IP and Digital Entertainment conference: Part III


Amanda then went on to look at the equivalent provisions under the "insane" US copyright provisions. While in every other country the author gives a global exclusive right to its copyright management organisation, in the United States it's only possible to grant a non-exclusive licence. The consequences of this, leading to the DMX scandal (noted here and here on the 1709 Blog) and to firms like Pandora paying only tiny sums for playing their music and still complaining that they're paying too much.
Amanda's bravura performance was a hard act to follow, but Toni Vitali (YouView -- NOT to be confused with YouTube), addressing TV on Demand. YouView owns no content and sells no boxes to consumers -- it's an open platform which is open to all and lets users aggregate content, of which YouView is not the aggregator. Users can watch what they wan, when they want.
Video on Demand (VoD) is rising rapidly in popularity, from a more or less standing start: witness the rapid rise of Netflix and Lovefilm (soon to be rebranded Amazon). Some 400,000 VoD set-top boxes are now in use and this is scary for the major broadcasters, since time-shifting is generally at their expense.
What are the copyright infringement issues? In principle the act of recording for time-shifting is permitted, but does the streaming of a programme infringe the right to distribution or, if done in public, a public communication, of it? And has there been an authorisation of infringement by others? A further issue relates to the incorporation into the set box of an algorithm that suggests and automatically pre-records material on the basis of its perception of the box-owner's preferences.
Toni then went through a list of regulatory approvals that must be maintained, depending on the nature of the communication service in question. Lacunae exist even now, though: for example, live broadcasts of opera. Football club websites offering 'goal of the month' and interviews with players may be another example, though the Authority for Television on Demand (ATVOD) thought it might be -- and it probably would be if it operated a paywall.