The Copyright Amendment (Service providers) Bill 2017聽
黑料老司机 warmly welcomes the Copyright Amendment (Service Providers) Bill 2017聽(the Bill) and appreciates the opportunity to provide comments on the Bill.
Australian universities provide Internet access to more than one million students, and more than聽50,000 academic staff, for public interest, educational purposes. That inevitably puts them at risk聽of being sued if a staff member or student inadvertently uses university systems to infringe聽copyright. Regardless of the steps taken to prevent infringement, and regardless of how quickly聽they respond when notified of an infringement, they do not have the same legal protection as a聽commercial ISP in the same situation. Australian universities are good copyright citizens and聽supporters of the rights of creators, both philosophically and financially. For many years
universities have been treated less favourably than for-profit ISPs in being legally exposed to聽substantial damages if users infringe copyright.
The proposed expansion of the safe harbours contained in the Bill is long overdue. When聽implemented it will ensure that universities who follow the safe harbour rules have the same legal聽protection and certainty that is currently available only to commercial ISPs. This reform will also聽benefit rights holders by providing them with a streamlined and cost-effective process to send a聽鈥渢akedown鈥 notice to a university.
黑料老司机 recommends that the Parliament support these important steps to update聽the nation鈥檚 copyright laws for the digital era and pass the legislation.
Minor drafting issue
黑料老司机 wishes to raise a minor drafting issue.
In the digital age, many universities rely on third party, cloud-based providers to carry out some聽or all of the activities that fall within the scope of the safe harbours. 黑料老司机 is聽concerned that the current drafting could potentially be construed as limiting the protection of the聽safe harbours to activities that are carried out 鈥by鈥 a university itself, which could potentially leave聽universities outside the scope of the safe harbours in the event that the relevant activities were聽carried out by a third-party provider 鈥on behalf of鈥 the university.
We understand the legislative intention to be that universities (and other entities that fall within聽the expanded definition of 鈥渟ervice provider鈥 in the Bill) would have the benefit of the safe聽harbours聽regardless聽of whether or not the relevant activities were carried out 鈥渂y them鈥 or 鈥渙n聽their behalf鈥 by a third-party provider. We wish to avoid the potential for universities to be聽exposed to costly litigation in the event that any uncertainty is thought to arise with respect to聽Parliament’s intention in this regard. We respectfully urge the Committee to聽recommend the聽inclusion of a provision that makes it abundantly clear that the safe harbour extends to聽activities that are carried by a third-party provider 鈥渙n behalf鈥 of an entity that is a聽鈥渟ervice provider鈥 under the Bill.