Source: https://www.communia-association.org/2018/05/10/database-directive-study-options-neutralising-sui-generis-right/
Timestamp: 2019-04-20 11:11:58+00:00

Document:
There is strong evidence that there is no coherence, a clash or no clarity or uncertainty as regards the relationship between the Database Directive or at least the sui generis right and the PSI directives and open access policies. The sui generis right is seen by many as a barrier to innovation and knowledge exchange and thus to economic growth as research and public data cannot be reused either at all (if refusal to license), or less fast or at a greater cost (p. 121).
The authors of the report suggest that one possibility for intervention would be to remove the protection of the sui generis right for public bodies. This is aligned with the recent proposed revisions to the PSI Directive (released on the same day as this study), which includes a specific clarification that where databases fall under the scope of the PSI Directive, the public sector body responsible for the database may not use the Database Directive to prevent or restrict the reuse of the data.
Repeal the sui generis right? What is possible?
Regarding the future of the sui generis right, the report states, “The Commission may want to consider abolition. There is no evidence that the sui generis right has had a positive effect. There is evidence that it causes problems. There is evidence that it is not needed in the US” (p. 126). At the same time, the study recognises that such abolition “may be as daunting if not more than in 1996 because there are far more Member States and it will also be more costly than keeping the sui generis right as Member States will have to remove it from their law and then the EU will have to invoke another Directive or Regulation to harmonise parasitism and the sui generis right was meant to codify/replace parasitism in the first place” (p. 126).
In our earlier policy paper we called for the sui generis right to be eliminated altogether, with the fallback option being that the right should only be made available to those database producers who have registered for it. That way it would ensure that only those entities who actually need (or truly want) the right would get it. The study considers the recommendation provided by Communia, Creative Commons, Wikimedia, Copyright4Creativity, EDRi, and others to introduce a formality such as registration for database makers to receive the sui generis right.
The report recognises that this is indeed an legally-workable proposal: “Such a registration system would be entirely possible under international law, as the rule against the use of formalities in Article 5 of the Berne Convention applies only in relation to copyright aspects of databases” (p. 71).
With pre-emptive effect on national unfair competition law (so that, in the applicable field, one must register or have no protection) (p. 139).
The sui generis right has not stimulated the production of databases. Instead it has thwarted the legitimate interests of users to access information compiled in databases by creating a confusing legal environment in which users do not know if (or how) their uses are subject to the sui generis right. If full repeal of the sui generis right is not available (or would cause more difficulties), then the registration approach — combined with the harmonisation with copyright limitations and exceptions — is the reasonable path to take.
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