Court Slaps Fees on CD Burners
By IDG
Jun 22 2001 04:36 AM PDT

A German legal ruling demands that Hewlett-Packard pay 
intellectual-property fees on all the CD burners it has sold over the past 
three years.


(BERLIN) Hewlett-Packard GmbH must pay intellectual-property fees on CD 
burners retroactively for three years, a German court ruled on Thursday. HP 
said it will appeal the ruling.

The ongoing legal battle seeks to determine whether buyers of the devices 
must pay a flat fee to offset losses sustained by authors and artists whose 
work is duplicated without their permission. HP is fighting the test case 
on behalf of all hardware makers.

Negotiations between manufacturers and authors'-rights guilds collapsed 
earlier this year, after HP withdrew an initial agreement to pay $5.25 
(DM12) on each new CD burner sold.

The preliminary ruling orders HP to divulge how many of the devices it has 
sold in Germany since February 1998, said Harald Heydlauf, a spokesman for 
the Landgericht Stuttgart state court. The court has yet to set level of fees.

HP said it rejects the ruling. The old system of flat fees on duplication 
devices - which was originally devised for photocopiers and tape recorders 
- cannot be carried over to the "digital world," the company said in a 
statement.

The company said copyrighted materials can be better protected through a 
system of individual licensing and per-use fees.

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