ENDitorial: AVMS Directive : TV or not TV - that is the question

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The discussions on the new Audiovisual Media Services Directive (AVMS) are continuing unabated within the European Union's institutions. With regards to Internet media, the Council of the European Union and the European Parliament are moving in the same direction. The question is how far.

The new Directive proposed by the Commission in December 2005 (COM(2005)646) was meant to modernize the Television without Frontiers Directive (TVWF), which was last updated in 1997. Besides proposed liberalized rules for classic television regarding advertisement or product placement that have been widely discussed, the new Directive also introduces regulation for so called 'non-linear audiovisual media services', including on the Internet - a fact that did not receive wide public attention to date.

The adoption of the Directive is pursued under the co-decision procedure, whereby both, the Council and the Parliament are involved in the process.

On 13 November, the 'Education, Youth and Culture Council' came up with a first 'General Approach' proposing amendments to the Commission Proposal of December 2005.

On Wednesday last week, 13 December, the European Parliament adopted a legislative resolution on the AVMS in its first reading, also amending the Commisson proposal.

In spite of the parallel discussions in the Parliament and the Council, the two have slightly differing approaches on how far the new Directive will in fact be applicable to Internet media, although they are moving in the same direction.

The good news is that compared to the vague initial Commission proposal, the current definition of 'non-linear audiovisual media services' has been narrowed down considerably by both the Parliament and the Council. Which Internet services will in the future be regulated by this EU directive, however, remains unclear.

While the Council in its general approach sees it as "characteristic of on-demand services that they are 'television-like'", and does not include non-commercial services such as "private websites and services consisting of the provision or distribution of audiovisual content generated by private users for the purposes of sharing and exchange within communities of interest" - obviously trying to exclude services like YouTube -, Parliament is not that lucid.

The text adopted by the EP defines audiovisual media services, both off- and online, still somewhat vaguely as services "the content of which is suitable for television broadcasting irrespective of the delivery platform".

But also the Parliament acknowledges - in line with the service definition of the EU Treaty - that non-economic activities "which are normally not provided for remuneration, such as weblogs and other user-generated content or any form of private correspondence, such as e-mails and private websites" are not covered by the Directive.

But that's not a reason for celebration, yet. The Parliament's report that was compiled from a number of Committee proposals under the responsibility of rapporteur Ruth Hieronymi of the Committee for Culture and Education in many points suggests additional regulation compared to the initial proposal by the Commission.

For example, the right of reply was introduced for non-linear services as well as an obligation for Member States to ensure that media service providers provide filtering systems along with a stipulation that new television sets shall be equipped with technical devices to enable certain programmes to be filtered out.

While the Commission in its proposal stressed the 'country of origin principle' - i.e. whatever is legal in one EU country is also licit in every other Member State and must not be blocked - the Parliament in its resolution allows for derogations from this principle, the introduction of which was initially mentioned as one of the main motives for the update. For example, in a speech from 22 September 2005 Commissioner Reding stressed that " (...) an effective country of origin principle - for me a cornerstone of the European audiovisual policy."

The results of the Parliament's first reading show improvements in some areas, while the level of regulation was increased in others. Especially the inconsistency in the country of origin principle makes it hard to find the justification for the regulation of on-demand services under the AVMS, given that many such provisions already exist in the EU e-Commerce Directive and in national legislation.

The ongoing co-decision procedure will show how far this regulation will go in the end and what the consequences of this "technologically neutral approach" eventually will be for a still growing market. A market that certainly would not have grown this fast had it been regulated in such a way from the beginning.

Budapest Recommendations to the European Parliament on the draft Audiovisual Media Services Directive (1.12.2006)
http://194.8.63.155/documents/rfm/2006/12/22708_en.pdf

Speech by Viviane Reding, Audiovisual Conference * Between Culture and Commerce - Liverpool (22.09.2005)
http://europa.eu/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do?reference=SPEECH/05/532&...

EDRi-gram: Draft Audiovisual Directive Limited To The TV-Like Services On The Web (22.11.2006)
http://www.edri.org/edrigram/number4.22/twf

(Contribution by Christian Möller)