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December 22, 2005 10:45 AM PST

France may sanction unfettered P2P downloads

Last modified: December 22, 2005 11:32 AM PST

France could become the first country to pass a law broadly permitting free downloads of copyright content from the Internet for private use.

In a move that could thwart the entertainment industry's attempts to seek legal sanctions for copyright violations, French Parliament members voted 30 to 28 late Wednesday night to accept an amendment proposing such a move.

Attached to a broader copyright law proposal, the amendment--roughly translated--reads: "Authors cannot forbid the reproductions of works that are made on any format from an online communication service when they are intended to be used privately and when they do not imply commercial means directly or indirectly."

In short, that language could "open the way to the legalization of peer-to-peer" downloading of copyright music and movies in the nation of about 8 million Net users, Jean-Baptiste Soufron, a legal counsel with the Association of Audionauts, said in a telephone interview with CNET News.com. The French advocacy organization has represented approximately 100 clients accused of sharing files illegally.

Under French copyright law, there's a concept called "private copy," which permits people to make copies of content for themselves or their friends, Soufron said. But lately, he added, "they're having a huge debate to know if 'private copy' includes downloaded content on the Internet or not."

A French court ruled in favor of the organization recently, holding that downloaded content for personal use does meet the "private copy" definition, Soufron said. But this amendment would give firmer legal backing in a nation that relies more heavily on codified law than court precedents, he said.

The Association of Audionauts isn't suggesting that copyright holders go without compensation, Soufron said. It supports pairing the amendment's text with a royalty tax collected from Internet service providers. Those companies would likely raise the money by levying a monthly fee--say, 2 to 5 euros--on customers who engage in a certain amount of downloading and uploading.

The IFPI, a trade association that speaks for the music industry worldwide, said it was "greatly concerned" by the amendment's initial approval.

"Instead of promoting the growth of legitimate music services on the Internet, some of the measures would be extremely detrimental to legal services and to the future of the French cultural industries," the organization said in a statement provided to CNET News.com.

But IFPI European spokeswoman Francine Cunningham said the proposal doesn't appear to permit unfettered uploading of copyright content. "This distinction is important because the recording industry's ongoing litigation is against major uploaders who are breaking copyright law by making music available to others via the Internet without permission from those who created the music," she said.

Last year, a Canadian judge came to a similar conclusion, ruling it legal to download--but not to upload--copyright content from peer-to-peer services.

The ultimate success of the proposal is far from certain.

French Culture Minister Renaud Donnedieu de Vabres, along with much of the government, supports beefing up the nation's copyright laws significantly, instituting criminal penalties and steep fines for pirates. The official reopened debate on the issue on Thursday, with a second vote expected later in the day.

Even if it survives the Parliament's lower court, it would also have to win approval from its high court, which likely won't consider the measure until late January.

Across the Atlantic, the Motion Picture Association of America on Thursday called the amendment "an unfortunate development." "Most alarming is the apparent disregard for the potential impact on the French cinema industry, which will be hardest hit if this vote is upheld," said Gayle Osterberg, an MPAA vice president. "We are hopeful as this bill works its way through the legislative process, those with an eye toward fostering French cinema will prevail."

See more CNET content tagged:
amendment, copyright law, sanction, France, P2P

Add a Comment (Log in or register) 10 comments
Nice Christmas present from France
by bobby_brady December 22, 2005 11:42 AM PST
Let's hope the higher Parlaiment accepts it.
Reply to this comment
I Just Have to Wonder ...
by markdoiron December 22, 2005 12:50 PM PST
i just have to wonder if this isn't the French tweaking their noses at the American "culture" they so vociferously complain about. if it is, i think it's brilliant!

mark d.
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France may sanction unfettered P2P downloads
by joers December 22, 2005 5:32 PM PST
I love the French and their unfettered approach to stupidous copy-right laws. DRM benefits the big guys and their greed only, mostly leaving the interest of the consumers AND the artists by the way-side.
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Vive La France!
by December 23, 2005 12:08 AM PST
Obviously forward thinking is not totally out of style in France ....

Intellectual copyright is a creation of the human disposition to greed and the acquisitiveness of capitalist monopolies .... Since "There is no new thing under the sun" and since all is built on the aggregate accumulation form others why should any entity claim "divine" copyright --- It is only a human extension of the absurdness of a species trying to avoid sharing the toys ....
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I hope it gets accepted...
by unknown unknown December 23, 2005 1:30 AM PST
just out of pure spite for the record and movie companies. They need a few good kicks in the head after all the anti-consumer BS they've been involved in.
Reply to this comment
Not a big deal
by ejevo December 23, 2005 5:38 AM PST
They know exactly who is going to take it on the chin with this move - American entertainment industry players. It's their way of sticking it to the US.
Reply to this comment
French Utopia: oxymoron
by TogetherinParis December 23, 2005 8:44 AM PST
Attack musicians in this demeaning way and all the brightest
stars will shine beneath a sea of muddy mediocrity. Since when
have the goofball French done anything right? This French law
debases public and private morals by facilitating millions of
petty thefts! How? It needlessly socializes a good market.
Excuse me, it is a good market for NON-French bands. The
Gaelic ghastlies produce inferior music these days, so to
discourage any competition which might actually promote some
really good French music (I know, it is an odd notion) out of
their burning ghettos, they stick musicians on the public dole,
with foreseeable consequences: more ghastly gallic gaul and
the French again do not pull their own weight. And this is held
up as an example? Does anyone in their right mind want some
silly French minister of music education choosing their music for
them?
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Free P2P In France
by genium January 15, 2006 8:44 PM PST
P2P in France: Sarkozy want to stop the revolution?

?uvre censurée sous pression de la SACEM:

http://www.citoyenlambda.net/so/pol/POL_tizenfants.mp3

http://www.eucd.info

Enjeux: http://www.framasoft.net/article1953.html - http://www.framasoft.net/article397.html

wait and see the next mounth but i think P2P will be legalized :)
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