Introduction
1.1
On 7 December 2017, the Senate referred the Copyright Amendment (Service
Providers) Bill 2017 (the bill) to the Environment and Communications
Legislation Committee for inquiry and report by 19 March 2018.[1]
Conduct of the inquiry
1.2
In accordance with its usual practice, the committee advertised the
inquiry on its website and wrote to relevant organisations and individuals inviting
submissions. The date of receipt of submissions was 30 January 2018.
1.3
The committee received 38 submissions, which are listed at Appendix 1.
The public submissions are available on the committee's website at www.aph.gov.au/senate_ec.
1.4
The committee held a public hearing in Melbourne on 6 March 2018. A list
of witnesses who gave evidence at the public hearing is available at Appendix
2. The Hansard transcript may be accessed through the committee's website.
1.5
The committee thanks the individuals and organisations that contributed
to the inquiry.
Scope and structure of the report
1.6
This report comprises two chapters. The remaining sections of this
chapter discuss the purpose of the bill, the background to the bill and the
Scrutiny of Bills Committee review of the bill. Chapter 2 outlines the
principal issues raised in evidence and provides the committee's findings and
recommendation.
Purpose of the bill
1.7
The bill seeks to extend the operation of the 'safe harbour scheme'[2] set out in
Division 2AA of Part V of the Copyright Act 1968 (the Copyright Act) to
a broader range of 'service providers'. Proposed section 116ABA will extend the
safe harbour scheme to include, in addition to a carriage service provider:
- educational institutions, through their administering bodies,
including universities, schools, technical colleges, training bodies and
pre-schools;
- libraries that either make their collection available to the
public or are Parliamentary libraries, through their administering bodies;
- archives, through their administering bodies, including the
National Archives of Australia and specified state archives, galleries and
museums;
- key cultural institutions, through their administering bodies,
including specific archives and libraries that are not open to the public; and
- organisations assisting persons with a disability.[3]
1.8
In the second reading speech on the bill, the minister stated:
Extension of the safe harbour scheme to service providers in
these sectors will provide greater certainty to educational and cultural
institutions and to those organisations assisting people with a disability
about their responsibilities in engaging in the online space.[4]
1.9
The minister added that users of these institutions and organisations'
services will also have additional protection under the safe harbour scheme. In
addition, the minister stated that 'the Government has made the decision to
make this incremental expansion of the safe harbour scheme, so that it can
continue to consult on how best to reform the scheme to apply to other online
service providers in the future'.[5] The minister concluded:
The Government will continue to work with stakeholders to
find a way to further extend the safe harbour scheme in a way that allows
Australian businesses to harness the significant opportunities of the growing
digital economy while ensuring respect for the creative efforts and economic
rights of creators. The Government is confident that through this staged
approach it can find a way to provide a practical and responsive safe harbour
framework that operates effectively in the Australian environment.[6]
Background to the bill
1.10
Following Australia's entry into the Australia-United States Free Trade
Agreement in 2005, a new regime for determining when carriage service providers
(CSPs) might be liable for copyright infringements by users over the CSP's
network or services was established. The scheme was based on the 'safe harbour'
concept. The following overview of the scheme was provided by the minister in
his second reading speech on this bill:
The scheme in the Australia-United States Free Trade
Agreement was intended to provide an alternative to court proceedings for
copyright owners where their infringing material is hosted, cached or linked to
by a service provider or where a provider's network services are used to
infringe copyright. It sets out conditions that a service provider must comply
with, including in some situations, taking down infringing material or removing
links to infringing material when they have been notified of a suspected
infringement by a copyright owner. When the scheme was originally implemented
in Australia, it was restricted only to carriage service providers—or providers
of telecommunications services (such as Internet Service Providers) as they are
more commonly known. This cautious approach was taken because the Internet was
still in its infancy.[7]
1.11
The Copyright Act defines a 'carriage service provider' by reference to
the Telecommunications Act 1997: a 'carriage service provider' is a
person who uses a network unit to supply carriage services to the public. This
includes telecommunications companies such as Telstra, Optus and TPG.[8]
1.12
The safe harbour scheme protections are confined to certain categories
of activities that may be provided by a CSP:
- Category A – acting as a conduit for internet activities by
providing facilities or services for transmitting, routing or providing
connections for copyright material.[9]
- Category B – caching through an automatic process.[10] Caching is
defined as the reproduction of copyright material on a system or network
controlled or operated by a CSP in response to an action by a user in order to
facilitate efficient access to that material by that user or other users.[11]
- Category C – storing copyright material on their systems or
networks.[12]
- Category D – referring users to an online location (linking).[13]
1.13
To obtain the benefit of the safe harbour protections from liability,
the CSP must comply with certain conditions in relation to each category of
activity, which in some situations requires the taking down or removal of the
copyright infringing material, or removing links to infringing material when
the CSP has been notified of a suspected infringement by a copyright owner
(generally referred to as 'notice to take down' procedures). [14]
1.14
Critically, a CSP is only entitled to the protection of the safe harbour
scheme if it provides services to the public:
Entities providing
services that fall within the four categories prescribed, cannot take advantage
of the safe harbour scheme unless they provide network access 'to the public'.
A range of organisations and businesses operate services to provide internet
access to their clients, customers, students and other users, but not 'to the
public'. These entities fall within the Category A activity, but they are
excluded from the definition of [CSP].[15]
1.15
Music Rights Australia (MRA) commented that:
...safe harbours were
not intended to shield ISPs from liability where they themselves engaged in
distribution of copyright material or where they intervene or participate in
the communication and making available copyright content. They were meant to
ensure that innovation was not thwarted by the fear of copyright liability in
certain cases where technologies or services were used by third parties.[16]
1.16
By contrast, the term 'service provider' in the United States safe
harbour scheme is more broadly defined than the term understood in Australian
law. In the United States:
...the courts have determined that, for the purposes of the US
scheme, the term ‘service provider’ includes an internet service provider
acting as a conduit for peer-to-peer file sharing programs, providers of the
software and operators for instant messaging services, internet service
providers that provide subscribers with news groups and online vendors. This
extends the application of the scheme beyond entities responsible merely for
providing the infrastructure for the internet.[17]
Scrutiny of Bills Committee
1.17
When examining a bill or draft bill, the committee takes into account
any relevant comments published by the Senate Standing Committee for the
Scrutiny of Bills. The Scrutiny of Bills Committee assesses legislative
proposals against a set of accountability standards that focus on the effect of
proposed legislation on individual rights, liberties and obligations, and on
parliamentary propriety.
1.18
The Scrutiny Committee examined the bill in its Scrutiny Digest,
No. 1 of 2018, and made no comments on the bill.[18]
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