COPYRIGHT : EUROPEAN FILMMAKERS SEEK END TO BUYOUT CONTRACTS.

European filmmakers, documentary-makers and TV filmmakers are calling for an end to buyout contracts' in the EU, which are very common - particularly in Germany and the UK. These buyouts make them lose intellectual property rights when their works are successful through other media, for instance when they are revived through the internet.

This is not the exact object of Internal Market Commissioner Michel Barnier's proposals, which are expected in June and which aim to harmonise the system of collective management of online copyright. Nevertheless, three associations, the Society of Audiovisual Authors (SAA), the Federation of European Film Directors (FERA) and the Federation of Screenwriters in Europe (FSE) are intent on making the most of the various debates that are being held on copyright at EU level to promote their interests. First and foremost, they want to put an end to buyout contracts - lump payments - which "force authors to accept payments that take little or no account of subsequent use".

CASE LAW

The SAA, the FERA and the FSE have now been vindicated by an EU Court of Justice ruling made in February in an Austrian case (C-277/10). The case involved a producer against a screenwriter and the principal director of a documentary film. The Luxembourg judges ruled that Austrian legislation is incompatible with EU legislation - namely the 2011 directive on the harmonisation of certain aspects of copyright and related rights in the information society. This is because by operation of law, and exclusively...

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