HADOPI law explained

The French HADOPI law or Creation and Internet law (French: Haute Autorité pour la Diffusion des Œuvres et la Protection des droits d'auteur sur Internet,[1] English: "Supreme Authority for the Distribution of Works and Protection of Copyright on the Internet") was introduced during 2009, providing what is known as a graduated response as a means to encourage compliance with copyright laws. HADOPI is the acronym of the government agency created to administer it.

The part of the HADOPI law that allowed for suspension of Internet access to a repeat infringer was revoked on 8 July 2013 by the French government because that penalty was considered to be disproportionate. The power to impose fines or other sanctions on repeat infringers remains in effect.

In January 2022, the Hadopi agency merged with the High Audiovisual Council (CSA), to form the Regulatory Authority for Audiovisual and Digital Communication (French: Autorité de régulation de la communication audiovisuelle et numérique; ARCOM).[2]

Legislative passage

Despite strong backing from President Nicolas Sarkozy, the bill was rejected by the French National Assembly on 9 April 2009.[3] [4] [5] The French government asked for reconsideration of the bill by the French National Assembly and it was adopted on 12 May 2009 by the assembly,[6] and on 13 May 2009 by the French Senate.

Debate included accusations of dubious tactics made against the promoters of the bill. There were complaints that the government's official website misrepresented the bill,[7] that the French Wikipedia pages on it were falsified by the Ministry of Culture on 14 February 2009.[8] and a "petition of 10,000 artists" in support of the bill was questioned as allegedly fraudulent.[9]

Timeline

Details of the law

Government agency

The law creates a government agency called Haute Autorité pour la Diffusion des Œuvres et la Protection des Droits sur Internet (HADOPI) (English: Supreme Authority for the Distribution and Protection of Intellectual Property on the Internet); replacing a previous agency, the ARMT (Regulation of Technical Measures Authority) created by the DADVSI law.[15]

The new government agency is headed by a board of nine members, three appointed by the government, two by the legislative bodies, three by judicial bodies and one by the Conseil supérieur de la propriété littéraire et artistique (Superior Council of Artistic and Literary Property), a government council responsible to the French Ministry of Culture.[16] The agency is vested with the power to police Internet users.

Mandate

To ensure that Internet subscribers "screen their Internet connections in order to prevent the exchange of copyrighted material without prior agreement from the copyright holders" (Art. L. 336-3 of the bill). HADOPI also retains mandates previously attributed to the ARMT.

Enforcement

On receipt of a complaint from a copyright holder or representative, HADOPI may initiate a 'three-strike' procedure:

The ISP is then required to monitor the subject's Internet connection. In addition, the Internet access subscriber is invited to install a filter on his Internet connection.

If, in the 6 months following the first step, a repeat offense is suspected by the copyright holder, his representative, the ISP or HADOPI, the second step of the procedure is invoked.

In the event that the offender fails to comply during the year following the reception of the certified letter, and upon accusation of repeated offenses by the copyright holder, a representative, the ISP or HADOPI, the third step of the procedure is invoked.

Offender can seek recourse against the HADOPI, before case transmission, and against the court.

The Internet access subscriber was blacklisted and other ISPs were prohibited from providing an Internet connection to the blacklisted subscriber. The service suspension did not, however, interrupt billing, and the offending subscriber was liable to meet any charges or costs resulting from the service termination.

According to the CNIL, action under the HADOPI law does not exclude separate prosecution under the French code of Intellectual Property,[17] particularly its articles L331-1 or L335-2, or limit a claimant's other remedies at law. (See CNIL opinion, below).

Enforcement in practice

Since the law was approved in 2009 until abrogation of the suspension of access to a communication service in 2013, only one user has been sentenced to suspension (for 15 days) plus fined for EUR 600.[18] The sentence never applied because of the abrogation some days after.

Abrogation of the suspension of access to a communication service

On 9 July 2013, the French Ministry of Culture published official decree No. 0157, removing from the law "the additional misdemeanor punishable by suspension of access to a communication service."[19] allegedly because "the three strikes mechanism had failed to benefit authorized services as promised". The Minister explained that the stricter copyright policy of the French Government would be revised from going after the end-user to taking punitive sanctions against companies who provide web hosting and telecom infrastructure services which allow copyright infringement to occur. Nevertheless, the fines against users found to be sharing unauthorized content remained standing ("up to EUR 1500 in cases of gross negligence"), and ISPs are still required to provide details to identify them.

The French Culture Minister Aurélie Filippetti explained that the financial costs to the French Government in applying the Hadopi Law was not sound. She disclosed that it cost her Ministry 12 million Euros and 60 civil servants to send 1 million e-mails to copyright infringers and 99,000 registered letters, with only 134 cases examined for prosecution.[20]

Background

Implementation of the European Copyright Directive resulted in the French DADVSI law which has been in force since 2007, creating the crime of lack of screening of Internet connections in order to prevent exchange of copyrighted material without prior agreement from the copyright holders (art. L335.12).[21] The DADVSI law did not prescribe any punishment.It has been partially invalidated by the Constitutional Council of France's rejection of the principle of escalation,[22] and retains only the crime of copyright-infringement, punishable by up to 3 years' prison and a fine of up to €300,000.

The HADOPI law is supposed to address the concerns of the Constitutional Council of France, in addition to replacing the DADVSI law, which has yet to be enforced.

Olivennes report and Élysée agreement

On September 5, 2007, the French Minister of Culture, Christine Albanel asked the CEO of the major French entertainment retailer (Fnac), Denis Olivennes, to lead a task force to study a three-strike sanction, to conform with the ruling of the French Constitutional Council. After consulting representatives of the entertainment industry, Internet service providers and consumer associations, the Olivennes committee reported to the Minister on November 23.[23] The report was signed by 40 companies at the Élysée and presented as the "Olivennes agreement". It was later renamed the "Élysée agreement".

The HADOPI law is the implementation of the Olivennes report, supported by the Olivennes agreement, in which representatives of the entertainment and media industries gave their assent to the law's enforcement procedures. Nevertheless, some companies, notably the ISPs Orange and Free, later dissented from the agreement.[24]

Lobbying for the bill

Owing to its controversial nature, the bill became a subject of intense campaigning in various media, which was redoubled after its parliamentary defeat on April 9, 2009.

President Sarkozy's Brussels Intervention

On October 4, 2008, the then French President Nicolas Sarkozy, a personal supporter of the law, interceded with the president of the European Commission regarding an amendment to the EU Telecoms Package that targeted the HADOPI law and the lack of a judicial ruling in the original drafting of it.[25] This was Amendment 138 to the Framework directive as adopted by the European Parliament in the First Reading of the Telecoms Package. The European Commission's response to Sarkozy was that it supported Amendment 138. That remained its position until the Telecoms Package was finally adopted with the so-called Freedom Provision (Directive 2009/140/EC, Article 1.3a).

Government

The French government created a promotional website in support of the country's entertainment industry. The content of the website was criticised as misleading.[7] It was also alleged that French Wikipedia pages relative to HADOPI were edited by the Ministry of Culture on February 14, 2009.[8]

Entertainment industry

SACEM and other entertainment industry players mounted a petition of "10,000 artists" in support of the HADOPI law. The list has been challenged on several grounds:

Lobbying against the bill

Consumer associations

The leading French consumer association UFC Que Choisir has positioned itself against the law and set up a website to support opposition.[27]

Digital rights group La Quadrature du Net is a strong lobbyist against the law.[28]

Following an open letter in the newspaper Libération signed by Chantal Akerman, Christophe Honoré, Jean-Pierre Limosin, Zina Modiano, Gaël Morel, Victoria Abril, Catherine Deneuve, Louis Garrel, Yann Gonzalez, Clotilde Hesme, Chiara Mastroianni, Agathe Berman and Paulo Branco[29] which was published on April 7, 2009, and co-authored notably by Victoria Abril and Catherine Deneuve, an informal group has been constituted under the name Creation Public Internet.[30]

On March 12, 2009, the British Featured Artists Coalition publicised its opposition to the principle of the HADOPI law.[31]

Political groups' positions

With the exception of the French Green Party who campaigned against the law, other political groups represented in the legislative chambers were not active lobbying for or against the law, though individual members did so. The French Socialist Party was probably the most divided. While it initially favored the law (voted yes in the Senate's first reading), it was chiefly responsible for the surprise rejection of the bill after the first reading in the National Assembly, as well as requesting the Constitutional Council's ruling. The Pirate Party (France) although not represented in the legislative chambers also campaigned against the law.

Logo incident

Shortly after HADOPI's agency logo was presented to the public by Minister of Culture and Communication Frédéric Mitterrand, it was revealed that the logo used an unlicensed font. The font was created by typeface designer Jean François Porchez, and is owned by France Télécom. The design agency that drew the logo, Plan Créatif, admitted to using the font by mistake and the logo was redone with another font.[32]

See also

References

Notes
Citations

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Dossier législatif: Projet de loi favorisant la diffusion et la protection de la création sur Internet . fr . French Senate. 18 June 2008 .
  2. Web site: fr . Rees . Marc . L'Arcom, fusion de la Hadopi et du CSA . ARCOM: the merger of Hadopoi and CSA . Nextinpact.com . 2019-09-25 . 21 February 2022.
  3. News: French reject internet piracy law . BBC News Online . 9 April 2009.
  4. News: Lizzy . Davies . French MPs reject controversial plan to crack down on illegal downloaders . The Guardian . 9 April 2009 . London.
  5. News: Charles . Bremner . Setback for Sarkozy as French parliament rejects controversial internet law . The Times . London . 2 April 2009.
  6. News: Lawmakers adopt Internet anti-piracy bill . France 24 . 12 May 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090515105835/http://www.france24.com/en/20090512-lawmakers-adopt-internet-anti-piracy-bill-illegal-downloading-France . 15 May 2009.
  7. Web site: fr . Jaimelesartistes.fr, Albanel explique pourquoi ca-va-couper.fr . Rees . Marc . 31 October 2008 . PC Inpact . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20081103082450/http://www.pcinpact.com/actu/news/47012-jaimelesartistesfr-partenaires-christine-albanel-riposte.htm . 2008-11-03.
  8. Web site: Comment Albanel "arrange" Hadopi dans Wikipedia . Lapoix . Sylvain . 11 May 2009 . fr . . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090514123452/http://www.marianne2.fr/Comment-Albanel-arrange-Hadopi-dans-Wikipedia_a179590.html . 2009-05-14.
  9. News: Hadopi: couacs autour de la pétition des 10 000 artistes . . fr . Julie . Saulnier . 15 April 2009 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20090511065841/http://www.lexpress.fr/actualite/high-tech/hadopi-couacs-autour-de-la-petition-des-10-000-artistes_754193.html . 2009-05-11.
  10. News: On ne s'excuse pas d'avoir rejeté Hadopi . April 27, 2009 . . fr . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090502055848/http://www.liberation.fr/medias/0101564207-on-ne-s-excuse-pas-d-avoir-rejete-hadopi . 2009-05-02.
  11. Web site: L'ensemble des amendements de cette page concerne le texte "Protection De La Création Sur Internet" - (n° 1240) . March 11, 2009 . Assemblée Nationale . fr . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090311024823/http://recherche.assemblee-nationale.fr/amendements/resultats2.asp?NUM_INIT=1240&LEGISLATURE=13 . 2009-03-11.
  12. Access to Network Services and Protection of Constitutional Rights: Recognizing the Essential Role of Internet Access for the Freedom of Expression . Lucchi . Nicola . February 6, 2011 . Cardozo Journal of International and Comparative Law (JICL) . 19 . 3.
  13. News: French Constitutional Council: Decision n° 2009-580 of June 10th 2009—Act furthering the diffusion and protection of creation on the Internet . 10 June 2009 . 7 April 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160127183746/http://www.conseil-constitutionnel.fr/conseil-constitutionnel/root/bank/download/2009-580DC-2009_580dc.pdf . 27 January 2016 . dead. at French Constitutional Council
  14. News: France Approves Wide Crackdown on Net Piracy . The New York Times . Eric . Pfanner . 22 October 2009.
  15. Web site: Décret n°2007-510 du 4 avril 2007 relatif à l'Autorité de régulation des mesures techniques instituée par l'article L. 331-17 du code de la propriété intellectuelle . Légifrance.
  16. Web site: Conseil supérieur de la propriété littéraire et artistique (CSPLA) . Ministère de la Culture . fr.
  17. Web site: Code de la propriété intellectuelle . Légifrance.
  18. Web site: French three-strikes law no longer suspends Net access . Shankland . Stephen . July 10, 2013 . CNET.
  19. Web site: Three Strikes and You're Still In - France Kills Piracy Disconnections . Maxwell . Andy . July 9, 2013 . TorrentFreak.
  20. Web site: Hadopi "failure" a warning for the UK? . 8 August 2012 . The 1709 Blog.
  21. Web site: Article L335-12: Code de la propriété intellectuelle . Légifrance . fr.
  22. Web site: Décision n° 2006-540 DC du 27 juillet 2006 . Conseil constitutionnel . fr.
  23. Web site: Rapport au Ministre de la Culture et de la Communication: Le Developpement et la Protection des Oeuvres Culturelles sur les Nouveaux Reseaux . November 2007 . Ministère de la Culture . fr.
  24. Web site: Après Free, Orange dénonce le projet Hadopi? . Alexandre . Laurent . October 29, 2008 . Clubic.com.
  25. Book: Horten, Monica . The Copyright Enforcement Enigma – Internet Politics and the Telecoms Package . 2012 . New York City . Palgrave Macmillan . 166–174.
  26. Web site: La liste des 10,000 signataires . Sanyas . Nil . 15 April 2009 . PC Inpact.com . fr . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090415104801/https://pcinpact.com/actu/news/50333-liste-10000-signataires-creation-internet.htm . 2009-04-15.
  27. Web site: Ça va couper . ca-va-couper.fr . fr . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20081102021638/http://www.ca-va-couper.fr/ . 2008-11-02.
  28. Web site: Search for "HADOPI" . La Quadrature du Net. 30 April 2024 .
  29. News: Lettre ouverte aux spectateurs citoyens . 7 April 2009 . . fr.
  30. Web site: Qui sommes-nous? . 22 April 2009 . Création Public Internet . fr . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090428153346/http://creationpublicinternet.fr/blog/index.php?post/2009/04/22/Qui-sommes-nous . 2009-04-28.
  31. News: It's not a crime to download, say musicians . The Independent . London . Arifa . Akbar . 2009-03-12 . 2010-05-04.
  32. News: Anti-piracy agency's logo broke copyright . The Daily Telegraph . London . 2010-01-12 . 2010-05-04.