Article contents
Country of Origin Regulation in Cross-Border Media: One Step Beyond the Freedom to Provide Services?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 January 2008
Abstract
The E-commerce Directive1 has introduced a country of origin rule2 for the provision of online services (‘information society services’). This means in principle that service providers are only subject to the rules of their country of origin or home country, ie the country where they are established. The country to which they are providing the services to, the country of destination, must refrain from applying its regulations. For regulators this means that they must not applytheir national regulations to services provided from another Member State3 (‘incoming services’).Likewise they must extend national regulation to services provided to residents in another MemberState (‘outgoing services’).
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © British Institute of International and Comparative Law 2005
References
1 Directive 2000/31/EC on certain legal aspects of information society services, in particular electronic commerce, in the internal market (implementation deadline 17 Jan 2002).Google Scholar
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6 Art 3 (4).Google Scholar
7 Art 2 a of the E-commerce Directive refers to the definitions in Art 1 (2) of Directives 98/34/EC and 98/84/EC.Google Scholar
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14 See Case C-274/96 Judgment of the Court of 24 Nov 1998, Criminal proceedings against Horst Otto Bickel and Ulrich Franz paras 5 and 17. This case concerned a German and an Austrian national who were, on separate occasions, arrested by the police in the province of Bolzano, in the north of Italy, which has a large German-speaking community. They relied on the law which gives native German speakers resident in this province the right to have criminal proceedings conducted in German. The Court found that it would be discriminatory and contrary to Art 59 to deny this right to German-speaking persons travelling through the province to receive or provide services. The fact that this matter concerned criminal law was irrelevant, see also the similar case 186/87 Cowan v French Treasury.Google Scholar
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64 Case C-76/90 Manfred Säger v Dennemeyer & Co Ltd, Judgment of the Court of 25 July 1991; [1991] ECR I-4221.Google Scholar
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93 Implementation deadline 17 Jan 2002.Google Scholar
94 Annex of the E-commerce Directive.Google Scholar
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98 Council Directive 97/36/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 30 June 1997 amending Council Directive 89/552/EEC on the coordination of certain provisions laid down by law, regulation or administrative action in Member States concerning the pursuit of television broadcasting activities.Google Scholar
99 In the following (unless stated otherwise) I shall refer to the Directive as amended, revised Directive 97/36/EC.Google Scholar
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102 Stipulating that a certain percentage of programming must be of European origin.Google Scholar
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104 Covering such details as name, geographic address, email address, and trade register number of the service provider.Google Scholar
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106 Ignoring the possibility of derogation for the moment.Google Scholar
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140 Advocate General Lenz in VT4 [1997] ECR I 3143, para 38.Google Scholar
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143 Which is in conformity with EU law.Google Scholar
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146 Discussed below.Google Scholar
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150 Para 16. Arts 16 and 22 of the TWF Directive.Google Scholar
151 Para 58–62.Google Scholar
152 Ie outside the scope of the Directive.Google Scholar
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154 Para 37. This has been extended to incitement to racial hatred in Art 22a of the new TWF Directive.Google Scholar
155 Other than preventing the broadcast, such as issuing a prohibitive injunction or prosecuting the service provider.Google Scholar
156 By restricting or blocking the transmission, in order to enforce the laws and regulations falling within the coordinated field; to what extent this is technically possible is another question.Google Scholar
157 Eg by ordering Swedish ISPs to block the relevant internet site, which might not be a very effective measure, anyway, as not all access providers will be in Sweden and this is difficult to control and enforce.Google Scholar
158 Art 2 (h).Google Scholar
159 Assuming that the relevant service provider is the UK website operator, providing the Italian publishers with paid-for advertising space.Google Scholar
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161 ‘Member States may not for reasons falling within the co-ordinated field restrict the freedom to provide information society services from another Member State.’Google Scholar
162 See also (n 159).Google Scholar
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168 Art 2 (h) (i) of the E-commerce Directive.Google Scholar
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172 As has been pointed out above, the court in Alpine Investments (n 117) accepted that country of origin regulation is more suitable, see para 48: ‘The Member State from which the telephone call is made is best placed to regulate cold-calling. Even if the receiving State wishes to prohibit cold-calling or to make it subject to certain conditions, it is not in a position to prevent or control telephone calls from another Member State without the co-operation of the competent authorities of that State.’Google Scholar
173 LICRA and UEJF v Yahoo! Inc and Yahoo France Tribunal de Grande Instance de Paris, 20 Nov 2000.Google Scholar
174 Yahoo! Inc v La Ligue Contra Le Racisme et L'Antisemitisme 145 F Su2d 1168 (ND Cal 2001).Google Scholar
175 Reed, CInternet Law: Text and Materials (1st edn Butterworths London 2000) 232.Google Scholar
176 Thünken, A (n 171) 930.Google Scholar
177 The Act on Discounts (Rabattgesetz), which prohibited promotional discounts with certain exceptions and the Regulation on Gifts (Zugabeverordnung), which prohibited certain promotional offers such as ‘two for the price of one’ have been abolished with effect from 25 July 2001; see <http://www.mittelstandsportal.de/wirtschaft/Aufhebung%20Rabattgesetz2.html> and <http://www.heise.de/newsticker/data/mbb-13.12.00-000> last visited on 29 Jan 2004.+and+
178 This so-called Van Binsbergen principle allows Member States to take measures against service providers who deliberately avoid national regulation by establishing themselves in and providing services from another Member State; see Recital 57 of the E-commerce Directive and see also Recital 14 of the Television without Frontiers Directive 97/36/EC of 30 June 1997 and amending Directive 89/552/EEC, see further above.Google Scholar
179 Proposal for a Directive of the European Parliament and the Council concerning unfair business-to-consumer commercial practices in the Internal Market of 18 June 2003, COM (2003) 356 final, available at <http://europa.eu.int/comm/consumers/cons_int/safe_shop/fair_bus_pract/directive_prop_en.pdf> last visited on 29 Jan 2004.+last+visited+on+29+Jan+2004.>Google Scholar
180 See Recital 8; this Proposal has been advocated by Member States with strict unfair competition regimes who feel that consumer protection may be undermined by the country of origin rule; see <http://www.mittelstandsportal.de/wirtschaft/Aufhebung%20Rabattgesetz2.html> and <http://www.heise.de/newsticker/data/mbb-13.12.00-000> last visited on 29 Jan 2004.+and+
181 On the implications for the UK, see Report by Professor Robert Bradgate, Professor Roger Brownsword, and Dr Christian Twigg-Flesner ‘The Impact of Adopting a Duty to Trade Fairly’, July 2003 available from the DTI website <http://www.dti.gov.uk/ccp/consultations.htm> last visited on 29 Jan 2004.+last+visited+on+29+Jan+2004.>Google Scholar
182 See (n 177).Google Scholar
183 At the time of writing there was only one case.Google Scholar
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