Partners Against Piracy (PAP) has applauded proposed changes to the Copyright Act that will eliminate takedown notices for internet service providers (ISPs).
The Parliamentary Committee on Communication, Information & Innovation heard memoranda submitted by various stakeholders regarding the Bill on Tuesday.
PAP, a Pan-African, multi-sectoral coalition of stakeholders supporting the creative industry in Kenya, was in attendance, calling for the deletion of Clauses 5, 6 and 7 in the Bill, which propose repeals of Sections 35B, 35C and 35D in the Copyright Act.
Assented into law by President Uhuru Kenyatta in October 2019, Sections 35B, 35C and 35D are game-changing provisions for Kenya, and the first of their kind in Africa.
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The provisions protect the creative industry in Kenya by providing incentives and a legal basis for better co-operation with ISPs, to avoid them being accused of enabling piracy, and to support rightsholders in their fight against piracy.
Repealing sections 35B, 35C and 35D would weaken the fight against content piracy, as it would remove the first line of defense – the ISPs and other platforms that could potentially enable piracy. The Bill proposed to scrap the allowance for issuing ISPs with take-down notices, which direct them to remove content suspected of violating copyright.
Economically, removing the said clauses could mean a Sh14.3 billion per year loss to Kenyan creatives and a Sh16.3 billion per year loss in taxes to the government. Total losses could amount to Sh92 billion per year, as most digital content is priced in foreign currency, as are the costs of platforms, distributors, and retailers, among others.
Through the global awareness raised by PAP and its supporters since the first reading of the Bill last November, parliament has received an avalanche of local and international memoranda against the proposed repeal of the aforementioned sections.
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Protestations from local stakeholders in this matter include John Kiarie, MP Dagoretti South who declared that “the proposal to repeal these sections represent the biggest setback in the history of copyright and is akin to disarming Kenyan authors and rights holders.”
In addition, the Music Copyright Society of Kenya (MCSK), in their #SAYNOTOREMOVALOFSECTION35B-35D and #Handsoffsection35B campaigns, agree and reinforce the widely held view that “piracy is currently devastating the creative industry in Kenya,” and that repealing sections 35B-35D of the Copyright Act would “encourage online piracy and loss of revenue making it difficult for creatives to recoup their investments, thereby killing the creative industry.”
Speaking on the proposed repealing of Sections 35B, 35C and 35D, sponsor of the Bill, Homa Bay Woman Rep Gladys Wanga said the sections will be dropped in the third reading.
“This is to assure our content creators that this House is not about taking away the gains that we have made in protecting our content creators from piracy,” she said.
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A recent letter from the Sports Rights Owners Coalition (SROC), signed by chairman Mark Lichtenstein, said its members were “extremely concerned” at the proposed changes to the Copyright Act if the Bill became law – particularly the plan to repeal sections 35B, 35C and 35D.
Kenya Copyright Board (KeCOBO) executive director Edward Sigei on his part said, “take-down notices are a critical tool for copyright holders and related rights holders to fight digital content piracy by controlling the distribution and economic viability of their work and how it is accessed online.”
Welcoming the dropping of Clauses 5, 6 and 7 in the Bill, PAP convener and co-founder of MyMovies.Africa Mike Strano said the implementation of the clauses will be transformational for Kenya’s creative industry.
Strano said PAP had spent the past two years co-creating a framework around takedown notices and other matters with the Technology Service Providers of Kenya (TESPOK) – where ISPs are members – via a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU).
“We hope that the MoU can be signed immediately,” said Strano, “so that creatives will be able to co-operate with the ISPs against piracy, for mutual benefit and the sustainability of Kenya’s creative industry.”
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