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Copyright report published, aimed at supporting digital industry – Minister Bruton

Key commitment in Action Plan for Jobs aimed at reducing barriers to

innovation in the digital environment

The Minister for Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation, Richard Bruton TD,

together with the Minister of State for Research and Innovation, Sean

Sherlock TD, today (Tuesday) welcomed the publication of the report of the

independent Copyright Review Committee, entitled Modernising Copyright.

The report is aimed at identifying any barriers for innovation in the

digital environment, and developing proposals for reducing them in order to

provide greater support for growth and jobs in the digital industry.

Publication of the report marks delivery of a key commitment in the

Government’s Action Plan for Jobs.

Following publication, Minister Bruton and Minister Sherlock propose that

the recommendations of the report will be carefully examined with other

Departments and Agencies involved, with the intention of bringing forward

legislative proposals for reform in this area to stimulate innovation and

to ensure that Ireland is well positioned to meet the needs of the digital

environment.

Minister Sherlock announced also the convening of a public forum on the 9th

December at the Royal Irish Academy to allow the Committee to present its

findings and the copyright community to probe these findings with members

of the Committee.

The Report entitled “Modernising Copyright” was compiled by the Copyright

Review Committee comprising Dr Eoin O’Dell of Trinity College (Chair),

Professor Steve Hedley of University College Cork and Ms Patricia McGovern

of DFMG Solicitors. In completing its Report, the Committee was informed

by an extensive consultation process undertaken by them to ensure that the

full range of views of the copyright community was available to them. The

Report is accompanied by a draft Bill designed to give effect to the

recommendations contained therein.

Launching the Report, Minister Bruton said:

“The digital industry is a key part of the Government’s Action Plan for

Jobs, and in the past two years we have put in place a range of measures to

support growth in this sector, including changes to increase the number of

people with relevant skills coming through the education and work permit

systems. In the past two years we have seen significant jobs growth in this

sector. However if we are to sustain and accelerate this we must

continually look over the next horizon and examine possible changes that

could improve our international offering in this area.

“That is why we commissioned this report to look at possible barriers to

innovation in this sector and measures we could take to remove them and

support further growth and innovation. Sincere thanks are due to Prof

O’Dell and his team for the incredible work they have put in to this

comprehensive report. We will now examine its recommendations along with

other relevant actors to see what changes we can make to ensure that we

continue and accelerate the jobs growth we need in this area”.

Minister Sherlock said “I want to thank most sincerely the members of the

Review Committee for their hard work and the huge level of personal

commitment they have given to complete this Report. Thanks are also due to

the many persons and organisations who took part in the extensive

consultation process. The timing of the Report is very opportune at a time

when, both at EU level and in a number of countries globally, it is

recognised that copyright reform is needed to best suit the needs of the

digital environment and is very much a live issue that legislators are

actively grappling with on many levels”.

“The Report proposes an array of positive reforms responding to the need to

make works more available for educational and research purposes, to provide

a stimulus for innovation, to make more publicly available our rich store

of cultural and heritage works and, to respond to the dynamically changing

needs of the digital environment. To a significant degree, the analogue

environment in which copyright has traditionally operated is not fit to

meet current realities in the online environment. Given the advancement in

social media and other channels of delivery for online content such as

music, news and films, consumers increasingly expect to be able to receive

legitimate content online quickly and that measures are in place to ensure

that the owners of the content i.e. the rightholders, are paid for the

content to allow delivery of the required services.

“Modernisation of copyright feeds into the delivery of the EU digital

agenda also and, while the agenda is much wider in scope, involving the

extension of broadband capability, digital signatures etc. it involves also

copyright and the need to provide for expeditious clearance of copyright

rights to deliver online content.

“This Report now provides Government with an outline roadmap to facilitate

the way forward on the copyright modernisation agenda” in order to respond

to issues that impact on innovation and the need for copyright to be fully

fit for the digital environment”.

ENDS

Note for Editors

Biographies of Committee Members

Dr Eoin O'Dell BCL (NUI), BCL(Oxon), MA (Dubl) (j.o.), LLM (Dubl)

(a.e.Oxon), PhD (Cantab), FTCD, Barrister-at-Law is an Associate Professor

of Law in Trinity College Dublin. He researches and publishes primarily in

the fields of private and commercial law (including IP, IT and cyberlaw),

and he teaches various IP law courses to graduate students and private law

courses to undergraduate students. He has been been President of the Irish

Association of Law Teachers, a Member of the Council and Executive of the

Society of Legal Scholars in the UK and Ireland, and Editor of the Dublin

University Law Journal; and he is the Chair of the Fellows of Trinity

College Dublin. He was a member of the group which advised the Department

of Justice on the Defamation Act, 2009, and a member of the Advisory Group

on a European Civil Code which advised the EU Commission on common

principles of European private law. He blogs at http://www.cearta.ie

Patricia McGovern is Chairman and Head of the Intellectual Property

Department of DFMG Solicitors. Ms. McGovern advises on all aspects of

intellectual property law. She is regarded as one of the leading

intellectual property lawyers in Ireland and has considerable experience in

advising on brand strategies, protection strategies for patents, trade

marks, designs and copyright and the prosecution of trade marks and

designs. She advises on all contentious aspects of intellectual property to

include patent, trade mark, copyright and design infringement actions. Her

practice also encompasses information technology, data protection,

e-commerce and franchising.

Professor Stephen William Hedley BSc, MA (Oxon), LLB (Cantab), Barrister

(Middle Temple), UCC. Professor Hedley joined the Faculty in September

2003, after teaching for 18 years at Cambridge in England. He has written

textbooks on Tort (latest edition 2002) and Restitution (2001), an account

of the theory of Restitution (Restitution: Its division and ordering,

2001), and Law of Electronic Commerce and the Internet in the UK and

Ireland (2006). He has also co-edited (with M Halliwell) a reference work

on Restitution, and compiled two books of statutory materials. He blogs at

http://private-law-theory.org. He was Dean of Faculty from 2009 to 2012.

The report can be found at

www.enterprise.gov.ie/en/Publications/CRC-Report.pdf