From the European Court of Justice, a ruling on the much-disputed
database right.
http://www.out-law.com/page-9497
This may be of some interest, as:
a) it involves Directmedia, with whom I believe we've worked in the past and it's interesting to see what they're up to now;
b) it helps explain a bit what the "database right" actually means for reusers, such as ourselves.
The ruling is relating to a case where a German university created a list of "significant poems" - an extensive academic work - and Directmedia then reproduced almost the entirety of this selection as part of a similar collection. Astute readers will no doubt spot that, well, we often do pretty similar things.
The case doesn't go any further on defining what is or isn't a database - the court didn't discuss the issue of whether the list constituted one, and accepted it did - but it does help define what constitutes *infringement* of the database right.
Basically - as I understand it - reproduction which puts a "substantial part" of the original database into another medium is held to be potentially infringing, even if it isn't an exact copy and even if you've put in some editorial refinement.
(Note potentially - this was an appeal on a point of law and it's been returned to the original court for a decision. This case may not be an infringement, but other things in this general class of activity might well be.)
Possibly not something we need to overly concern ourselves with, but it's useful to know about these things.
Andrew Gray wrote:
From the European Court of Justice, a ruling on the much-disputed
database right.
http://www.out-law.com/page-9497
This may be of some interest, as:
a) it involves Directmedia, with whom I believe we've worked in the past and it's interesting to see what they're up to now;
b) it helps explain a bit what the "database right" actually means for reusers, such as ourselves.
The ruling is relating to a case where a German university created a list of "significant poems" - an extensive academic work - and Directmedia then reproduced almost the entirety of this selection as part of a similar collection. Astute readers will no doubt spot that, well, we often do pretty similar things.
The case doesn't go any further on defining what is or isn't a database - the court didn't discuss the issue of whether the list constituted one, and accepted it did - but it does help define what constitutes *infringement* of the database right.
Basically - as I understand it - reproduction which puts a "substantial part" of the original database into another medium is held to be potentially infringing, even if it isn't an exact copy and even if you've put in some editorial refinement.
(Note potentially - this was an appeal on a point of law and it's been returned to the original court for a decision. This case may not be an infringement, but other things in this general class of activity might well be.)
Possibly not something we need to overly concern ourselves with, but it's useful to know about these things.
This still seems to extend database infringement beyond the obvious. Would a UK court have arrived at the same result as a German one? They rule that "*transfers of insubstantial parts which, by their repeated or systematic nature, would have resulted in the reconstruction of a substantial part of those contents." *Who has the burden of proof of establishing where the material was extracted? If we are talking about the greatest poems in the German language there is bound to be a considerable degree of convergence between the selections of various experts.
These database protection laws remain unique to the European Union. AFAIK no other country has adopted such laws. Any attempt to introduce them in the United States is bound to face a stiff constitutional challenge. It would amount to introducing a whole new class of intellectual property, and would fly in the face of the notion that copyright protects expression rather than content. That was the essence of the "Feist" case.
Ec
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