Sketching the outline of a ghost: the fair balance between copyright and fundamental rights in intermediary third party liability external link

Info, num: 6, pp: 72-96., 2015

Auteursrecht, Copyright, Electronic commerce, European law, Information media, Intellectuele eigendom, Internet

Bibtex

Article{nokey, title = {Sketching the outline of a ghost: the fair balance between copyright and fundamental rights in intermediary third party liability}, author = {Angelopoulos, C.}, url = {http://www.emeraldinsight.com/doi/pdfplus/10.1108/info-05-2015-0028}, year = {2015}, date = {2015-09-01}, journal = {Info}, number = {6}, keywords = {Auteursrecht, Copyright, Electronic commerce, European law, Information media, Intellectuele eigendom, Internet}, }

Going means trouble and staying makes it double: the value of licensing recorded music online external link

Handke, C.W., Bodó, B. & Vallbé, J.
Journal of Cultural Economics, 2015

Abstract

This paper discusses whether a copyright compensation system (CCS) for recorded music—endowing private Internet subscribers with the right to download and use works in return for a fee—would be welfare increasing. It reports on the results of a discrete choice experiment conducted with a representative sample of the Dutch population consisting of 4986 participants. Under some conservative assumptions, we find that applied only to recorded music, a mandatory CCS could increase the welfare of rights holders and users in the Netherlands by over €600 million per year (over €35 per capita). This far exceeds current rights holder revenues from the market of recorded music of ca. €144 million per year. A monthly CCS fee of ca. €1.74 as a surcharge on Dutch Internet subscriptions would raise the same amount of revenues to rights holders as the current market for recorded music. With a voluntary CCS, the estimated welfare gains to users and rights holders are even greater for CCS fees below €20 on the user side. A voluntary CCS would also perform better in the long run, as it could retain a greater extent of market coordination. The results of our choice experiment indicate that a well-designed CCS for recorded music would simultaneously make users and rights holders better off. This result holds even if we correct for frequently observed rates of overestimation in contingent valuation studies.

Auteursrecht, collective rights management, compensation systems, Contingent valuation, Copyright, Intellectuele eigendom, Internet, Recorded music

Bibtex

Article{nokey, title = {Going means trouble and staying makes it double: the value of licensing recorded music online}, author = {Handke, C.W. and Bodó, B. and Vallbé, J.}, url = {http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs10824-015-9251-8}, year = {2015}, date = {2015-06-11}, journal = {Journal of Cultural Economics}, abstract = {This paper discusses whether a copyright compensation system (CCS) for recorded music—endowing private Internet subscribers with the right to download and use works in return for a fee—would be welfare increasing. It reports on the results of a discrete choice experiment conducted with a representative sample of the Dutch population consisting of 4986 participants. Under some conservative assumptions, we find that applied only to recorded music, a mandatory CCS could increase the welfare of rights holders and users in the Netherlands by over €600 million per year (over €35 per capita). This far exceeds current rights holder revenues from the market of recorded music of ca. €144 million per year. A monthly CCS fee of ca. €1.74 as a surcharge on Dutch Internet subscriptions would raise the same amount of revenues to rights holders as the current market for recorded music. With a voluntary CCS, the estimated welfare gains to users and rights holders are even greater for CCS fees below €20 on the user side. A voluntary CCS would also perform better in the long run, as it could retain a greater extent of market coordination. The results of our choice experiment indicate that a well-designed CCS for recorded music would simultaneously make users and rights holders better off. This result holds even if we correct for frequently observed rates of overestimation in contingent valuation studies.}, keywords = {Auteursrecht, collective rights management, compensation systems, Contingent valuation, Copyright, Intellectuele eigendom, Internet, Recorded music}, }

De implicaties van het Google Spain-arrest voor de vrijheid van meningsuiting external link

NJCM-Bulletin, num: 1, pp: 3-19., 2015

Abstract

In deze bijdrage wordt het Google Spain-arrest van het Hof van Justitie van de Europese Unie besproken, evenals de ontwikkelingen na het arrest. Centraal staat de vraag naar de gevolgen van het arrest voor de vrijheid van meningsuiting. De auteurs betogen dat het Hof onvoldoende aandacht schenkt aan de vrijheid van meningsuiting.

Grondrechten, Internet, Persoonsgegevens, Privacy, recht om vergeten te worden, Vrijheid van meningsuiting, zoekmachines

Bibtex

Article{nokey, title = {De implicaties van het Google Spain-arrest voor de vrijheid van meningsuiting}, author = {Zuiderveen Borgesius, F. and Kulk, S.}, url = {http://www.ivir.nl/publicaties/download/1566.pdf}, year = {0604}, date = {2015-06-04}, journal = {NJCM-Bulletin}, number = {1}, abstract = {In deze bijdrage wordt het Google Spain-arrest van het Hof van Justitie van de Europese Unie besproken, evenals de ontwikkelingen na het arrest. Centraal staat de vraag naar de gevolgen van het arrest voor de vrijheid van meningsuiting. De auteurs betogen dat het Hof onvoldoende aandacht schenkt aan de vrijheid van meningsuiting.}, keywords = {Grondrechten, Internet, Persoonsgegevens, Privacy, recht om vergeten te worden, Vrijheid van meningsuiting, zoekmachines}, }

The Diginotar Case: Internet Security is No Abstract Matter external link

Computers & Law Magazine of SCL, num: 6, pp: 1-2, 2013

certificates, diginotar, Grondrechten, Internet, Privacy, security

Bibtex

Article{nokey, title = {The Diginotar Case: Internet Security is No Abstract Matter}, author = {van Eijk, N.}, url = {http://www.ivir.nl/publicaties/download/CLM_2013_6.pdf}, year = {0920}, date = {2013-09-20}, journal = {Computers & Law Magazine of SCL}, number = {6}, keywords = {certificates, diginotar, Grondrechten, Internet, Privacy, security}, }