Today, the Legal Affairs Committee of the European Parliament passed an amended version of my copyright evaluation report with a broad majority. (Find the detailed breakdown of the votes on my overview page. The final adopted text is not yet available – I will link to it as soon as it goes online.)

The amended report was supported by all political groups – the only two opposing votes were cast by MEPs from the far-right French Front National.

In this report, the Parliament recognises that copyright reform is urgently needed not just to improve the Digital Single Market, but also to facilitate access to knowledge and culture for all people in Europe. It calls on the Commission to consider a wide variety of measures to bring copyright law up to speed with changing realities and improve cross-border access to our cultural diversity, going further than the plans so far announced by the Commissioners.

The report marks a turning point: After decades in which the focus was on introducing new restrictions to protect the material interests of rightholders, this is the strongest demand yet to reconsider the rights of the public – of users, cultural heritage institutions and scientists, and of authors who build on what has come before. It is a call to reduce the legal uncertainty Europeans face in their everyday online interactions with copyrighted works today – while at the same time also protecting creators from exploitation. Its proposals, if implemented, will have no overall negative effects on the livelihood of creators, but greatly increase everyone’s ability to participate in culture and education.

For the first time, the Parliament asks for minimum standards for the rights of the public, which are enshrined in a list of exceptions to copyright that up to now have been completely optional for the Member States to implement. The report stresses that the use of these exceptions may not be hindered by restrictive contracts and that DRM may not restrict your right to make a private copy of legally acquired content. The introduction of completely new exceptions is also on the table, namely

to allow libraries and archives to digitise their collections efficiently,

to enable the lending of e-books over the Internet and

to allow the automatical analysis of large bodies of text and data (text & data mining).

There is no Parliamentary majority for the public majority

At the same time, reaching broad agreement on the report came at a cost. It proved impossible to build a Parliamentary majority for several common-sense reform ideas demanded by the vast majority of respondents to the public consultation the EU conducted last year and supported by scientific research and expert assessments.

The report no longer calls for making all exceptions mandatory across the EU, which would have prevented rights of Europeans to interact with copyrighted works from ending at national borders.

There was no majority for a flexible open norm, which would have allowed the legislation to cover future developments unforeseen today.

Instead of meaningfully reducing copyright terms, which would have curbed the “20th century black hole” effect where a large part of our recent cultural history has become unavailable because it is no longer commercially viable yet still protected. The Committee could only bring itself to reject any further extensions in copyright terms, and to eliminate national additions to the copyright term, such as the 30 extra years that France awards to the works of war heroes.

Works created by governments will still be subject to copyright, supposedly to protect them from the sovereign who financed their creation. Instead, the Commission is only asked to simplify their re-use.

The big political groups not only turned their backs on these ideas that enjoy vast public support according to the consultation – they specifically insisted that the mention of the unprecedented number of responses by end users be deleted from the report. This was the most successful political participation effort on copyright issues ever – and we must keep reminding politicians of the results. It is unacceptable that so many voices are ignored.

The necessity of compromise also resulted in a significant weakening of the language in the report. Where my draft report made bold demands, the final version now frequently just asks the Commission to assess certain ideas. Unfortunately, this does not set up the Parliament as a strong player in the upcoming debate on the legislative proposal.

We took two hits

On a few points it proved impossible to reach a compromise, so it all came down to votes – and we lost them:

Regarding freedom of panorama, a troubling amendment was adopted with the support of EPP and S&D stating that commercial use of reproductions of works in public spaces should require express permission by the rightsholders. This would restrict existing rights in many EU member states, introduce new legal uncertainty for many creators and even call the legality of many photos shared on commercial photo sharing platforms like Instagram and Flickr into question. Documentary filmmakers, for example, would have to research the copyright protection status of every building, statue or even graffiti on a public wall depicted in their movie – and seek the permission of each rightholder. It’s absurd.

The Committee also narrowly rejected an amendment that called for allowing audio-visual quotation in every member state, extending this right beyond textual quotes to other forms of cultural expression. As a result, YouTubers and podcasters who use quotes may remain outlaws and common practices on the web today like reaction GIFs will still be illegal in many countries! Had the two GUE/NGL MEPs not abstained from this vote, the amendment would have passed.

But we also defeated many bad ideas

Over 550 amendments were filed to my draft report – among them, dozens that would have had lasting negative effects on the rights of the public and freedom on the internet. In the negotiations, I was able to stop a large number of these threats. Some examples:

The shadow rapporteurs representing the EPP and ECR groups together with 11 further MEPs filed five amendments all seeking to delete any positive mention of the public domain – our common cultural wealth made up of works unprotected by copyright, or for which protection has lapsed. The final report maintains a strong call for safeguaring the public domain and ensuring that works that belong to us all stay in the public domain when they are digitised.

Also rejected was the attempt by the EPP to call for an introduction of an ancillary copyright for press publishers. In Germany and Spain, the introduction of such a law resulted in heavy restriction of free linking and posed a huge threat to innovation on the web with no actual gain for news publishers.

The EPP shadow along with 11 other MEPs submitted an amendment saying “market-based solutions” were the answer to enable libraries to e-lend books – rejecting that libraries need a broad legal basis for lending online just like the one their offline work is based on. The final version contains no such language, insisting that the path to follow is an e-lending exception.

A German EPP MEP filed an amendment explicitly lauding digital locks that often prevent users from exercising the rights granted to them by copyright exceptions. The compromise, on the other hand, unequivocally states that the right to make private copies may not be technically limited.

Several amendments submitted by the ALDE group shadow rapporteur and several S&D MEPs called for you to be criminally liable if a link you share online leads to unauthorised reproductions of copyrighted works – criminalising the hyperlink, the basic building block of the internet. In the end, we compromised on omitting this topic altogether, which ensures the report does not end up making the current situation worse.

This is one step on a journey

The fight is not over: On July 9th, the plenary – all 751 members of the Parliament – will vote on the report. And several months later, the Parliament will start debating the legislative proposal that will be put forth by the Commission.

I will continue to fight to defeat the worst ideas that slipped into the report, and demanding that the good ones be implemented.

I’m counting on your support!

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