Gepubliceerd op vrijdag 4 juli 2014
IEF 14013
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Our single market is crying out for copyright reform

Neelie Kroes, 'Our single market is crying out for copyright reform', SPEECH/14/528(...) Information Influx International Conference at Institute for Information Law, Amsterdam, 2 July 2014.
Today, the EU copyright framework is fragmented, inflexible, and often irrelevant. It should be a stimulant to openness, innovation and creativity, not a tool for of obstruction, limitation and control.Things need to change in Europe and they need to change right now. It's obvious, as other parts of the world have already seen. In 2009, Japan introduced a copyright exception covering text and data mining: including for commercial use. In Canada in 2012, they added an exception for non-commercial user-generated content.

In none of those places has the sky fallen in. All of those places are now innovating, creating, progressing, while the EU lumbers by with an ageing system for an analogue age. Sometimes it is hard to find the middle ground between different principles, to fairly balance different interests. Not in this case – the solution is already staring us in the face. It doesn't even have to be about principles – it's about aligning with current practices, with what most people are already doing. These opportunities should not just be available to those who can afford expensive lawyers, or are prepared to ignore the law all together. They should be for everyone. (...)

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