Meta loses court fight over compensation to Italian publishers
The ruling supports AGCOM’s authority to set compensation terms when platforms and publishers fail to agree, strengthening publisher leverage under EU copyright law.
- On Tuesday, the Court of Justice of the European Union ruled that Meta must compensate Italian publishers for using news snippets, upholding an order from Italy's telecoms watchdog AGCOM.
- Meta previously challenged AGCOM's authority, arguing compensation should result from private commercial negotiations rather than regulatory intervention, prompting an Italian court to refer the dispute to the CJEU.
- The ruling confirms rights under Article 15 of the European Union Copyright Directive. Angela Mills Wade, executive director at the European Publishers Council, stated "quality journalism depends on the ability of publishers to recoup investments."
- Meta stated it will review the decision in full and engage constructively as the matter returns to Italian courts, maintaining its legal position despite the court's judgment.
- Case C-797/23 sets a significant precedent across Europe and could influence ongoing disputes over how tech companies pay for news snippets or content used in artificial intelligence training.
40 Articles
40 Articles
Meta loses Italian publisher pay case at EU’s top court
The Court of Justice has ruled that Italy’s AGCOM can require Meta to pay publishers for news snippets, the first time the bloc’s top court has weighed in directly. Meta lost its bid to overturn an Italian regulatory order requiring it to compensate publishers for the use of their news snippets, after the Court of […] This story continues at The Next Web
The European Union backs Italy’s right to make Meta pay for news
Meta must comply with Italian law requiring it to negotiate with and fairly compensate news publishers for the the use of their content, according to a ruling by the Europe’s highest court on Tuesday. The decision by the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) found that EU copyright law doesn’t prohibit individual countries from setting up systems that give news publishers power to negotiate compensation terms and regulatory bodies the au…
EU Member States can impose "reasonable remuneration" on the platforms, the ECJ decided – in the sense of a balance between freedom of enterprise, copyright and media diversity
Press editors may require large digital platforms like Meta to pay for the use of media-produced content, after the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) has endorsed this model in a judgment this Tuesday, in response to a preliminary question from an Italian court. Continue reading....
Meta Platforms, the company behind Facebook and Instagram, among others, has suffered a major defeat at the European Court of Justice (ECJ), with potentially significant consequences for how technology platforms must handle journalistic content. The Court ruled that press publishers are entitled to fair remuneration when they grant online service providers permission to use their publications.
The Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) backs the media in the new digital era that has profoundly disrupted the sector. Community justice has recognized Tuesday the right of publishers and media companies to obtain “fair remuneration” if large platforms use their content, provided that this payment constitutes the economic counterpart of the authorization to use their online publications.Continue reading...
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