Copyright reform through competition law? The Commission’s statement of objections in the pay TV investigation

Geo-blocking: does it make you roar or yawn? 
Is geo-blocking, ie something that the Commission considers a priority for copyright reform at the EU level [here], really a copyright issue? Or is it rather a competition law one?

The IPKat is delighted to host an extremely thoughtful contribution by competition law scholar and fellow blogger (Chillin' CompetitionPablo Ibanez-Colomo (London School of Economics) on some key developments occurred yesterday.

Here's what Pablo writes:

"The moment of truth for the Pay TV investigation has arrived. 

Yesterday, the Commission sent a statement of objections to Sky UK and the ‘Big Six’ Hollywood majors. It has come to the preliminary conclusion that the territorial restrictions introduced in the agreements between the pay TV operator and the studios are restrictive of competition, and this insofar as they give absolute territorial protection to broadcasters (both to Sky and to licensees based elsewhere in the EU). 

As a result of these agreements, the Commission argues, Sky is prevented from providing its services (online and via satellite) to end-users based in Member States other than the UK. Some of the views stated in the press release are remarkable and will no doubt give rise to considerable controversy in the coming months.

Exhaustion through competition law? 

The Commission suggests in the press release that Sky should be entitled to provide its online pay TV services outside the UK (at least in principle). The fact that it may hold a license to offer content only in that Member State does not seem to make a difference in this regard. 

This position is extraordinary.

It means that a TV operator having been granted a licence to broadcast content online in one Member State should be entitled to broadcast the same content in the whole of the EU. 

As I see it, it comes dangerously close to saying that the exhaustion doctrine applies to broadcasts. 

It's usually impossible
to take Merpel by surprise ...
According to the Commission, online content should circulate within the EU as freely as DVDs so long as it is offered by the right holder or with its consent.

The view advanced by the Commission in the statement of objections (at least in light of the press release) is at odds with Article 3 of the InfoSoc Directive, which states very clearly that the right of communication to the public is not subject to exhaustion. 

The Commission indeed suggests the opposite, in the sense that it claims that the licensee in one Member State is not entitled to prevent licensees based elsewhere from offering, online, the same content in its territory.

In this regard, the question is, I guess, whether it is possible to limit the scope of an intellectual property right through competition law. One can say in this regard, at the very least, that there are no precedents for such a move. EU courts have always been clear in stating that EU competition law does not question the existence of intellectual property rights, but only their exercise.

Is the extension of the exhaustion doctrine through Article 101 TFEU enforcement not tantamount to questioning the very existence of the right of communication to the public?

The scope of Murphy and Coditel II

The statement of objections seems to be based on a relatively expansive interpretation of Murphy [here]. The Court of Justice of the European Union held in that case that an export prohibition regarding decoding devices is restrictive of competition by object under Article 101(1) TFEU and does not meet the conditions of Article 101(3) TFEU. 

I have written elsewhere that Murphy is not easy to interpret. In particular, it is not immediately obvious to reconcile with Coditel II, which remains good law. The difficulty is that, in the latter case, the Court held that an exclusive territorial licence is not as such restrictive of competition.

In any event, it seems clear to me that merely prohibiting, by means of an agreement, an operator from broadcasting content in the territory allocated to another licensee is not contrary to Article 101(1) TFEU. 

Paragraph 137 in Murphy seems unambiguous to me in this regard. Not only does it confirm that Coditel II has not been overruled, but it states that "the mere fact that the right holder has granted to a sole licensee the exclusive right to broadcast protected subject-matter from a Member State, and consequently to prohibit its transmission by others, during a specified period is not sufficient to justify the finding that such an agreement has an anti-competitive object".

... except when
competition law gets into IP business
The Commission now seems to be of the view that even clauses that restrict the ability of broadcasters to offer online content in a territory other than the one for which they hold the licence (the press release refers to geo-blocking) are contrary to Article 101(1) TFEU by their very nature. It would be interesting to see how this position is substantiated by the authority. It is without any doubt the key legal issue in the case.

Copyright reform through competition law?

It is impossible to ignore that the statement of objections comes at a time when copyright reforms are being discussed. 

The press release itself refers to some initiatives by the Commission which seek to promote cross-border access to copyright-protected works. The proposed reforms overlap with the concerns raised in the statement of objections and would have exactly the same consequences for end-users. 

Is cross-border access to content a competition law issue or a copyright one, then? Why apply Article 101 TFEU to a policy objectively that would be more logically achieved via legislation?

I find it extremely difficult to draw neat boundaries between disciplines. I am always wary of claims that EU competition law is being applied beyond its proper scope. One thing is clear, however. If the Commission goes ahead with the theories sketched in the press release, it would be redefining, via Article 101 TFEU enforcement, the scope of the right of communication to the public and the reach of the exhaustion doctrine. 

Proper or improper, this, as explained above, is surely unprecedented in EU competition law."
Copyright reform through competition law? The Commission’s statement of objections in the pay TV investigation Copyright reform through competition law? The Commission’s statement of objections in the pay TV investigation Reviewed by Eleonora Rosati on Friday, July 24, 2015 Rating: 5

2 comments:

  1. The coincidence with the Commission's battle with the same opponents to do away with copyright territoriality gives the unfortunate impression that the law is being enforced according to a political agenda. And if IP law is about to be changed so as to transform the competitive structure of the European market, what priority can there be for an investigation under the existing rules?

    ReplyDelete
  2. I find the above argument to be rather incoherent, to say the least.

    The contractual agreements in this case appear to be very similar to those in the Murphy case, so the fact that the Commission has reached this conclusion is hardly a surprise. In fact, I find it hard to understand why the contributor considers the Commission's conclusions to be anything other than blindingly obvious.

    This certainly isn't "exhaustion", and plainly isn't "questioning the very existence of the right of communication to the public". What nonsense!

    ReplyDelete

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