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Bills Digest No. 119 2000-01
Copyright Amendment (Parallel Importation) Bill 2001
WARNING:
This Digest was prepared for debate. It reflects the legislation as introduced
and does not canvass subsequent amendments. This Digest does not have
any official legal status. Other sources should be consulted to determine
the subsequent official status of the Bill.
CONTENTS
Passage History
Purpose
Background
Main Provisions
Concluding Comments
Endnotes
Contact Officer & Copyright Details
Copyright Amendment (Parallel Importation) Bill 2001
Date Introduced: 28 February
2001
House: House of Representatives
Portfolio: Attorney-General
Commencement: Royal
Assent, apart from:
- Schedule 2 (relating to printed books and music) that commences one
year after Royal Assent
- items 1-3, 5 and 7 of Schedule 3 (involving technical corrections)
that commenced immediately after commencement of the Copyright Amendment
(Digital Agenda) Act 2000 on 4 March 2001, and
- consequential items in Schedule 3 that commence immediately after
the commencement of Schedule 1.
To amend the Copyright Act 1968
to allow:
- the parallel importing of computer software and computer games, and
- the parallel importing of books, periodicals and sheet music in both
electronic and print form.
Copyright
Copyright protects the way ideas are expressed - in the
language of copyright the expression of an idea is known as a 'work'.
It does this by giving the person who creates a work a monopoly over the
way in which the work may be exploited. Exploitation of a work includes
amongst other things its reproduction, publishing, broadcast or performance.
Creators can license different aspects of the exploitation of their work,
for instance, the right to import into, and sell in, Australia, copies
of their work. Protection of copyright is free and automatic and there
is no system of registration required under Australian copyright law.
Proper copyright protection laws are beneficial to the
economy as they protect the interests of creators and therefore encourage
innovative activity. The existence of copyright allows creators to generate
an income from their creativity by either receiving royalties or other
payments for their work. Copyright similarly fosters investment in creative
works by businesses.
Parallel importation
Parallel importing is the importation of works which
have been legitimately purchased overseas (ie purchased without infringing
the creator's copyright in the overseas country) by someone other than
the authorised importer.(1)
It is said that the prohibition of parallel importing
results in a segregated market:
The effect of prohibiting parallel importation is
to facilitate geographical division of the market [used in a loose
sense to refer to the demand for and supply of particular copyright
material] for the copyright material in question. The copyright in
particular material can be partially assigned along geographical lines.
The assignee is then assured that when selling the copyright material
within the geographical area described in its assignment that it will
not be competing with the same material from a different source.(2)
The Copyright Act 1968 and parallel importation
Under the Copyright Act, it is generally an infringement
of copyright to import an article into Australia for commercial purposes
without the copyright owner's consent, where the importer knew, or ought
reasonably to have known, that if the article had been made by the importer
in Australia it would have infringed copyright.(3)
In essence, the parallel importation provisions of the
Copyright Act allow a copyright owner or exclusive licensee to control
the importation into Australia of copyright material, even if the products
have been lawfully acquired overseas. The restrictions allow rights owners
to separate the world market into self-contained segments to secure the
greatest return on the protected subject matter.
This general prohibition regarding parallel imports has
been relaxed for certain categories of subject matter, and separate regimes
have been enacted to govern the book and sound recording industries. Also
excluded from parallel importation control are works and other subject
matter that are 'accessories'. The general rule against parallel importing
still applies to literary works (other than books), dramatic, musical
and artistic works, broadcasts and cinematograph films.(4)
Books
In 1991 provisions were introduced into the Copyright
Act to govern 'non infringing books' (ie those legitimately manufactured
in their country of origin). Sections 44A and 112A, the two sections dealing
with parallel importation, draw a distinction between a book 'first published'
in Australia and a book published overseas. The Act imposes no restrictions
on the importation of books first published in a foreign country and there
is a partial relaxation of parallel import restrictions for books 'first
published in Australia'. A book is deemed to be 'first published in Australia'
if it is published in Australia within 30 days of being published overseas.
Effectively, as long as foreign books are released in the Australian market
within 30 days of being published overseas, they will be deemed to be
'first published in Australia', and parallel import restrictions will
apply.
Parallel importation of books 'first published in Australia'
is also allowed:
- to provide a single copy for a customer
- to provide one or more copies for a non-profit library, and
- to satisfy local orders which have been unfilled for more than 90
days.(5)
These arrangements are also referred to as the '30/90
day rule'.
Sound recordings
In 1998 the Parliament passed the Copyright Amendment
Act (No. 2) 1998 which removed the prohibitions on parallel importation
of 'sound recordings'. Consequently copyright is no longer infringed by
importing into Australia a 'non-infringing' copy of a sound recording.(6)
Under section 10AA of the Copyright Act a sound recording
will be a 'non-infringing copy' only if:
- the copy is made by, or with the consent of the owner of the copyright
in the 'copy country'
- the making of a copy does not infringe copyright in the copy country,
and
- the 'copy country' is either a party to the Berne Convention, or a
member of the World Trade Organization and complies with TRIPS.(7)
Packaging and labelling
Until recently, authorised importers were able to prevent
the parallel importation of their products by relying on the copyright
subsisting in the packaging and labelling. Importation of the packaging
and labelling constituted an infringement of copyright under the Copyright
Act.
However from 1 February 2000, amendments to the Act establish
that copyright is no longer infringed by the parallel importation of a
product, if copyright subsists in the packaging and labelling alone (ie
in the 'accessories').(8) The Government's rationale for this
amendment was that copyright in labelling and packaging should not be
used as a backdoor means of protecting exclusive distribution arrangements.(9)
The Copyright Amendment (Parallel Importation)
Bill 2000
On 27 June 2000, the Government announced its intention
to lift restrictions on parallel importing of legitimately produced books,
periodicals, printed music, and computer software products including computer-based
games. The stated rationale for this decision was that the lifting of
restrictions would
pave the way for future cost savings on these products
for consumers and businesses' and they would eliminate the import
monopoly of a small number of multinational software companies and
book publishers, which has kept prices artificially high.(10)
The Copyright Amendment (Parallel Importation) Bill 2000
('the Bill') implements this decision.
Reviews and inquiries into parallel importation
Over the last fifteen years the issue of parallel importation
has been a subject of numerous reviews and inquiry.(11)
The Copyright Law Review Committee, the Prices Surveillance
Authority, the Industry Commission, the ACCC and various parliamentary
committees have all dealt with this issue. More recently the Government
requested the Intellectual Property and Competition Review Committee ('IPCR
Committee'), chaired by Mr Henry Ergas, to inquire into and report on
the interaction and appropriate balance between competition policy and
intellectual property legislation. The Committee submitted its final report(12)
on 30 September 2000 and in relation to parallel importation recommended
repeal of the parallel importation provisions of the Copyright Act, with
a 12-month transitional period allowed for books.(13)
The IPCR Committee stated that such a move:
would enhance competitive neutrality, both as between
types of copyright material and as between the industries and activities
that rely on copyright protection and those that do not; it would
enhance competition in the supply of copyright materials; and it need
not compromise the efficiency of copyright enforcement or the goals
of the copyright system.(14)
The following section summarises some of the issues raised
in these numerous reports together with the arguments for and against
parallel importation.
Copyright owners
It was put to the IPCR Committee that lifting restrictions
on parallel importing would reduce the incentives for copyright owners
to invest in creative effort. This is claimed to occur mainly because
the restrictions facilitate territorial price discrimination and may increase
the returns accruing to rights owners.
As the Australian Copyright Council told the IPRC Committee:
The Copyright Council opposes parallel importation.
The purpose of the parallel importation provisions is to ensure the
effective exercise by Australian copyright owners of the exclusive
rights granted to them under the Copyright Act. The exclusive right
to reproduce a work in Australia is effectively undermined if articles
containing the work can be imported by others, such as people seeking
to take advantage of the copyright owner's investment in creating
or expanding a market for the work. The effect of imported copies
on the Australian rights owner is similar to the effect of unauthorised
reproductions made in Australia - other people unfairly benefit from
the copyright owner's investment in the work, and the copyright owner's
return from that investment is reduced.(15)
The publishing industry has also indicated support for
the current arrangements. Text Publishing argued to the IPCR Committee:
The current regime [ie the 30/90 day rule] provides
an incentive for internationally focussed Australian publishers to
price their Australian editions competitively while also providing
them with the same protection of territorial copyright that British
and American publishers have. [...] It is reasonable to conclude that
the effectively open market which we now have has permitted Australian
publishers to flourish because the 30-day rule allows them to compete
on equal terms with foreign publishers. It has permitted them to flourish
not because they have resorted to publishing books without export
potential but because they have used the fact of territorial copyright
to increase their revenue by selling rights which in turn has allowed
them vigorously to compete for new Australian writers.(16)
Text Publishing also argued that Australian publishers
would be vulnerable to remaindered foreign editions (from which the author
either derives a minuscule royalty or no royalty at all) being sold in
Australia at heavily discounted prices.(17)
IBM, in its submission to the IPCR Committee, suggested
that parallel importation of computer software would disadvantage local
businesses and consumers.
Local distributors and retailers will find that parallel
imported products undermine their marketing and sales efforts. Then
when consumers buy those products, service and support may not be
available for them. Furthermore, consumers may not know at the time
of purchase that their product will not be properly supported.(18)
Against this, the ACCC argued that:
Legislative restrictions on parallel importing are
not justified by the traditional free rider concerns relating to intellectual
property. These relate to the sphere of production, protecting
intellectual property owners from unauthorised reproduction. By contrast,
restrictions on parallel imports extend intellectual property into
the sphere of distribution. While legislative restrictions
on imports of pirate and counterfeit goods are a necessary adjunct
to restrictions on reproduction, restrictions on imports of goods
legally marketed cannot be justified. While free riding may occur
in the sphere of distribution, for example on marketing and promotional
investments or on pre and after sales service, this is nothing unique
to, nor even a necessary feature of, intellectual property.
It should be emphasised that restrictions on parallel
imports do nothing to protect domestic industry, they simply provide
the domestic rights holder with an exclusive right to import. Whether
they choose to invest and manufacture domestically are separate decisions
which will be influenced by factors such as the likely international
returns from investing in local R&D and the costs of local vs
off shore manufacturing.(19)
The ACCC presented the view that problems such as free
riding in markets should be tackled through specific contractual arrangements,
rather than by embodying geographical restraints in the Copyright Act.
In the Commission's view, if these arrangements are likely to contravene
the Trade Practices Act, their specific costs and benefits to the community
can be considered under the processes of authorisation and notification.(20)
Anti-Competitive?
Those supporting parallel importing argue that the parallel
import provisions in the Act are a restriction on competition and contrary
to the criteria set down in the Competition Principles Agreement.
The guiding principle of the Competition Principles Agreement
is that legislation should not restrict competition unless it can be demonstrated
that:
- the benefits of the restriction to the community as a whole outweigh
the costs, and
- the objectives of the legislation can only be achieved by restricting
competition.(21)
According to the Government's Explanatory Memorandum,
the power to control the distribution of imported copyright subject matter
has enabled copyright owners to exercise market control. This in turn
resulted in higher prices being charged to Australian consumers.(22)
The ACCC argues:
Parallel import restrictions grant a 'monopoly' or
exclusive right to import to intellectual property owners. By preventing
international arbitrage, these import monopolies may be used to support
international price discrimination by firms with market power (either
unilateral or coordinated market power). Indeed, the very existence
of these exclusive rights tends to create a climate conducive to coordination
rather than competition, since intellectual property owners know they
are not constrained by import competition.(23)
Mr John Stonier, the dissenting member of the IPCR Committee,
suggests that while the copyright owner's power to prevent parallel imports
is a power that enables them to restrict conduct, not all restrictions
on conduct are quantifiable restrictions on competition. He argues that
unless an extremely narrow definition of the market is adopted, the power
to prevent parallel imports does not constitute a restriction on competition
except possibly in very particular situations. He concludes:
It is therefore not clear that the parallel import
provisions restrict the competitive process, or that the costs of
such restrictions exceed the benefits. It is also not clear that there
are alternative cost-effective means of achieving the same goals.
This conclusion is particularly true for the book
industry in Australia. There are over 250 publishers employing more
than 4 000 people. In 1997-98 they sold more than 110 million books
(60 per cent Australian) and published nearly 7 000 new Australian
titles. Sales exceeded $1 000 million, of which more than $100 million
were exported, mainly to the United States ($40 million), New Zealand
($25 million) and the United Kingdom ($17 million). These figures
are consistent with Australia having a thriving and competitive industry.
They are also consistent with the view that parallel imports are not
impeding or restraining the competitive process.(24)
Pricing
Pricing is an argument used by both supporters and opponents
of parallel importation.
The Attorney-General when introducing the Bill into Parliament
said:
The Bill offers the prospect of cheaper prices and
increased availability of products for all Australians, but especially
for small businesses, parents and the education sector.(25)
The Attorney-General claims that since the lifting of
restrictions on sound recordings, it is now possible for consumers to
buy top selling CDs that are over 30 per cent cheaper than prior to parallel
importation.(26)
In relation to computer software the Attorney-General
cites an ACCC report to Government showing that over the past ten years,
Australian businesses have had to pay an average of 27% more for packaged
business software than their US counterparts.
These benefits then flow primarily to foreign rightsholders
while the corresponding costs are borne by Australian consumers and
industries such as the domestic software industry.(27)
The Australian Visual Software Distributors Association
(AVSDA), in evidence to the IPCR Committee, suggested that the ACCC discussion
of pricing is incomplete and flawed.(28) AVSDA argued that
Australia already has comparatively lower prices by world standards and
the importation of legitimate products through other channels will not
change this.(29) AVSDA also referred to a study carried out
by Access Economics which looked at 97 per cent of all computer game sales
in 1998 and showed that prices in the UK were 32 per cent higher than
Australian and US prices were only 7 per cent lower than in Australia.(30)
Microsoft, in evidence to the IPCR Committee, also claimed
that surveys conducted within the software industry in the past two years
indicate that the price of most high-volume packaged software products
sold in Australia is presently competitive with, and in some cases cheaper
than, the price for the same products sold in the US, Europe and other
countries.(31)
On the other hand, Australia's e-commerce industry opposes
the current restrictions arguing that they prevent Australian retailers
from obtaining goods at the same price as their competitors, thus inhibiting
their online competitiveness.(32)
Piracy
Some industry groups argue that there is a link between
parallel importation and the importation of pirated(33) or
infringing material. This is because parallel importation weakens the
ability to identify the importation and distribution of pirate copies.
The issue of piracy and parallel importing was raised
in a recent parliament committee inquiry into copyright infringement.(34)
The Committee received evidence citing the New Zealand experience. The
Anti-Counterfeiting Action Group. stated that when New Zealand changed
its parallel import laws recently, there was a major increase in counterfeit
merchandise.(35)
The Australasian Performing Rights Association questioned
the wisdom of amendments allowing for parallel importation generally when
there has been concern over the Australian Customs Service ability to
detect infringement at the border. However Customs told the Committee
that the relaxation on parallel importation would not affect its operations
significantly and the Committee considered this observation significant.(36)
The IPCR Committee recently commissioned a report from
the Australian Institute of Criminology on parallel importation and piracy.(37)
The report, which uses compact discs as a case study, found that in the
period since mid-1998 when restrictions on importation were lifted, there
is little evidence of an increase in CD piracy.(38)
The Institute of Criminology's report did acknowledge
that insufficient time may have elapsed to make a realistic assessment
of the effect of the parallel importing amendments. However it also suggested
that other events, such as changes in economic conditions and technological
advances, may be responsible for any increase in CD piracy which does
eventuate.(39)
ALP policy position on parallel importation
On 24 August 2000 the Hon Duncan Kerr, Shadow Minister
for the Arts, and the Hon Bob McMullan, MP, Shadow Minister for Industry
and Technology launched the ALP's Policy Statement on Parallel Importation
and indicated it would not support the complete removal of parallel importation
restrictions.
Such a move will not benefit Australian consumers.
It will severely hurt our local industries, and in the long term it
will deprive Australian consumers access to locally produced cultural
goods.(40)
As an alternative to the Bill the ALP proposes a 'Use
It or Lose It' policy, based on the parallel importation regime currently
existing for the book industry. The ALP would extend this regime to apply
to the video games, computer software and music industries. Under this
arrangement the importation of a good for which there is a local copyright
owner would only be permitted if:
- the copyright owner does not release the good on the local market
within 30 days after its publication or international release, or
- the good, although released locally, is unavailable for purchase within
Australia, or
- the good is unavailable within Australia at an internationally competitive
price, within 90 days of being requested.
The ALP claims that this approach would place pressure
on importers to make products available to Australian consumers faster
and at a better price. According to the Opposition the 'use-it or lose
it' rule will provide security to Australian copyright holders and give
Australian consumers access to the most up-to date music, books, computer
software and video games.(41)
Schedule 1 - Computer software
Schedule 1 makes amendments to the Copyright Act 1968
(the Principal Act) to allow the parallel importation of computer
programs,(42) and electronic literary and music items. Electronic
literary or music items are books, periodicals or sheet music in electronic
form, regardless of whether there is a printed form (item 3).
Items 1-7 make amendments to subsection 10(1),
the definition section of the Principal Act.
Central to the parallel import regime is the term 'non-infringing
copy'.
Item 6 repeals and replaces the existing definition
of 'non-infringing copy'. The new definition of a non-infringing copy
will be:
- a 'non-infringing sound recording' as already defined in section 10AA
- a 'non-infringing computer program' as defined in new section 10AB,
and
- a 'non-infringing electronic literary or music item' as defined in
new section 10AC, or
- a 'non-infringing printed literary or music item' as defined in new
section 10ACA. (Note: this is added to the definition by item
3 of Schedule 2).
Item 8 inserts proposed sections 10AB
and 10AC which define 'non-infringing computer program' and 'non-infringing
electronic literary or music item' respectively. Essentially these will
be copies made in a qualifying country and which do not breach copyright
law in their country of manufacture. A 'qualifying country' is a country
that is either party to the Berne Convention(43) or a member
of the World Trade Organization with a copyright law consistent with the
TRIPS Agreement (item 7).(44)
The practical effect of the definitions in new
sections 10AB and 10AC is that pirated copies, which are
made without the copyright owner's consent, are excluded by these definitions.
- Item 8 also inserts proposed section 10AD which deals
with accessories to imported articles. 'Accessory' is already defined
in subsection 10(1) of the Copyright Act to mean, amongst other things
the packaging or container for an article, or a label on an article,
a written instruction or other information provided with an article,
or a record embodying an instructional sound recording, or a copy of
an instructional cinematograph film, provided with the article.
Under new section 10AD computer programs
or electronic literary or music items that are part of or combined with
imported articles are taken to be 'accessories' to the imported article.
These accessories do not include a feature film, defined as a cinematograph
film of more than 20 minutes length for exhibition to the public in cinemas
or by television. The note to new section 10AD refers the
reader to sections 44C and 112C. Under these sections copyright is not
infringed by virtue of a work containing accessories.
According to the Explanatory Memorandum this provision
is a response to the issue of convergence of technologies and will enable
the parallel importation of computer software products such as interactive
games and other multimedia.(45)
Item 12 inserts proposed sections 44E
and 44F into the Principal Act. It is one of the main changes proposed
by the Bill. New section 44E provides that the copyright
in a computer program that has been published in Australia or a qualifying
country is not infringed by a person who imports into Australia an article
that has embodied in it a non-infringing copy of the program. Such items
may also be imported for commercial purposes without infringing copyright.
Effectively this will allow the parallel-importation
of computer programs and software for commercial purposes. There is no
change to the permissibility of importing a computer program for personal
use.
Proposed section 44F provides identical arrangements
for the parallel importation of electronic books, periodicals and sheet
music.
Item 16 inserts proposed section 112E that
deals with published editions. In particular a person who imports published
editions of electronic books, periodicals or sheet music that have been
published in Australia or a qualifying country will not be infringing
copyright. Similarly other published editions containing or embodying
such electronic items may be imported without breach of copyright.
Proposed section 130B reverses the onus of proof
in regard to proceedings concerning the unlicensed importation of pirated
copies of computer programs. Once a person, claiming that their copyright
has been infringed, has proved that a copy of a computer program has been
imported and offered for sale or trade etc, then the onus falls on the
defendant to prove that the imported item is a 'non-infringing copy' (item
17). This section is modelled on section 130A which reverses the onus
of proof in relation to 'non-infringing' copies of sound recordings. The
Government's rationale is that this will give procedural assistance to
copyright owners in civil actions involving the importation of pirated
products.(46) Proposed section 130C provides an identical
arrangement for electronic literary or music items.
Item 19 inserts new section 198A that deals
with the parallel importation of computer software and electronic literary
and musical items containing trademarks. The section provides a number
of conditions whereby a person can use a registered trademark.
Item 20 stipulates that the amendments described
in the Schedule will only apply to computer programs and electronic books,
periodicals and music imported into Australia after the commencement of
the Schedule.
Schedule 2 - Printed books, periodicals and sheet
music
Schedule 2 makes amendments to the Principal Act to allow
the parallel importation of printed books, music and periodicals. Note
that the Bill draws a distinction between electronic and printed
books, periodicals and music and deals with them into two separate Schedules.
Schedule 1, dealing with electronic material, commences on Royal
Assent whereas Schedule 2, dealing with printed material, commences 12
months after Royal Assent. According to the Explanatory Memorandum this
12 month delay is to assist the publishing and printing industries and
authors to make the necessary adjustments in their business practices
and legal arrangements.(47)
Items 1-3 of Schedule 2 make amendments to the
subsection 10(1) of the Principal Act.
As mentioned above, item 3 of Schedule 2 adds
to proposed new definition of non-infringing copy' the term 'non-infringing
printed literary or music item' as defined in proposed section 10ACA.
Item 4 of Schedule 2 inserts proposed section
10ACA which defines 'non-infringing printed literary or music item'.
These will be printed books, periodicals or sheet music which were made
in a 'qualifying country' and do not breach copyright law in that country.
A 'qualifying country' is a country that is either party to the Berne
Convention(48), or a member of the World Trade Organization
with a copyright law consistent with the TRIPS Agreement (item 7).
Item 6 repeals and replaces section 44A of the
Principal Act. It is one of the key changes proposed by the Bill.
Existing section 44A contains the current regime regulating
the parallel importation of books. In short it contains the 30/90-day
rule and stipulates that the right to control importation of books is
lost if the book is not published in Australia within 30 days of publication
overseas.(49)
New section 44A provides that copyright
in a work that has been published in Australia or a qualifying country
is not infringed by a person who imports into Australia a 'non-infringing'
printed book, periodical or piece of music. Such items may also be imported
for commercial purposes without infringing copyright.
Effectively this will allow the parallel-importation
of books, periodicals and printed music for commercial purposes.
Item 9 repeals and replaces section 112A. Existing
section 112A deals with the current arrangements for the parallel importation
of published editions of books. In short these arrangements consist of
the '30/90 day rule' discussed above at page 3.
Proposed section 112A contains the new arrangements
for the parallel importation of published editions of printed books, periodicals
and music. A person who imports editions of printed books, periodicals
or sheet music that have been published in Australia or a qualifying country
will not be infringing copyright. Such items may also be imported for
commercial purposes without infringing copyright.
Proposed section 130D reverses the onus of proof
in regard to proceedings concerning the unlicensed importation of pirated
copies of printed books, periodicals and music. Once a person, claiming
that their copyright has been infringed, has proved that the particular
copy has been imported and offered for sale or trade etc, then the onus
falls on the defendant to prove that the imported item is a 'non-infringing
copy' (item 10). This section is modelled on section 130A which
reverses the onus of proof in relation to 'non-infringing' copies of sound
recordings. The Government's rationale is that this will give procedural
assistance to copyright owners in civil actions involving the importation
of pirated products.(50)
Item 13 stipulates that the amendments described
in the Schedule will only apply to printed books, periodicals or sheet
music imported into Australia after the commencement of the Schedule.
Schedule 3 - Other amendments
Schedule 3 contains consequential amendments to the proposed
parallel importation amendments plus technical amendments to correct and
clarify changes in the Copyright Amendment (Digital Agenda) Act 2000.
The differing views regarding the lifting of parallel
importation restrictions reflect the basic tension between intellectual
property rights and competition policy. The closed market provisions of
copyright law sit uneasily with the trend to liberalise trade and investment
in a global economy.
However, despite this basic tension between intellectual
property and competition policy it would appear that this Bill has not
attracted the same amount of controversy that surrounded the lifting of
restrictions on the import of sound recordings. There could be many reasons
for this but it may be that the amendments in the Bill are seen as having
been overtaken by the increasing effects of the Internet.(51)
It has been argued that the Internet is the greatest single threat to
copyright protected material today and as a consequence of its accessibility
more consumers are purchasing both software, music and books direct from
overseas suppliers.(52)
Finally, it is observed that the Copyright Act as amended
will contain frameworks for the parallel importation of both print and
electronic books, recorded music, computer software and computer games
but not 'cinematographic films' (for instance, in the form of DVDs).
The Attorney-General has said that the Government has
not fully assessed the impact of allowing the full parallel importation
of 'cinematograph film' on the Australian film and television industry
and therefore considers it would not be appropriate to alter the arrangements
for imported film products without a cost benefit analysis specific to
the industry, together with careful analysis of the likely effects on
consumers.(53)
The IPCR Committee report, on the other hand, suggested
that the film industry had not provided the Committee with convincing
evidence that parallel importing would have a detrimental impact on the
Australian community.(54)
As the author of a recent research study states:
The piecemeal approach adopted in the past to reform
parallel importing item-by-item (books, sound-recordings and packages)
cannot be justified on economic grounds. It might be preferable to
reform in one step the entire copyright law.(55)
It could be said that to exclude films and DVDs from
the impact of parallel importation is less than a full commitment to the
economic principles underlying the Bill.
- J. McKeough and A. Stewart, Intellectual Property in Australia,
1991, p. 140.
- M. J. Davison, 'Parallel Importing of Copyright Material in a Digital
Age: Why it Should be Lawful and Why it May Never Be', Federal Law
Review, v. 25, 1997, p. 264.
- Sections 37 and 102.
- Intellectual Property and Competition Review Committee, 'Review of
Intellectual Property Legislation under the Competition Principles Agreement,
Final Report, September 2000, p. 46.
- Intellectual Property and Competition Review Committee, Final Report,
pp. 46-47.
- Sections 44D and 112D.
- Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights
set out in Annex 1C to the Marrakesh Agreement establishing the World
Trade Organisation, done at Marrakesh on 15 April 1994.
- These amendments were in Schedule 2 of the Copyright Amendment
Act (No 1) 1998.
- Intellectual Property and Competition Review Committee, Final Report,
p. 47.
- Attorney-General, Minister for Communications, Information Technology
and the Arts, and Acting Treasurer, 'Consumers the Winners from Reforms
to Import Laws', Joint News Release, 27 June 2000.
- The Explanatory Memorandum gives an overview of these reports on pages
4-5.
- Intellectual Property and Competition Review Committee, 'Review of
Intellectual Property Legislation under the Competition Principles Agreement:
Final Report', September 2000. Note that the Committee prepared an Interim
Report in April 2000.
- One Committee member presented a dissenting opinion.
- IPCR Committee, Interim Report, April 2000, p. 23.
- ibid, p. 14.
- Ibid.
- Intellectual Property and Competition Review Committee, Final Report,
p. 54.
- Intellectual Property and Competition Review Committee, Interim
Report, p. 15.
- Intellectual Property and Competition Review Committee, Final Report
pp. 49-50.
- ibid, p. 50.
- Subclause 5(1) of the Competition Principles Agreement.
- Explanatory Memorandum, p. 1.
- Intellectual Property and Competition Review Committee, Interim
Report, p. 20.
- Intellectual Property and Competition Review Committee, Final Report,
p. 75.
- Hon D. Williams, MP, Copyright Amendment (Parallel Importation) Bill
2001, Second Reading, Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), House
of Representatives, 28 February 2001, p. 24578.
- ibid.
- ibid.
- Intellectual Property and Competition Review Committee, Final Report,
p. 52.
- Australian Visual Software Distributors Association Ltd (AVSDA) in
evidence to the IPCR Committee, p. 52.
- Intellectual Property and Competition Review Committee, Final Report,
p. 52.
- IPCR Committee, Interim Report, p. 16.
- Intellectual Property and Competition Review Committee, Final Report,
p. 53.
- A pirate copy is a reproduction of a copyrighted work manufactured
without the permission of the copyright owner.
- House of Representatives Standing Committee on Legal and Constitutional
Affairs, 'Cracking down on copycats: enforcement of copyright in
Australia', 2000.
- ibid, para 2.51.
- ibid, para 2.52.
- G. Urbas, 'Parallel Importing and CD Piracy, Australian Institute
of Criminology, Report Prepared for the Intellectual Property and Competition
Review Committee', 26 January 2000.
- Intellectual Property and Competition Review Committee, Final Report,
p. 59.
- ibid.
- Hon D. Kerr, 'Copyright, Culture, Cops and Cybercrime; Address to
the Australian Publishers Association Annual General Meeting', Press
Release, 15 March 2001.
- ibid.
- Section 10(1) already defines a 'computer program' to mean a set of
statements or instructions to be used directly or indirectly in a computer
in order to bring about a certain result.
- International Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic
Works concluded at Berne on 9 September 1886.
- According to the Explanatory Memorandum (p. 47) this will ensure copyright
owners are able to rely on a minimum level of copyright protection in
regard to parallel imported material. This requirement of qualifying
country is modelled on the provision from the Principal Act regarding
parallel importation of packaging and labelling. It is of interest that
TRIPS does not determine the issue of parallel imports. Rather it allows
each WTO member to regulate parallel imports in the manner it feels
appropriate. (Article 6, TRIPS Agreement).
- Intellectual Property and Competition Review Committee, Final Report,
p. 49.
- Hon D. Williams, MP, Copyright Amendment (Parallel Importation) Bill
2001, Second Reading, Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), House
of Representatives, 28 February 2001, p. 24578.
- ibid, p. 2.
- International Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic
Works concluded at Berne on 9 September 1886.
- This provision is described in more detail at page 3.
- Hon D. Williams, MP, Copyright Amendment (Parallel Importation) Bill
2001, Second Reading, Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), House
of Representatives, 28 February 2001, p. 24578.
- Suggested in evidence to the IPCRA Committee, Final Report, p.
56
- Peter Knight, 'Australia to scrap parallel import restrictions' Australian
Intellectual Property Law Bulletin, v. 13, no. 3, September 2000,
p. 32.
- Hon D. Williams, MP, Copyright Amendment (Parallel Importation) Bill
2001, Second Reading, Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), House
of Representatives, 28 February 2001, p. 24578.
- Intellectual Property and Competition Review Committee, Final Report,
p. 68.
- J. Revesz, Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights,
Staff Research Paper, Productivity Commission, May 1999, p. 51.
Mary Anne Neilsen
4 April 2001
Bills Digest Service
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