A report published on Sunday by the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR)
has suggested that UK copyright law should be changed to include a ‘private
right to copy’ that protects users of ipod and other MP3 players.
The UK’s current copyright laws mean that millions of UK citizens break
the law each year when they copy their CDs onto their computers, leading IPPR
to suggest that the forthcoming review of Intellectual Property, set up by Chancellor
Gordon Brown and chaired by Andrew Gowers, should update the 300-year-old copyright
laws to take account of the changes in the way people want to listen to music,
watch films and read books.
The Institute stated that:
"IPPR recommends a legal ‘private right to copy’ that would
allow people to make copies of CDs, or DVDs for personal use. The report says
a new right would legalise the actions of millions of Britons without any significant
harm to the copyright holders."
Dr Ian Kearns, IPPR Deputy Director, explained:
"Millions of Britons copy CDs onto their home computers breaking copyright
laws everyday. British copyright law is out of date with consumer practices
and technological progress. Giving people a legal ‘private right to copy’
would allow them to copy their own CDs and DVDs onto their home computers, laptops
or phones without breaking the law."
"When it comes to protecting the interests of copyright holders, the emphasis
the music industry has put on tackling illegal distribution and not prosecuting
for personal copying, is right. But it is not the music industry’s job
to decide what rights consumers have. That is the job of Government."
The report, entitled 'Public Innovation: Intellectual property in a digital
age', additionally recommends that:
- The Government should reject calls from the UK music industry to extend
copyright term for sound recordings beyond the current 50 years. The report
argues that there is no evidence to suggest that current protections provided
in law are insufficient; and
- The Government should act to ensure that Digital Rights Management (DRM)
technology does not continue to affect the preservation of electronic content
by libraries. The British Library should be given a DRM-free copy of any new
digital work and libraries should be able to take more than one copy of digital
work. It also recommends that circumvention of DRM technology should stop
being illegal once copyright has expired.