THE NEW EU COPYRIGHT LAW WILL FORCE GOOGLE, FACEBOOK TO PAY PUBLISHERS

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The European Union’s overhaul of online copyright legislation cleared its final hurdle on Monday, with the European Commission approving a radical change in how copyright law will be enforced online.

The European Union’s move to overhaul copyright law and update it for the online age got the final seal of approval from European governments on Monday.

The European Commission, the EU’s executive body, approved the new legislation, passed by the European Parliament last month, that will make online platforms liable for copyright infringement on their sites and force Google, Facebook and their ilk to pay publishers for news snippets they post online.

Nineteen countries representing a majority of the European Union population, including France and Germany, endorsed the overhaul, but several, including Finland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Poland and Sweden voted against the legislation.

The new copyright law has been a battleground for two years, with internet rights activists and tech giants opposing the legislation and groups representing artists and large publishers broadly in favor.

Under the new rules, Google and other online platforms will have to sign licensing agreements with musicians, performers, authors, news publishers and journalists to use their work online.

While the legislation does not explicitly state so, it is widely assumed that to conform with the law, online platforms will have to install filters to prevent users from uploading copyrighted material. Opponents say this is technically impossible and will lead to widespread censorship.

The new Copyright Directive now goes to European countries’ individual parliaments, which have two years to write it into their national laws.

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