[Ecommerce] WIPO Press Release on Broadcast treaty

James Love james.love@cptech.org
Fri Jun 11 05:12:24 2004


*  Different views were also expressed on the scope of rights to be
granted. Some delegations supported limiting protection to rights
necessary to fight signal piracy, to avoid overlap with content-based
rights held by authors, performers or producers. Views also differed on
the question of the term of protection of any new rights.

Press Release 386/2004
Geneva, June 10, 2004

WIPO MEMBER STATES MAKE SIGNIFICANT HEADWAY IN TALKS ON BROADCASTERS=92 RIG=
HTS



  Member states of the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO)
made significant progress towards updating international intellectual
property standards for broadcasting in the information age. The Standing
Committee on Copyright and Related Rights (SCCR), which met in Geneva
from June 7 to 9, 2004, recommended that the WIPO General Assembly, the
Organization=92s top decision-making body, consider convening a diplomatic
conference on the protection of broadcasting organizations. A diplomatic
conference is the final step in developing a new international treaty.
Endorsement of the SCCR recommendation by the General Assembly at its
September 2004 session would be a significant step forward in this process.

"We welcome the adoption by the SCCR of a resolution asking the WIPO
General Assembly to consider convening a diplomatic conference at an
appropriate time. This was possible because most member states are
confident that differences on this important issue can be narrowed in a
reasonable time frame, thus paving the way for the adoption of a new
treaty that would update the rights of broadcasting organizations," said
Mrs. Rita Hayes, Deputy Director General who oversees WIPO=92s work in the
area of copyright.

Updating the IP rights of broadcasters, currently provided by the 1961
Rome Convention on the Protection of Performers, Producers of Phonograms
and Broadcasting Organizations, began in earnest in 1997. A growing
signal piracy problem in many parts of the world, including piracy of
digitized pre-broadcast signals, has made this need more acute.

Noting the cultural importance of the broadcasting sector in all
countries, SCCR Chair Mr. Jukka Liedes of Finland stated that the SCCR
session had "created a roadmap towards a new international instrument,
the goal of which was to balance the real needs of broadcasters with
those of other rightholders and society at large."

Differences remain on issues such as the scope of a new treaty and its
beneficiaries, namely whether only traditional broadcasters should be
protected or whether protection should also extend to cablecasters and
webcasters, entities that transmit directly over the Internet. Different
views were also expressed on the scope of rights to be granted. Some
delegations supported limiting protection to rights necessary to fight
signal piracy, to avoid overlap with content-based rights held by
authors, performers or producers. Views also differed on the question of
the term of protection of any new rights.

The next meeting of the Committee will take place from November 17 to
19, 2004, and will discuss a revised text containing brackets around
proposals having obtained limited support, such as protection of
webcasters. Based on its review of the new text, the November Committee
meeting could recommend dates for the diplomatic conference.

The SCCR also considered the issue of protection of non-original
databases. Collections of data, such as telephone directories, which are
not sufficiently original to qualify for copyright, may still deserve
protection for the significant investment in their creation and
maintenance, and to avoid unauthorized copying and dissemination, for
example, over the Internet. The Committee decided to revisit the matter
in the second half of 2005.

The SCCR was attended by delegates from 90 member states, and 8
intergovernmental and 55 non-governmental organizations, including
policy-makers, representatives of broadcasting organizations and the
content industries (such as film and music), users and consumer
organizations.

For further information, please contact the Media Relations and Public
Affairs Section at WIPO:

     * Tel: (+41 22) - 338 81 61 or 338 95 47
     * Fax: (+41 22) - 338 88 10
     * Email: publicinf@wipo.int.
--
James Love, Director, Consumer Project on Technology
http://www.cptech.org, mailto:james.love@cptech.org
tel. +1.202.387.8030, mobile +1.202.361.3040