TALIAN CONSTITUTIONAL COURT TO DECIDE WHETHER ADMINISTRATIVE
ENFORCEMENT OF ONLINE COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT IS CONSTITUTIONAL
By Giancarlo Frosio
A few days ago, an Italian administrative Tribunal referred to
the Italian Constitutional Court a question regarding the constitutionality of
the Italian Communication Authority's ('AGCOM') Regulation on Online Copyright
Infringement (“Regulation”). As we have reported
in previous blog posts, the
Regulation, which entered into force on April 1, 2014, empowered AGCOM to
enforce online copyright infringement. Under the Regulation, AGCOM may order
access and hosting providers to block access to websites hosting infringing
materials or remove allegedly infringing contents after a short administrative
procedure.
Following
a claim brought by a number of consumer associations, the Regional
Administrative Tribunal of Lazio asked the Constitutional Court whether website
blocking orders issued by an administrative body, such as AGCOM, comply with
constitutional principles, including freedom of expression, economic freedom
and proportionality. Additionally, the administrative Tribunal questioned the
constitutionality of the whole notice and take down system put in place by the
Italian implementation of the EU E-Commerce Directive. In fact, the
administrative Tribunal asked the Constitutional Court to review the
constitutionality of those European provisions allowing “a court or
administrative authority” to require Information Service Providers to
“terminate or prevent” infringement. Those provisions served as the
legal basis for the enactment of the AGCOM Regulation. In referring the
review of these provisions to the Constitutional Court, the administrative
Tribunal noted:
The
“double track,” administrative and judicial, provided for by the
European Directives that AGCOM referred to [as a legal basis to enact the
“Regulation”], should be construed by taking into consideration the
necessity that the limitations to access the Internet in order to protect
copyright should be balanced with other rights protected by European law, such
as the principle of proportionality. However, those limitations should be
subject to a preliminary judicial review. In any event, it should be considered
that the implementation of those Directives in the Italian legal system cannot
undermine the protection provided by our Constitution to other potentially
conflicting fundamental rights.
http://cyberlaw.stanford.edu/blog/2014/09/italian-constitutional-court-decide-whether-administrative-enforcement-online-copyright
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