Culture Secretary threatens search engines with anti-piracy legislation

UK Culture Secretary Sajid Javid has made some worrying declarations, 
threatening search engines with legislation unless they stop "sending people to 
illegal sites”.

https://www.openrightsgroup.org/blog/2014/uk-culture-secretary-piracy-legislation-search-engines

In his speech to the AGM of the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) Javid 
skimmed over existing government policies, from tax reliefs to £246 million in 
music education hubs that will give children the chance to learn to play an 
instrument. This industrial activism is aligned with CBI proposals to 
strengthen the creative industries. But he chose instead to make copyright 
enforcement the focus of his speech.

Javid tackled the topic with an almost endearing simplicity: “copyright 
infringement is theft, pure and simple”. Such one-liners may please this 
audience, but make poor policy foundations, particularly in areas as fuzzy as 
copyright infringement. For example, until the law changes this autumn copying 
your own CDs to your own iPod is theft, according to Javid. In another example 
of how convoluted copyright conflicts can get, it has taken five years for the 
Court of Justice of the EU to eventually rule that browsing websites is 
actually legal and the on-screen copies are not infringing. So much for pure 
and simple.

Does the music industry really need protecting in 2014?

Javid commiserated with the BPI: “the 21st century has not always been kind to 
you”. It is undeniable that the UK music industry is undergoing a seismic 
transformation, like many other industrial sectors and aspects of our lives. 
BPI members’ incomes have decreased by almost 40% in the past 10 years , but 
the trend appears to be stabilising and last year saw an increase. This is 
thanks to digital services, which now account for some 50% of their revenues.

According to the international music body IFPI we are seeing “an industry of 
growing digital revenues and multiple income streams internationally”. Not 
exactly a picture of doom. And while monies may have been going down, the 
amount of music being created nowadays is astonishing. A ten minute tour of 
websites such as The Hype Machine will fry the brain of any baby boomer with a 
fully paid mortgage.

What about the music based on remixes and mash ups of existing songs? The 
creative citizens who make these tracks are not included in considerations that 
exclusively focus on the established recording industry. And within industry it 
is far from clear that the interests of all artists and creators are 
automatically aligned with those of the companies represented at the BPI.

Incidentally, Javid’s team apparently gave him the wrong figures. According to 
the best estimates, the UK music industry is worth £3.5 billion. It is the UK 
film industry that is worth £4.5 billion.

The rest of his speech provided a round up of current enforcement policy with 
an added new threat of legislation on search engines.

Creative Content UK: alienating consumers

The new industry-led successor to the Digital Economy Act, Creative Content UK, 
was presented as an enforcement regime that “protects the rights of copyright 
holders and punishes criminals, but doesn’t hamper creativity, stifle 
innovation or block new, legitimate ways of enjoying music”. The CCUK system - 
formerly known as VCAP - will involve both an education campaign on the value 
of copyright and sending letters to alleged infringers. There are no plans to 
disconnect or throttle the internet of subscribers who receive several letters.

This new programme is less worrying than the original DEA, and a clear 
vindication for ORG’s campaigning on this issue. But we remain concerned about 
this - mainly adversarial - approach to dealing with consumers. OFCOM research 
shows that people sharing content online are also contributing significantly to 
industry spend, “as their high infringing is coupled with high levels of 
consumption and spend”. There must be a better way to encourage more legal 
consumption than alienating some of your best customers.

From the available evidence it appears unlikely that Creative Content UK will 
have any major impact on file-sharing. We can expect calls to introduce more 
draconian measures. But instead we should be looking at the root causes of the 
phenomenon and its real impact on revenues.

City of London Police Intellectual Property Crime Unit (PIPCU): BYO cops

The minister praised the activities of PIPCU. These include maintaining a 
copyright Infringing Websites List (IWL) with input from industry. This is a 
secret list, and FOI requests for the release of the IWL have been rejected . 
We believe that secret lists have no place in copyright enforcement. As we saw 
above, one person’s infringement may be another’s innovation, and there should 
be an opportunity for site owners and users to discuss each case.

PIPCU takes pride on its innovative ways of disrupting the activities of 
allegedly infringing sites. But to us, and many others elsewhere, these appear 
to involve extra-judicial punishments. In some cases the organisations hosting 
the DNS records are being asked to point these to a website with an ominous 
warning and the logos of PIPCU and several rights holder groups. In one case 
PIPCU forced domains to be transferred, but an arbitration tribunal reversed 
the decision due to the lack of a court order. More recently, PIPCU has started 
sending “notices of criminality” warning internet companies to sever 
relationships with allegedly infringing websites “to avoid any future 
accusations of knowingly facilitating the movement of criminal funds”. It is 
extremely worrying that a British police force thinks they can bypass the 
courts to deliver summary justice.

There are also concerns about the independence of the unit. The unit’s current 
funding mostly comes from the Intellectual Property Office, but industry is 
expected to fund its continuity. PIPCU already has a BPI employee in secondment.

The City of London Police has similar arrangements in most other economic crime 
units. For example, itsInsurance Fraud Enforcement Department is funded by the 
Association of British Insurers , although they claim to operate with 
independence. The Dedicated Cheque and Plastic Crime Unit (DCPCU) is fully 
funded by the banking industry and supported by bank staff. The Overseas 
Anti-corruption Unit is wholly funded by DfID.

All these agreements raise questions about potential conflicts of interest, 
which might be managed with proper governance arrangements. But PIPCU is unique 
in dealing with an area where there is no social consensus; where different 
industry sectors are pitted against each other, and the everyday behaviour of 
millions of citizens is potentially criminalised. This is a situation that 
requires a nuanced approach to balance the interests and concerns of all 
parties. At present it appears that PIPCU is acting as a semi-privatised police 
force for one specific interest group: rightsholders.

Threats of legislation on search engines

The final salvo was dedicated to search engines. He informed us that he has 
written - together with Vince Cable - to Google, Microsoft and Yahoo asking 
them to stop “sending people to illegal sites”, threatening a legislative 
approach if he doesn’t see “real progress”.

But it is unclear what exactly this means. Sajid said he supported Mike 
Weatherley MP, Cameron’s IP czar, who has published a discussion paper with 
several proposals for how search engines should handle unlawful content. These 
include demoting websites by using reports and the PIPCU blacklist; removing 
websites subjected to court orders that demand blocking by ISPs; reducing 
advertising income to infringing sites, and the use of industry trust marks to 
promote legitimate content. Weatherley also supported exploring Google’s 
proposals for technical measures to promote legitimate content, such as the use 
of “rich snippets”.

We hope to hear soon what concrete proposals are on the table, but we can 
already find some problems with this approach. Ultimately, the government are 
considering the legal regulation of one industry to protect the interests of 
another. If the government thinks this is the right approach, they should be 
transparent about it. It is not simply a matter of neutrally enforcing the law.

An added complication is that technology companies have many lines of activity. 
Some search engines are actively involved in media distribution. Legislating to 
force search engines to remove links to some media sources could have 
unpredictable consequences. In the US, Google search results for music and 
video titles present prominent links to its own Play services - for watching 
content. Apple delivers digital media via their iTunes platform, and might 
benefit from the removal of any website links.

This kind of close collaboration between government and industry groups happens 
in other areas - for example in the nuclear and pharmaceutical industries - but 
there is a certain coyness about it. Here instead we have Javid publicly joking 
about how being able to get free tickets to concerts makes him popular with his 
own children. Clearly it would take a lot more than free concert tickets to 
influence UK government policy – and we are sure these were promptly registered 
as gifts and hospitality. But it shows how acceptable it is to be seen 
championing the music industry instead of the public interest.

More generally we believe that regulation of copyright enforcement should 
consider all stakeholders involved, not just industry, and including consumers 
and amateur creators. You may believe that the role of government is to take an 
active role in protecting national industries, or simply act as a hands off 
regulator. But in any case it is unacceptable not to consider the interests of 
large sectors of the affected population. Sadly, this seems to be the case 
here, as government threatens to legislate without any early consultations.


This process also goes against the “multi-stakeholder approach” to Internet 
regulation of which the UK is a leading promoter, including this week at the 
Internet Governance Forum in Istanbul.

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