FEATURED STORY

World Sports Bodies Team Up Against Kenya Copyright Bill

Share
Copy right
If the Amendment Bill is passed into law, Kenya will be out of step with global trends, and the average Kenyan will lose out on great sports entertainment. 
Share

A coalition of global sports bodies has written an open letter to the Kenyan government, expressing concern about the Copyright Amendment Bill currently before Parliament, and its potential impact on the availability of international sports content in Kenya.

The Sports Rights Owner Coalition (SROC) is an alliance of more than 50 international and national sport bodies, representing some of the world’s leading sport codes and competitions – including the English Premier League, FA Cup, Wimbledon, MotoGP, and the Rugby World Cup.

In the recent letter, signed by Chairman Mark Lichtenstein, the SROC says its members are “extremely concerned” at changes that will be made to Kenya’s Copyright Act if the Copyright Amendment Bill becomes law. The SROC is particularly worried about proposals to repeal sections 35B, 35C and 35D of the Copyright Act, which allow for take-down notices issued to internet-based service provider platforms which enable content piracy to flourish.

A take-down notice is a widely used remedy employed by copyright owners worldwide, compelling online platforms to rapidly remove content from their websites if it is suspected that the content infringes copyright.

The Kenya Copyright Board (KeCOBO) champion of the Partners Against Piracy (PAP) initiative, has come out in support of the SROC letter. “Take-down notices are a critical tool for copyright holders and related rights holders to fight digital content piracy by controlling the distribution and economic viability of their work and how it is accessed online,” says Edward Sigei, KeCOBO Executive Director.

“Across the world, they help to safeguard the intellectual property rights of sports rights owners,” he said. “If rights owners cannot request that pirated sports content is taken down immediately, that will threaten the future of live sports broadcasts in Kenya. Why would international sports media allow sports broadcasts in Kenya, if they have no way of stopping them from being pirated!”

Kenya’s 2019 Copyright Amendment Bill, incorporates principles from the World Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO) Internet Treaties of 1996, aimed at preventing unauthorised access to and use of creative works. Takedown notices are among these principles and are necessary tools to enforce copyright protections for rights owners and distributors.

If the Amendment Bill is passed into law, Kenya will be out of step with global trends, and the average Kenyan will lose out on great sports entertainment.  A further negative consequence of this Amendment Bill passing would be the reputational and economic investment quagmire it would create is jeopardising Kenya’s ability to renew participation in the Africa Growth and Opportunity Agreement (AGOA).

One of the additional provisions of renewal requires a demonstrated commitment to copyright protection. Repealing section 35 of the Copyright Act, would do the exact opposite and threaten investor confidence.

>> The Many Scams And How Kenyans Are Always Conned

The SROC points out that in Europe, policy makers are strengthening – not weakening – the effectiveness of take-down notices, particularly regarding live content. New proposals to protect live content more effectively in Europe are expected in the first half of 2022.

“Were the Copyright Amendment Bill to be enacted, it could have devastating consequences for both the Kenyan economy and Kenyan consumers,” says the SROC letter. “Rights holders from sport and other creative industries are extremely unlikely to license their content in a jurisdiction that effectively legitimises piracy. Consumers would therefore be deprived from watching their favourite sports and television shows, and leave Kenya isolated on the global copyright stage.”

The coalition – which includes the English FA, UEFA, the IAAF, and the International Tennis Federation – goes on to ask that the proposed new law be urgently reconsidered “so as not to harm Kenyan consumers and threaten the availability of sports and entertainment content in Kenya.”

>> The Man Behind The Runaway Success Of Kenya’s Star Tennis Player

Written by
BT Reporter -

editor [at] businesstoday.co.ke

Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

PAST ARTICLES AND INSIGHTS

Related Articles
kenya pipeline
BUSINESSECONOMYFEATURED STORY

Kenya Pipeline Company Reserves 2 Boardroom Seats for Uganda

Kenya Pipeline Company(KPC) released a Supplementary Information Memorandum and structural updates that...

Nairobi Securities Exchange activity slowed as foreigners took profits
BUSINESSFEATURED STORYNEWSSTOCKS

NSE Activity Dampen as Foreigners’ Exit Big Counters

NSE (Nairobi Securities Exchange) shed KSh 104.7 Billion in market value at...

Cooperatives & MSME Development CS Wycliffe Oparanya.
FEATURED STORY

SACCOs in Governance Crisis: Only 19 Meet Set Compliance Levels

SACCOs (Savings and Credit Cooperative Societies) that are licensed to engage in...

Uchumi Supermarket is currently insolvent
FEATURED STORY

NSE Investors Back on Uchumi Counter as Market Slows

NSE (Nairobi Securities Exchange) closed the week with mixed signals, reflecting both...