[A2k] Thailand Moves To Amend Copyright Law To Regulate Royalties

James Love james.love@keionline.org
Wed Dec 19 10:17:17 2007


http://www.ip-watch.org/weblog/index.php?p=876

Intellectual Property Watch

19 December 2007
Thailand Moves To Amend Copyright Law To Regulate Royalties

By Sinfah Tunsarawuth for Intellectual Property Watch

BANGKOK - Thailand's lawmakers on Tuesday finalised a draft bill to
amend its copyrights law in an effort to regulate the collecting of
royalties in domestic music industry, which bill proponents say has been
subject to extortion by gangsters and corrupt law enforcers.

The bill, finalised on 18 December, requires those wanting to collect
royalties on copyrighted works to incorporate their business into a
limited company known as a "collecting company" and seek a permit for
such operation from a regulatory committee set up under the proposed
bill. These collecting companies would be required to publicly declare
the works for which they hold the copyrights, rate of royalties they
will collect from users, and how they will distribute the royalties
collected among the various copyright holders.

Those who continue to collect royalties without complying with
procedures under the new law could now be subject to a maximum jail term
of two years or a fine of 800,000 Thai baht ($23,680), or both.

Thailand's current Copyrights Act, in force since March 1995, contains
no provision specifically dealing with royalties collection.

Banyong Limprayoonwong, deputy director general of the Department of
Intellectual Property at the Ministry of Commerce, said in an interview:
"The amendment is meant to protect copyright holders, who now will be
ensured they will be paid their royalties and at a rate they will know
in advance, and users, who will be protected under the new law if they
pay the royalties required."

"Those who will lose are extortionists and corrupt officers who have
been demanding money from karaoke parlours and other entertainment
places," Banyong said.

He added that while in other countries collecting royalties on
copyrighted works is dealt with by the private sector, in Thailand the
government had to intervene because the various Thai parties could not
negotiate among themselves to form a single organisation for the
collection and distribution of the proceeds among the parties concerned.

The entertainment business that uses Thai copyrighted music most is
karaoke parlours, which are the key issues intended to be addressed by
this new bill. Banyong said karaoke operators once rallied in front of
his department office and blocked the main building entrance in
demanding the government's assistance to protest that they had to pay
royalties on same pieces of music to more than one party claiming to
have the rights over the works.

The 1995 act deals with various kinds of copyrighted works from music
and art objects to film and broadcasting, and various rights of
copyright owners, which include the rights of duplication and licensing.
The proposed amendment, meanwhile, deals specifically with collecting
royalties for the right to communicate to the public of musical works,
at least for the first five years after the enforcement of the
amendment. After the five years, the Ministry of Commerce can decide
whether these collecting companies shall be entitled to collect
royalties on other kind of rights of copyrighted works or not.

During the scrutiny of the draft bill, which this Intellectual Property
Watch reporter was permitted to sit through, committee members from the
two biggest sound recording companies in Thailand - GMM Grammy and RS
Promotion - voiced their objection to allow collecting companies to
handle royalties on the rights to duplication.

Their concern is also shared by copyright holders of foreign music.
Piset Chiyasak, an advisor to a joint venture of Music Copyright
(Thailand) and Phonorights (Thailand), said in a separate interview that
copyright holders of foreign music do not want to transfer the right to
duplication to collecting companies set up under the proposed amendment.

The joint venture - representing the world's biggest sound recording
companies, including Warner Music, Sony BMG, EMI and Universal Music -
holds copyrights and collects royalties on over 800,000 pieces of
foreign music in Thailand. Currently the joint venture is not
incorporated under Thai law, but would have to do so if the amendment
bill becomes law.

Banyong of the Department of Intellectual Property said despite the
large volume, collection of royalties on foreign music has been without
any problem. In comparison, royalties are being collected on 130,000
Thai songs.

The draft bill will now go to the full sitting of the National
Legislative Assembly for final approval before becoming law.

Sinfah Tunsarawuth may be reached at info@ip-watch.ch.


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James Love, Knowledge Ecology International (KEI)
http://www.keionline.org, mailto:james.love@keionline.org
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