NiemanLab reporting:
BERLIN — The European Union’s new
commissioner for digital affairs didn’t waste any time. Days before
starting the job at the end of October, Günther Oettinger (his official title is commissioner for digital economy and society) announced plans to reform European copyright law in 2015.
That could mean introducing a levy on search engines when they show
results for European companies, he said — a contested issue that’s been
pushed by large news media companies from across Europe in recent
months.
Oettinger has announced few details of his plans for copyright reform. But in an interview with the German daily newspaper Handelsblatt,
he made it clear that he wants to tackle Google’s profits from listing
European companies in search results. “If Google takes intellectual
property from the EU and works with that, then the EU can protect that
property and demand Google pay for that,” he said.
Copyright laws nicknamed “Google taxes” have been passed in a few
European countries over the past few years. That name is deceptive — the
laws don’t call for an actual tax since any fee Google is made to pay
will go to publishers, not governments — but they have left Google at
the center of legal battles driven by major publishers. Spain
passed a law at the end of October that charges search engines to pay a
copyright collection agency for including snippets from and links to
news websites. In 2013, France’s government settled news publishers’ demands for copyright reform by striking a deal with Google:
For a flat rate of €60 million (invested into a fund for digital
publishing), the company was allowed to continue listing news articles
in search results.
http://www.niemanlab.org/2014/12/the-fight-to-get-google-to-pay-for-news-continues-in-europe/
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