Images 1

The Global Legal Monitor from the Library of Congress provides a summary of the recently passed legislation but writer/tweeter @BlankTextField (based in France) says the article includes a few inaccuracies.

From the Global Legal Monitor

This Law adds a new chapter to the French Intellectual Property Code, comprising articles L.134-1 to L.134-9. Article L. 134-1 provides that an unavailable book is “a book published in France before January 1, 2001, which is commercially unavailable and is not currently published in paper or digital format.” (Id.) The Law creates a public database specifically dedicated to unavailable books, accessible at no charge, which will list these titles. The Bibliothèque Nationale de France (French National Library) will oversee the implementation and updates of the database. Any individual will be able to request that the National Library register an unavailable book in the database (art. L.134-2).

After a book has been registered in the database for six months without any opposition, a collective management society approved by the Ministry of Culture will be authorized to grant a publisher a non-exclusive license for digital exploitation of the book for a period of five years, which will be renewable (art. L.134-3). The publisher will have to accept the license within two months of notification of its having been granted (art. L.134-5).

Direct to Full Text

This afternoon @BlankTextField tweeted about the inaccuracies he found in the LOC summary.

Here are Direct Links to the those tweets.

Tweet 1 ||| 2 ||| 3 ||| 4 ||| 5 ||| 6

If you read French or feel comfortable using mechanical translation (be careful), here’s some coverage of the legislation @BlankTextField shared with us from the French press/blogosphere.

NO COMMENTS

The TeleRead community values your civil and thoughtful comments. We use a cache, so expect a delay. Problems? E-mail newteleread@gmail.com.