http://ipkitten.blogspot.com/2022/04/breaking-article-17-of-dsm-directive-is.html
Let there be light! Nearly 3 years after the Republic of Poland lodged its action (C-401/19) against the European Parliament and the Council requesting that the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) annul Article 17 of the DSM Directive – in part or as a whole – due to an alleged conflict with the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights and its Article 11 (freedom of expression and information), this morning the Grand Chamber of the CJEU ruled that Article 17 is VALID.
Last year, Advocate General (AG) Saugmandsgaard Øe advised the CJEU not to annul the provision (it should be recalled that the AG held the view that Article 17 could be only maintained or annulled in full, not in part) finding that Article 17 would be compatible with the Charter insofar as sufficient safeguards, inherent to the provision itself, are complied with when online content sharing service providers (OCSSs) fulfil their monitoring obligations under Article 17(4)(b)-(c) [IPKat here; the AG will discuss C-401/19 at an in-person event that will be held in Stockholm on 2 June: do sign up!].
So far only the press release is available, and here’s what it says:
In today’s judgment, the Court dismisses that action brought by Poland.
The Court observes, first of all, that, in order to benefit from the exemption from liability, laid down in Article 17 of Directive 2019/790, online content-sharing service providers are de facto required to carry out a prior review of the content that users wish to upload to their platforms, provided that those service providers have received from the rightholders the relevant and necessary information to that effect. Furthermore, in order to be able to carry out such a prior review, those providers are, depending on the number of files uploaded and the type of protected subject matter in question, required to use automatic recognition and filtering tools. According to the Court, such a prior review and prior filtering are liable to restrict an important means of disseminating online content. In those circumstances, the specific liability regime, established by the Directive, in respect of online content-sharing service providers, entails a limitation on the exercise of the right to freedom of expression and information of users of those content-sharing services.
As regards next the justification for such a limitation and, in particular, the proportionality of that limitation in relation to the legitimate objective pursued by Article 17 of Directive 2019/790 consisting in the protection of intellectual property rights, the Court finds, first, that the EU legislature — in order to prevent the risk which, in particular, the use of automatic recognition and filtering tools entails for the right to freedom of expression and information of users of online content-sharing services — laid down a clear and precise limit on the measures that may be taken or required in implementing the obligations laid down in that provision, by excluding, in particular, measures which filter and block lawful content when uploading. The Court recalls, in that context, that that a filtering system which might not distinguish adequately between unlawful content and lawful content, with the result that its introduction could lead to the blocking of lawful communications, would be incompatible with the right to freedom of expression and information and would not respect the fair balance between that right and the right to intellectual property. Secondly, Article 17 of Directive 2019/790 provides that users of the abovementioned services will be authorised, by national law, to upload content generated by themselves for the purposes, for example, of parody or pastiche and that they will be informed, by the abovementioned service providers, that they can use works and other protected subject matter under the exceptions or limitations to copyright and related rights, provided for in EU law. Thirdly, according to Article 17 of the Directive, the liability of online content-sharing service providers for ensuring that certain content is unavailable can be incurred only on condition that the rightholders concerned provide them with the relevant and necessary information with regard to that content. Fourthly, Article 17 states that its application must not lead to any general monitoring obligation, which means that the providers of online content-sharing services cannot be required to prevent the uploading and making available to the public of content which, in order to be found unlawful, would require an independent assessment of the content by them in the light of the information provided by the rightholders and of any exceptions and limitations to copyright. Fifthly, Article 17 of the Directive introduces several procedural safeguards, which protect the right to freedom of expression and information of users of the abovementioned services in cases where, nonetheless, the providers of the services erroneously or unjustifiably block lawful content.
The Court infers from the foregoing that the obligation, on online content-sharing service providers, to review, prior to its dissemination to the public, the content that users wish to upload to their platforms, resulting from the specific liability regime established in the Directive, has been accompanied by appropriate safeguards by the EU legislature in order to ensure respect for the right to freedom of expression and information of the users of those services, and a fair balance between that right, on the one hand, and the right to intellectual property, on the other. Nonetheless, Member States must, when transposing Article 17 of the Directive into their national law, take care to act on the basis of an interpretation of that provision which allows a fair balance to be struck between the various fundamental rights protected by the charter of fundamental rights.
A more detailed analysis will be provided as soon as the full text of the judgment is available. Stay tuned!
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