Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
05PARIS8626
2005-12-23 06:15:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Embassy Paris
Cable title:  

FRENCH LOWER HOUSE VOTES TO LEGALIZE PEER-TO-PEER

Tags:  ETRD KIPR SCUL FR EUN 
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This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.

230615Z Dec 05
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 PARIS 008626 

SIPDIS

BRUSSELS FOR USEU
STATE FOR E, D, EB, EB/TPP/IPE, EU/WE AND EUR/ERA;
COMMERCE FOR CHRIS ISRAEL
COMMERCE PLS PASS TO USPTO
USTR FOR VICTORIA ESPINEL AND JIM SANFORD
GENEVA FOR USTR

SENSITIVE

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: ETRD KIPR SCUL FR EUN
SUBJECT: FRENCH LOWER HOUSE VOTES TO LEGALIZE PEER-TO-PEER
DOWNLOADING ON THE INTERNET; GOF VOWS TO FIGHT


UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 PARIS 008626

SIPDIS

BRUSSELS FOR USEU
STATE FOR E, D, EB, EB/TPP/IPE, EU/WE AND EUR/ERA;
COMMERCE FOR CHRIS ISRAEL
COMMERCE PLS PASS TO USPTO
USTR FOR VICTORIA ESPINEL AND JIM SANFORD
GENEVA FOR USTR

SENSITIVE

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: ETRD KIPR SCUL FR EUN
SUBJECT: FRENCH LOWER HOUSE VOTES TO LEGALIZE PEER-TO-PEER
DOWNLOADING ON THE INTERNET; GOF VOWS TO FIGHT



1. (SBU) SUMMARY. In a vote that surprised the Government,
France's lower house, empty on the eve of the holiday
season, voted 29-28 late Dec 21 in favor of amendments that
would legalize peer-to-peer downloading on the Internet. To
the dismay of French and U.S. industry as well as mainstream
legislators on both sides, a number of pro-Government MPs
from the government party in the Chamber of Deputies voted
for the amendments along with leftist parties, who see this
as a vote-getter with younger voters. The amendments were
part of the implementation of the EU Copyright Directive.
President Chirac's adviser on media and education told DCM
Dec 22 that they are clearly aware of the "terrible signal"
this sends to both French and U.S. content industries. The
GOF is scrambling to reverse the vote, either by a
parliamentary procedure or when the Senate takes it up in a
month. Embassy continues to monitor events, but at
industry's request, will refrain from public statements on
the subject. END SUMMARY


2. (U) In what the French news agency AFP called "a rare and
possibly short-lived victory" for millions of French
Internet users who download music and movies, France's lower
house of parliament voted 29 votes to 28 in a nearly empty
chamber late December 21 to legalize peer-to-peer file-
sharing. Two amendments to a government bill implementing
the EU Copyright Directive provide that downloading
copyrighted files could be legal as long as they would be
for private use and the internet user was charged a fixed
royalties duty. Such a fee could, for example, be added on
to the monthly subscription charge for broadband Internet
access at the cost of a few euros, supporters of the
amendments said.

FRENCH BILL AIMED AT TOUGHER STANDARDS
--------------

3. (U) The bill implementing the EU Copyright Directive
would actually provide tougher digital copyright protections
than Brussels requires; in implementing a EU Directive,
Member States are authorized to go beyond the basic tenets.
(For example, France's media laws governing radio and

television quotas go beyond the relevant EU directive.)
The government, caught off guard by the vote, which was
backed by 22 MPs from the ruling UMP party, has called for a
second vote in the National Assembly on December 22. Under
the GOF draft bill, anyone convicted of deliberately
disabling the copy-protection on CDs, videogames, and DVDs
could be fined 300,000 Euros (USD 360,000) and jailed for up
to three years.


4. (U) The Government plan prompted consumer associations
"Que Choisir" and "UFC" to put out a report that concludes
that file sharing actually increases purchases of CDs and
DVDs. Other "open Internet" activists delivered a 110,000
signature petition to the Culture Ministry, which had
drafted the government bill. Groups representing companies
in the French cinema and music industries, for their part,
issued a joint statement decrying what they described as
"the expropriation of authors' rights on the Internet" and
calling for the government to step in. The statement was
signed by the SFA-CGT entertainers' union, the USPA union
for audiovisual production and the BLOC federation for
cinema organizations, among others. (Interestingly, their
statement notes that effective protections for copyright are
an essential element of cultural diversity.)

GOF ASKS INDUSTRY TO REFRAIN FROM PUBLIC COMMENTS
-------------- --------------


5. (SBU) Industry contacts told us that they had been
sought out by an GOF advisor close to Minister of Culture
Donnedieu de Vabre, who pleaded that industry
representatives or media companies not exacerbate their
predicament by public statements from Europe or the United
States that decried the impact on the U.S. majors. The
advisor, Marc Herubel (protect) made it clear that the GOF
sees the situation with just as much concern for the French
cinema sector and that all public comments needed to convey
this message. Herubel reportedly also assured industry
associations that the GOF was going to devote itself to
correcting this potential disaster. One option was a
parliamentary procedure that would require a revote.
Finally, the whole package also still needs to go to the
Senate, the upper house, currently expected in late January.

CHIRAC ADVISOR: "TERRIBLE SIGNAL" TO INDUSTRY
--------------

6. (SBU) DCM spoke with Alain Seban, President Chirac's
newly-named Special Assistant for Education and Culture at
the Elysee Palace. He said he was very appreciative of our
(quiet) support. Seban acknowledged what a mess the vote
was and said they were doing everything to get it reversed,
but "it's not yet certain that we can do it".


7. (SBU) Seban described last night's vote as a misguided
effort by MPs to garner favor with "the youth". He noted
that, in the event they can't reverse this in the National
Assembly, they will do so in the Senate, but that won't be
for a month and in the meantime a "terrible signal" will
have been sent to the industry. He repeated that he
appreciated the call and noted that we have been working
closely on these issues for several years now.

COMMENT
--------------


8. (SBU) COMMENT: Clearly mortified by the unexpected turn
of events, the government is working to rectify the mistake.
They are aware of the potentially devastating effect this
bill could have on the global entertainment industry in
France. French and U.S. industries are on the same page in
this dispute - strongly against the establishment of any
"open internet" downloading rights. But in urging U.S.
industry not to be vocal, the GOF signals its awareness of
the potential political downside of publicly defending the
"U.S. majors" and private interests on the Internet at a
time where the GOF is already defensive about being
insensitive to alienated youths in the suburbs. END
COMMENT

STAPLETON