SABAM – CJEU Judgment (Belgium, 2012)
CJEU precedent (Directive 95/46/EC, pre-GDPR)
This is a Court of Justice judgment predating the GDPR. It interprets Directive 95/46/EC (the Data Protection Directive). It is not a cookie or ePrivacy case and is excluded from cookie statistics and the Risk Calculator.
SABAM, a rights management organization, took Netlog to court for allowing users to share music without permission. The court found that SABAM's request for Netlog to monitor user content would violate privacy laws. This case shows the limits of copyright enforcement on social media platforms.
What happened
SABAM sought to stop Netlog from allowing users to share its music without authorization.
Who was affected
Users of Netlog who shared musical works without SABAM's permission.
What the authority found
The Court of Justice held that requiring Netlog to monitor user uploads for copyright infringement would impose an illegal obligation under EU law.
Why this matters
This ruling clarifies that social networks cannot be forced to monitor user content for copyright issues, balancing copyright enforcement with user privacy rights.
SABAM is a management company which represents authors, composers and publishers of musical works. Netlog ran an online social networking platform. On their Netlog profile, users could keep a diary, indicate their hobbies and interests, show who their friends are, display personal photos or publish video clips. However, SABAM claimed that the social network offered all users the opportunity to make use, by means of their profile, of the musical and audio-visual works in SABAM’s repertoire, making those works available to the public in such a way that other users of that network could access them without SABAM’s consent and without Netlog paying it any fee. SABAM first unsuccessfully tried to negotiate a licensing agreement with the social network, then gave it a notice that it should give an undertaking to cease and desist from making available to the public musical and audio-visual works from SABAM’s repertoire without the necessary authorisation - also without results. Given the lack of action taken by the social network, SABAM had it summoned before the Brussels Court of First Instance (rechtbank van eerste aanleg te Brussel) in injunction proceedings under Article 87(1) of the Law of 30 June 1994 on copyright and related rights. It requested that Netlog be ordered immediately to cease unlawfully making available musical or audio-visual works from SABAM’s repertoire and to pay a penalty of €1000 for each day of delay in complying with that order. The social network submitted that granting SABAM’s injunction would (1) effectively impose on Netlog a general obligation to monitor, which was prohibited by Article 15(1) of Directive 2000/31 and (2) introduce, at Netlog's own cost and for an unlimited period, a system for filtering most of the information which is stored on its servers in order to identify and block electronic files containing musical, cinematographic or audio-visual work in respect of which SABAM claims to hold rights. The rechtbank decided to stay t
Outcome
CJEU Judgment
A judgment by the Court of Justice of the European Union, typically on a preliminary reference from a national court.
Related Cases (0)
No other cases found for SABAM in BE
This is the only recorded case for this entity in this jurisdiction.
Details
Judgment Date
16 February 2012
Authority
Court of Justice of the European Union
GDPRhub ID
gdprhub-cjeu-4362About this data
Cite as: Cookie Fines. SABAM - Belgium (2012). Retrieved from cookiefines.eu
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