Reda Report adopted! Am 17. Juni 2015 - 20:24 Uhr von Tom Hirche
Yesterday, the Legal Affairs Committee of the European Parliament voted on the Report on the Copyright Directive by MEP Julia Reda. It was adopted with a broad majority: 23 votes in favour, only 2 against (Front National) and no abstention. Weiter
Weitere Infos zu dieser News
Save copyright reform! Am 3. Juni 2015 - 13:14 Uhr von Tom Hirche
On 16th June 2015, the European Parliament's legal affairs committee will vote on the report on the review of EU copyright rules. The report's author, MEP Julia Reda, calls on everybody to support her (good) work. Weiter
Weitere Infos zu dieser News
Discussion on "The relevance of ancillary copyrights for the European Media Diversity" Am 20. Mai 2015 - 10:17 Uhr von Tom Hirche
- VG Media
- Sabine Verheyen
- Matthias Kirschenhofer
- Julia Reda
- Günther Oettinger
- David Wood
- Christoph Keese
The German collecting society VG Media will have a panel discussion on "The relevance of ancillary copyrights for the European Media Diversity" on 17th June, 2015 at 11.30 a.m. Host will be the Representation of the Free State of Bavaria to the EU in Brussels. The VG Media exercises copyrights and ancillary copyrights for almost all German broadcasters and over 200 digital products of German newspaper and magazine publishers. Weiter
Julia Reda publishes draft report for new EU copyright law Am 20. Januar 2015 - 21:26 Uhr von Tom Hirche
Julia Reda, MEP for the German Pirate Party and Vice President of the Greens/EFA group, has released the draft report evaluating 2001's EU copyright directive (InfoSoc). She is a member of the Committee on Legal Affairs of the EU Parliament and was elected rapporteur on this particular issue in May. Weiter
Weitere Infos zu dieser News
"Rettung" des Leistungsschutzrechts über Europa? Am 2. Dezember 2014 - 19:20 Uhr von Tom Hirche
Letzten Donnerstag (27.11.2014) hat das Europäische Parlament eine Resolution zur "Stärkung der Verbraucherrechte im digitalen Binnenmarkt" verabschiedet. Ausgangspunkt ist das seit Jahren laufende EU-Wettbewerbsverfahren gegen Google. Dem Konzern wird vorgeworfen, eigene Dienste bei einer Suchanfrage zu bevorzugen. Doch wie passt hier das Leistungsschutzrecht hinein?