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Eleonora Rosati, Non-Commercial Quotation and Freedom of Panorama: Useful and Lawful?, 8 (2017) JIPITEC 311 para 1.

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%0 Journal Article
%T Non-Commercial Quotation and Freedom of Panorama: Useful and Lawful?
%A Rosati, Eleonora
%J JIPITEC
%D 2017
%V 8
%N 4
%@ 2190-3387
%F rosati2017
%X This contribution seeks to assess both the practical implications and lawfulness of national copyright exceptions that – lacking a corresponding provision in Article 5 of Directive 2001/29 (the InfoSoc Directive) – envisage that the only permitted use of a copyright work for the sake of the applicability of a certain exception is a non-commercial one.By referring to different national exceptions allowing quotation and freedom of panorama as case studies, the paper shows some of the shortcomings deriving from different approaches to the same permitted uses of copyright works across the EU, as well as the resulting (negative) impact on the very objective underlying adoption of the InfoSoc Directive: harmonization. This contribution concludes that – in general terms – diverging approaches to copyright exceptions, including limiting the availability of certain exceptions to non-commercial uses, may be both impractical and contrary to the system established by the InfoSoc Directive.
%L 340
%K Article 5 InfoSoc Directive
%K CJEU
%K Copyright
%K InfoSoc Directive
%K exceptions and limitations
%K for-profit
%K freedom of panorama
%K non-commercial exceptions and limitations
%K quotation
%U http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:0009-29-46396
%P 311-321

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Bibtex

@Article{rosati2017,
  author = 	"Rosati, Eleonora",
  title = 	"Non-Commercial Quotation and Freedom of Panorama: Useful and Lawful?",
  journal = 	"JIPITEC",
  year = 	"2017",
  volume = 	"8",
  number = 	"4",
  pages = 	"311--321",
  keywords = 	"Article 5 InfoSoc Directive; CJEU; Copyright; InfoSoc Directive; exceptions and limitations; for-profit; freedom of panorama; non-commercial exceptions and limitations; quotation",
  abstract = 	"This contribution seeks to assess both the practical implications and lawfulness of national copyright exceptions that -- lacking a corresponding provision in Article 5 of Directive 2001/29 (the InfoSoc Directive) -- envisage that the only permitted use of a copyright work for the sake of the applicability of a certain exception is a non-commercial one.By referring to different national exceptions allowing quotation and freedom of panorama as case studies, the paper shows some of the shortcomings deriving from different approaches to the same permitted uses of copyright works across the EU, as well as the resulting (negative) impact on the very objective underlying adoption of the InfoSoc Directive: harmonization. This contribution concludes that -- in general terms -- diverging approaches to copyright exceptions, including limiting the availability of certain exceptions to non-commercial uses, may be both impractical and contrary to the system established by the InfoSoc Directive.",
  issn = 	"2190-3387",
  url = 	"http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:0009-29-46396"
}

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RIS

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Rosati, Eleonora
PY  - 2017
DA  - 2017//
TI  - Non-Commercial Quotation and Freedom of Panorama: Useful and Lawful?
JO  - JIPITEC
SP  - 311
EP  - 321
VL  - 8
IS  - 4
KW  - Article 5 InfoSoc Directive
KW  - CJEU
KW  - Copyright
KW  - InfoSoc Directive
KW  - exceptions and limitations
KW  - for-profit
KW  - freedom of panorama
KW  - non-commercial exceptions and limitations
KW  - quotation
AB  - This contribution seeks to assess both the practical implications and lawfulness of national copyright exceptions that – lacking a corresponding provision in Article 5 of Directive 2001/29 (the InfoSoc Directive) – envisage that the only permitted use of a copyright work for the sake of the applicability of a certain exception is a non-commercial one.By referring to different national exceptions allowing quotation and freedom of panorama as case studies, the paper shows some of the shortcomings deriving from different approaches to the same permitted uses of copyright works across the EU, as well as the resulting (negative) impact on the very objective underlying adoption of the InfoSoc Directive: harmonization. This contribution concludes that – in general terms – diverging approaches to copyright exceptions, including limiting the availability of certain exceptions to non-commercial uses, may be both impractical and contrary to the system established by the InfoSoc Directive.
SN  - 2190-3387
UR  - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:0009-29-46396
ID  - rosati2017
ER  - 
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Wordbib

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ISI

PT Journal
AU Rosati, E
TI Non-Commercial Quotation and Freedom of Panorama: Useful and Lawful?
SO JIPITEC
PY 2017
BP 311
EP 321
VL 8
IS 4
DE Article 5 InfoSoc Directive; CJEU; Copyright; InfoSoc Directive; exceptions and limitations; for-profit; freedom of panorama; non-commercial exceptions and limitations; quotation
AB This contribution seeks to assess both the practical implications and lawfulness of national copyright exceptions that – lacking a corresponding provision in Article 5 of Directive 2001/29 (the InfoSoc Directive) – envisage that the only permitted use of a copyright work for the sake of the applicability of a certain exception is a non-commercial one.By referring to different national exceptions allowing quotation and freedom of panorama as case studies, the paper shows some of the shortcomings deriving from different approaches to the same permitted uses of copyright works across the EU, as well as the resulting (negative) impact on the very objective underlying adoption of the InfoSoc Directive: harmonization. This contribution concludes that – in general terms – diverging approaches to copyright exceptions, including limiting the availability of certain exceptions to non-commercial uses, may be both impractical and contrary to the system established by the InfoSoc Directive.
ER

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Mods

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    <title>Non-Commercial Quotation and Freedom of Panorama: Useful and Lawful?</title>
  </titleInfo>
  <name type="personal">
    <namePart type="family">Rosati</namePart>
    <namePart type="given">Eleonora</namePart>
  </name>
  <abstract>This contribution seeks to assess both the practical implications and lawfulness of national copyright exceptions that – lacking a corresponding provision in Article 5 of Directive 2001/29 (the InfoSoc Directive) – envisage that the only permitted use of a copyright work for the sake of the applicability of a certain exception is a non-commercial one.
By referring to different national exceptions allowing quotation and freedom of panorama as case studies, the paper shows some of the shortcomings deriving from different approaches to the same permitted uses of copyright works across the EU, as well as the resulting (negative) impact on the very objective underlying adoption of the InfoSoc Directive: harmonization. This contribution concludes that – in general terms – diverging approaches to copyright exceptions, including limiting the availability of certain exceptions to non-commercial uses, may be both impractical and contrary to the system established by the InfoSoc Directive.</abstract>
  <subject>
    <topic>Article 5 InfoSoc Directive</topic>
    <topic>CJEU</topic>
    <topic>Copyright</topic>
    <topic>InfoSoc Directive</topic>
    <topic>exceptions and limitations</topic>
    <topic>for-profit</topic>
    <topic>freedom of panorama</topic>
    <topic>non-commercial exceptions and limitations</topic>
    <topic>quotation</topic>
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  <identifier type="citekey">rosati2017</identifier>
</mods>
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JIPITEC – Journal of Intellectual Property, Information Technology and E-Commerce Law
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