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ISP Liability in Finland

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<strong>ISP</strong> <strong>Liability</strong> <strong>in</strong> F<strong>in</strong>landNordic IT Law ConferenceCopenhagen 11 November 2010Jesper Nevala<strong>in</strong>en, Senior AssociateBird & Bird (Hels<strong>in</strong>ki)


OverviewLegal FrameworkRecent Legislative ProposalRecent Case Law© Bird & Bird LLP 2010page 2


Legal Framework● Act on Provision of Information Society Services (2002/458).• Implements the E-Commerce Directive (2000/31/EC).● Copyright Act (404/196, as amended).• InfoSoc Directive (2001/29/EC) implemented by amendmentenacted <strong>in</strong> 2005.• Enforcement Directive (2004/48/EC) implemented (parts) byamendment enacted <strong>in</strong> 2006.● Police Act (493/1995, as amended).© Bird & Bird LLP 2010page 3


Legal Framework – Information SocietyServices● <strong>ISP</strong> liability under the Act on Provision of Information SocietyServices.• Mere Conduit- Does not <strong>in</strong>itiate.- Does not select receiver.- Does not select or modify <strong>in</strong>formation.• Catch<strong>in</strong>g- Does not modify <strong>in</strong>formation.- Complies with access conditions.- Complies with updat<strong>in</strong>g rules.- Removes or disables access upon actual knowledge of removal at <strong>in</strong>itial source, disabled access, or court oradm<strong>in</strong>istrative order to remove or disable.• Host<strong>in</strong>g- Activity purely technical- Disables access immediately upon~ receipt of Court order;~ receipt of copyright proprietor's written notice; or~ otherwise receiv<strong>in</strong>g actual knowledge that the content is illegal.● No general obligation to monitor.© Bird & Bird LLP 2010page 4


Legal Framework – Notice and Take Down● Notice and take down upon Courtorder or other actual knowledge.● May be applied aga<strong>in</strong>st anycontent which keep<strong>in</strong>g availableor conveyance is subject tocrim<strong>in</strong>al or civil liability.● If <strong>ISP</strong> disabled access without aCourt order (actual knowledge),the <strong>ISP</strong> must notify the CP.● CP may seek annulment <strong>in</strong> theDistrict Court with<strong>in</strong> 14 days fromthe receipt of <strong>ISP</strong>'s notice.CP =ContentProvider<strong>ISP</strong>/CP rightto seekannulmentwith<strong>in</strong>14 days.Claim with<strong>in</strong>3 months.Order to benotified toCP.Applicationto District Courtto disableaccess.Notice andtake downvia Courtorder.May beenforced byconditionalf<strong>in</strong>e.<strong>ISP</strong> / CPright to beheard.Order todisableaccess.© Bird & Bird LLP 2010page 5


Legal Framework – Notice and Take Down● Notice and take down uponcopyright proprietor's notice.● Available <strong>in</strong> case of copyright<strong>in</strong>fr<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g material only.● Not available for P2P.<strong>Liability</strong> <strong>in</strong>case of wilfulnotice orrejo<strong>in</strong>der.CopyrightproprietornoticetoCP / <strong>ISP</strong>.Formalnotice,contentdef<strong>in</strong>ed <strong>in</strong>the Act.Copyrightproprietormay seek Courtorder.Notice andtake downFirst to CP,<strong>ISP</strong> secondaryonly.by notice.<strong>ISP</strong> mustreturncontent.CP mayproviderejo<strong>in</strong>derwith<strong>in</strong>14 days.<strong>ISP</strong> mustnotifyCP ofdisabl<strong>in</strong>g.Error <strong>in</strong> form=Null and void.© Bird & Bird LLP 2010page 6


Legal Framework – Copyright Act● <strong>ISP</strong> liability under the Copyright Act.● The provisions of the Copyright Act of relevance <strong>in</strong> case of P2Pnetworks.● Obligation to provide contact <strong>in</strong>formation.• The Court may order an <strong>ISP</strong> pursuant to an application by acopyright proprietor to provide the contact <strong>in</strong>formation of asubscriber.• Applicant must show that significant amount of <strong>in</strong>fr<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g contentis be<strong>in</strong>g distributed through the subscriber connection.• Copyright proprietor liable for <strong>ISP</strong>'s costs and liable to <strong>in</strong>demnifythe <strong>ISP</strong> aga<strong>in</strong>st possible damages.• <strong>ISP</strong> to be heard.• A civil claim must not necessarily be filed.© Bird & Bird LLP 2010page 7


Legal Framework – Copyright Act● Court order to (temporarily)disable access to alleged<strong>in</strong>fr<strong>in</strong>g<strong>in</strong>g content.● May be issued <strong>in</strong> connectionwith the process<strong>in</strong>g of acopyright proprietor's petitionto prohibit <strong>in</strong>fr<strong>in</strong>gement orprior to that, if obvious that thecopyright proprietor's rightswould otherwise becompromised.● Applies to <strong>ISP</strong>'s only.Order may notjeopardize rightsof thirdparties.Applicant toplacesecurity.Actual claimmust be filedwith<strong>in</strong>onemonth.Pursuant toapplicationbycopyrightproprietor.Courtorderto disableaccess.Technicalmeansnotdef<strong>in</strong>ed.May beenforcedby aconditionalf<strong>in</strong>e.Must bea reasonablemeasure.<strong>ISP</strong> andalleged<strong>in</strong>fr<strong>in</strong>gerto beheard.© Bird & Bird LLP 2010page 8


Legal Framework – Police Act● In addition to the civil procedure available to copyrightproprietors under the Copyright Act, a copyright proprietormay also <strong>in</strong>itiate crim<strong>in</strong>al <strong>in</strong>vestigation.● The police may <strong>in</strong> connection with a crim<strong>in</strong>al <strong>in</strong>vestigationorder an <strong>ISP</strong> to supply the police with the details regard<strong>in</strong>g asubscriber connection that are not publicly available.© Bird & Bird LLP 2010page 9


Recent Legislative Proposal● Proposal to amend the Copyright Act and the Act on theProtection of Privacy <strong>in</strong> Electronic Communications.● Amendment of the Copyright Act.• The Court could order the <strong>ISP</strong> to supply the Court with the contact detailsof an alleged <strong>in</strong>fr<strong>in</strong>ger.• Could <strong>in</strong> exceptional circumstances be executed ex officio by the Court.• Would generally be used when a copyright proprietor has filed anapplication with the Court to order an <strong>ISP</strong> to provide the details of asubscriber connection of an alleged <strong>in</strong>fr<strong>in</strong>ger.• <strong>ISP</strong> to be heard.• Purpose of the amendment is to secure the availability of the contact<strong>in</strong>formation.• Copyright proprietor would be liable for costs and <strong>in</strong>demnify<strong>in</strong>g the <strong>ISP</strong>also when ordered ex officio by the Court.© Bird & Bird LLP 2010page 10


Recent Legislative Proposal● Amendment of the Act on the Protection of Privacy <strong>in</strong>Electronic Communications.• Right of <strong>ISP</strong>'s to process identification data <strong>in</strong> order to convey anotice of copyright <strong>in</strong>fr<strong>in</strong>gement to a subscriber.• <strong>ISP</strong> would be under obligation to convey a notice issued by aF<strong>in</strong>nish copyright society or other entity supervis<strong>in</strong>g copyrights.• Obligation to convey only to subscribers whose contact<strong>in</strong>formation is <strong>in</strong> the possession of the <strong>ISP</strong>.• <strong>ISP</strong>'s liability would be limited to conveyance.• <strong>ISP</strong>'s not to store <strong>in</strong>formation on to whom the notice has beenconveyed.• No obligation to monitor.© Bird & Bird LLP 2010page 11


Recent Legislative Proposal● Formal requirements on the contents of the notice laid down <strong>in</strong>the Act.● Copyright societies must have a PoW from the copyrightproprietors that they represent.● The copyright society would be liable for <strong>ISP</strong>'s costs.● Amendment aims at provid<strong>in</strong>g a "soft" alternative as comparedto the Court based proceed<strong>in</strong>gs.● The proposed amendments are planned to enter <strong>in</strong>to forcedur<strong>in</strong>g spr<strong>in</strong>g 2011.© Bird & Bird LLP 2010page 12


Recent Case Law – Case F<strong>in</strong>nreactor● Supreme Court (KKO 2010:47).● The defendants ma<strong>in</strong>ta<strong>in</strong>ed a fileshar<strong>in</strong>gnetwork or a so-called "torrent"server or "track<strong>in</strong>g" server.● The server conta<strong>in</strong>ed torrent/metadatafiles of computers that were connectedto the server.● The torrent files enabled the connectedcomputers to see what content wasavailable on the other computers.● The connected computers formed a P2Pnetwork.● The defendants monitored (technically)the download<strong>in</strong>g and shar<strong>in</strong>g of contentper end-user (so-called "ratio number").● The effective function<strong>in</strong>g of the systemrequired not only download<strong>in</strong>g but alsoshar<strong>in</strong>g of content.PCPCPCTorrentServerPCPCPC© Bird & Bird LLP 2010page 13


Recent Case Law – Case F<strong>in</strong>nreactor● The defendants had various roles <strong>in</strong> the ma<strong>in</strong>tenance andadm<strong>in</strong>istration of the F<strong>in</strong>nreactor service:• technical ma<strong>in</strong>tenance;• user adm<strong>in</strong>istration; and• supervis<strong>in</strong>g the content of the files be<strong>in</strong>g shared.● The defendants argued that the above acts did not amount tocopyright violation s<strong>in</strong>ce• they did not copy or distribute any works;• none of the works were <strong>in</strong> their possession nor did theydistributed any thereto related description files;• possible violations have not been a direct result of their activity;and• their activity has not concerned any particular work and they havenot even been aware of all works made available.© Bird & Bird LLP 2010page 14


Recent Case Law – Case F<strong>in</strong>nreactor● First time that the Supreme Court assessed the jo<strong>in</strong>t activity ofmany <strong>in</strong> a communication network as grounds for copyrightviolation.● The Supreme Court found that• copyright protection shall not be dependent on the technicalexecution of the illegal shar<strong>in</strong>g;• although the defendants have not themselves shared the protectedworks, the torrent files have been necessary for download<strong>in</strong>g andcopy<strong>in</strong>g the content files;• the torrent server has been set-up for the sole purpose of shar<strong>in</strong>gworks protected by copyright and therefore the activity of thedefendants must be reviewed as a whole, not separately for eachdefendant (except for the relevance of each <strong>in</strong>dividual personsacts for the purposes of crim<strong>in</strong>al liability);© Bird & Bird LLP 2010page 15


Recent Case Law – Case F<strong>in</strong>nreactor• the F<strong>in</strong>nreactor network is the result of cooperation betweenmany people;• the operation of the network has been organized and based on aclear division of responsibilities, which has been central forenabl<strong>in</strong>g the shar<strong>in</strong>g of the protected works;• the torrent files have been connected to <strong>in</strong>dividual content filesand the torrent files <strong>in</strong> particular have enabled the download<strong>in</strong>gof the content files from users' computers.● Based on the forego<strong>in</strong>g facts, the Supreme Court found thedefendants guilty for copyright violation (some only for aid<strong>in</strong>g)by <strong>in</strong> cooperation with each other and the end-usersreproduc<strong>in</strong>g and mak<strong>in</strong>g illegal copies available to the public.© Bird & Bird LLP 2010page 16


Recent Case Law – Case F<strong>in</strong>nreactor● The Supreme Court ruled also that, although the host<strong>in</strong>gexception could be argued to apply to the defendants activity,the defendants could not appeal to the grounds for dischargefrom liability s<strong>in</strong>ce• they participated <strong>in</strong> the activity amount<strong>in</strong>g to copyright<strong>in</strong>fr<strong>in</strong>gement; and• the defendants have been aware of the purpose of the F<strong>in</strong>nreactornetwork, i.e., enabl<strong>in</strong>g the shar<strong>in</strong>g of copyright protected content.● The Supreme Court elaborated also on what should be deemedas fair compensation for the illegal use <strong>in</strong> the case.© Bird & Bird LLP 2010page 17


Thank youJesper Nevala<strong>in</strong>enSenior AssociateBird & Bird Attorneys Ltd.Mannerheim<strong>in</strong>tie 800100 Hels<strong>in</strong>kiF<strong>in</strong>landT: +358 (0)9 622 6670F: +358 (0)9 622 6677@: jesper.nevala<strong>in</strong>en@twobirds.comBird & Bird is an <strong>in</strong>ternational legal practice compris<strong>in</strong>g Bird & Bird LLP and its affiliated bus<strong>in</strong>esses. www.twobirds.compage 18

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