •etc.

Page 24: Copyright & IPR

24

 Contracts   the author is the weak partystrict interpretationassignment of right clause

Page 25: Copyright & IPR

25

The fact that one buys an object does not means that he/she automatically owns the copyrights

118

Page 26: Copyright & IPR

Copyright protection does not vary following

•the nature of the work (music, sculpture, etc.)

•its form (digital, 3D or 2D, etc.) •Its beauty or its price

Page 27: Copyright & IPR

27

Moral rightOnly in some countries end of the work could not be seazed Paternity respect destruction honor & reputation

120

Page 28: Copyright & IPR
Page 29: Copyright & IPR

Exceptions

29

Quotations legal licences reprography family news communication as minor element fair use public domain

Page 30: Copyright & IPR

FAIR USE

– the usage of the work may be accepted depending on • the usage (education • the type of work • size and quantities of use • consequences on the market share

30

Page 31: Copyright & IPR

31

Neighboring rights

categories that help the author or created specific rights

!performing artists !producers !broadcasters !database producers

!duration 70 years

Page 32: Copyright & IPR

Which authorization are needed ?

• Reproduction rights

• Communication to the public • ! each use s/b authorized

• Do not forget moral right

• assignment of right s/b in writing

Page 33: Copyright & IPR

To whom may we ask the authorization?

• Author • Performing artists • Neighboring rights • Broadcasters • Rightsowners

• Collective organizations may help

Page 34: Copyright & IPR

Assignment of rights (Droit d’auteur)

• in writing • Strict interpretation • S/B precise

– which right – remuneration – how long – for which territory

• Difference with the copyright system

Page 35: Copyright & IPR

Sub contractors (droit d’auteur)

• in writing • Strict interpretation • S:B precise

– which right – remuneration – how long – for which territory

• Difference with the copyright system

Page 36: Copyright & IPR

What if no assignment?

• The author keeps his rights • Negociation at the end of the contract • legal action from the author possible

Page 37: Copyright & IPR

What is not protected ?

• laws • political speeches (with exceptions) • some public documents

Page 38: Copyright & IPR

Other licences

Page 39: Copyright & IPR

«What»

Noauthoriza.onneededasfarasyourespectthelicence

Acontractisneededforanaddi.onaluse(commercialbyinstance)

Example Creative Commons

4 criteria 6 liences

Page 40: Copyright & IPR

the most popular is CC invented by Lawrence Lessig philosophy oh the library of Alexandria Free as a free speech not as a free

beer

Page 41: Copyright & IPR

• 4 criteria : – atribute)

– no derivative

– Share-alike

– Non commercial (nc)

Page 42: Copyright & IPR
Page 43: Copyright & IPR

Now you know how to handle droit d’auteur, copyright &

neighboring rights

don’t forget it !

43

Page 44: Copyright & IPR

TRADEMARKS

An image, a graphic design

a word, an image

useful to recognize products

forbid confusion with other products

Duration 10 years renewable

by country and for EU

Page 45: Copyright & IPR

CONDITIONSnot forbid by law

no confusion

new means nothing similar already protected

DISTINCTIVE <> GENERIC, USUAL OU DESCRIPTIVE

Third party could refuse (ex:Apple)

Page 46: Copyright & IPR

http://fr.slideshare.net/MillwardBrownFrance/classement-brandz-top-100-des-marques-globales-les-plus-puissantes-au-monde-2014

Page 47: Copyright & IPR

Trademarks, domain names & user names in social media

200 millions domain names 2 billions user names google search identifies user names

crédit image: http://www.them.pro/files/images/domain-names-extensions.jpg

Page 48: Copyright & IPR

Usernameseasy to obtain

no control

used by search engines

crédit image: http://www.saadkamal.com/social-media/change-facebook-username/

Page 49: Copyright & IPR

Design & models

Protects appearance if

it is new it is specific Duration 25 years

http://lyc-stpaulnotredame-72.ac-nantes.fr/IMG/jpg/Philippe_Starck_1949-_-_Presse-Agrume_1_.jpg

https://encrypted-tbn1.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRLU6-6-PHFcb9sXL9Vmx10ANW5L_gBg2a6RL2f79VbD5dxkQFlMg

Page 50: Copyright & IPR

Promotes research by giving during a limited time (20 years) a monopoly to a person or a company who invent a product a process that is new

Patents

Page 51: Copyright & IPR

In order to receive a patent 4 conditions :

– new technical effect

– industrial consequences

–new (unknow by the public) –Innovative (as expert decide)

Page 52: Copyright & IPR

Right on his/her image

52

Page 53: Copyright & IPR

Basic principles

• International treaties • privacy means also right to his image • principally no need for a damage • Preliminary authorization needed • duration 20 years after the individual’s death

Page 54: Copyright & IPR

How ?Prior authorization requested Exceptions: – person with a public status - even temporary (only during

public life) – consent for a shooting does not mean consent for usage the person needs be identified (>< crowd)

Page 55: Copyright & IPR

Remember authorization is also needed for

• Artwork • Buildings and monument (Eiffel tower) • Houses

• trademarks

• design • For pictures two authorizations needed

– photographer – subject (individual or not)

• discussion for journalists: right of information >< right of image

Page 56: Copyright & IPR

Internet: digital far west ?

56

Page 57: Copyright & IPR

57

First court case

Page 58: Copyright & IPR

Legal questions on Internet ?

OPTE Project Map of the Internet – CC-BY

58

•Peer to peer •drugs •counterfeits products •Diffamation

Virtual world– real world National law - internet

Page 59: Copyright & IPR

INTERNET LAW ?

•There is no internet law •digital is not different •new usages & international level •Digital influence the legal framework

59

Page 60: Copyright & IPR

Digitalinfluence

60Source: http://www.slideshare.net/calimaq/ecriture-web-et-dimension-juridique

•Cut & paste •multimedia (voice, music, video, ) •co-working •immediate publication •re-use, re-create, re-publish •a work has an independent life

Page 61: Copyright & IPR

Digital and the law

Laws do exist but are not respected New problems that are not covered by existing laws Who is responsible? (creator, hosted, telecom operator,…) Applicable law ?

61

Page 62: Copyright & IPR

Google Book Search

•US law vs. French law • French stops Google •Finally agreements

62

Page 63: Copyright & IPR

• more & more influence of the terms & conditions

Applicable law is a complex matter

Page 64: Copyright & IPR

64

Did you read them ?

Page 65: Copyright & IPR

65http://static.freepik.com/free-photo/psd-social-icon-social-media-social-media-icons_29-30000199.jpg

Page 66: Copyright & IPR

Is a tweet a protected work?

Page 67: Copyright & IPR
Page 68: Copyright & IPR

It’s quite confusing

• wording not really understood (copyright, free, free for use,…)

• many new laws and regulations

• and everything could be copied in one clic

Page 69: Copyright & IPR

Where is the limit?

• What happens after your death?

"emails

"social media ?

"virtual goods

"e-reputation

CC-BY-NC-ND Henning

69Source: Lionel Maurel http://www.slideshare.net/calimaq/droit-de-linternet-et-de-linformation-complet

Page 70: Copyright & IPR

Where is the limit ?

70Source: Lionel Maurel http://www.slideshare.net/calimaq/droit-de-linternet-et-de-linformation-complet

Page 71: Copyright & IPR

WHERE IS THE LIMIT?

ARE AVATARS BECOMING LEGAL ENTITIES ?

Sur Second Life

71

Page 72: Copyright & IPR

http://www.scoop.it/t/any-need-for-reinventing-copyright-droit-d-auteur-intellectual-property-news

72

AUTHOR ?

A few lines

Photo Share… legally?

CURATION : ILLEGAL ?

Page 73: Copyright & IPR

73

Page 74: Copyright & IPR

74

Page 75: Copyright & IPR

Jacques Folon [email protected]

Page 76: Copyright & IPR

76

Q & A

Crédit image: http://jillsbooks.wordpress.com/2010/09/15/hellooooo-anybody-out-there/raise-your-hand-2/

Page 77: Copyright & IPR