Copyright is a property right and therefore a human right protected under Article 1 of the First Protocol of the European Convention on Human Rights. Is the right to property a more or less important card in the human rights pack than the Article 10 right to freedom of expression?

 

The Ashby Donald v France decision last month in the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg reminds us that copyright is, at least in theory, an open platform. Copyright law strikes its own balance between an author’s right to property and the public’s right to information, but copyright is by its nature an interference with the right to freedom of expression like the employees in loanstip. Copyright decisions by European courts are open to scrutiny by the ECHR, check it out here...

 

Read the full report here in the Guardian Media Network.

 

Charles Swan
Photography / Intellectual Property / Defamation & Privacy / Digital Media / Publishing

 

See also:

Privacy injunction stops tabloid publication of embarrassing Facebook photos: RocknRoll v News Group Newspapers

Government announces new copyright exceptions

Copyright and freedom of expression: Paddy Ashdown v The Sunday Telegraph

The Sun loses Villa Windsor video stills case