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Japanese government urges Internet regulation change |
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Written by Mark Schilling
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Thursday, 24 May 2007 |
TOKYO -- Seeking to promote Internet
distribution of TV content, a government panel has recommended that regs be
changed to allow webcasts without first getting permissions from all rights
holders.
The panel, the Intellectual Property Rights Policy
Work Group, has included the proposal in recommendations for intellectual
property law revisions that it is currently drafting. The panel will complete
its final report by May 31. The rule changes are expected to go into
effect within two years.
According to the panel's proposal, Internet
distribs of previously broadcast TV shows will no longer need to get permissions
from all rights holders, as is currently required. Instead they will only have
to ensure royalty payments to all rights holders following webcasts of the
shows. Given that, in Japan, right holders include talent as well as production
companies and broadcasters, the search for permissions is frequently cumbersome
or, in cases where rights holders have dropped out of the biz -- or off the face
of the earth -- impossible.
Seeking to ease this process, as well as boost
Internet distribution of TV content, the panel recommended the rule change. It
has also suggested that production contracts for new shows incorporate a clause
giving permission for Internet use.
Under the leadership of Prime
Minister Shinzo Abe, the panel is studying rule changes for intellectual
property rights in a range of fields, including broadcasting and
telecommunications, information technology, nanotechnology, biotechnology, and
environmental technology.
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