Internet
service providers cannot be forced to install filters aimed at preventing
people from illegally downloading music and other files, the EU's top court
ruled Thursday.
The decision by the European Union Court of
Justice is a defeat for backers of web filters, including artists and the
enterainment industry, who are fighting to protect their work from circulating
freely on the Internet.
The judges ruled that a national court cannot
impose an injunction ordering an Internet provider to install a filtering
system for all electronic communications, saying it is too expensive for the
company and could infringe on people's fundamental rights.
The case arose from a dispute in Belgium
pitting web provider Scarlet Extended SA against SABAM, a Belgian management
company responsible for authorising the use of music of authors, composers and
editors.
SABAM complained in 2004 that Scarlet's
customers were using peer-to-peer networks, which allow people to share files
online, to download works from its catalogue without authorisation and without
paying royalties.
A Belgian court then ordered Scarlet to make
it impossible for its customers to send or receive any electronic files
containing SABAM music.
But the EU court ruled that such filters
require the monitoring of all electronic comunications, which is incompatible
with the Union's E-Commerce rules.
An injuction would "result in a serious
infringement of Scarlet's freedom to conduct its business as it would require
Scarlet to install a complicated, costly, permanent computer system at its own
expense," the court said.
"The filtering system would also be
liable to infringe the fundamental rights of its customers, namely their right
to protection of their personal data and their right to receive or impart
information," it added.
The International Federation of the
Phonographic Industry, which represents the record industry worldwide, said
that despite the rejection, the ruling only affected one system to protect
copyrighted material online in Europe.
"In this particular case, the court
rejected the content filtering measure presented by the Belgian court as too
broad," said IFPI chief executive Frances Moore.
"However, this does not affect the forms
of ISP cooperation that IFPI advocates including graduated response and the
blocking of rogue websites, which are already being implemented in countries
across Europe," he said.
The European Internet Services Providers
Association, which represents 1,800 ISPs across Europe, welcomed the ruling,
saying it would have "serious implications" for content blocking
systems imposed in other EU states.
"Considering the major contribution that
the Internet industry can make to the economic recovery, it was indeed not the
time to put the innovation of the Internet at risk," said association
president Malcolm Hutty.
AFP
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