Copyright reform: libraries not proxies for commercial interests
EIFL co-signs letter responding to comments targeting libraries at the International Publishers’ Congress 2016

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librarians playing with kids
Promoting the public interest: librarians support children’s development in Piekary Slaskie Public Library in Poland.

EIFL has co-signed a letter in response to comments made by Hachette Livre CEO, M. Arnaud Nourry, at the International Publishers' Congress that took place in London from 9-12 April 2016 (comments reported in The Bookseller and Publishers' Weekly).

In a letter sent to the editors of the two journals on 13 April 2016, international and European organizations representing libraries and library consortia assert their independence and their proud tradition promoting the public interest without profit or commercial gain. Libraries are not proxies for the commercial or tech sectors, the letter says.

In the field of copyright, libraries consistently support a balanced copyright system where everyone has access to information and creativity, and authors are fairly rewarded for their work. Publishers benefit too, for example, globally in 2014 libraries were set to spend 25.4 billion USD purchasing content (source: Outsell report 2014 Library Market Size, Share, Forecast, and Trends).

In Europe, libraries are seeking modest changes to copyright rules to enable libraries, and other cultural heritage institutions, to undertake their work effectively in the digital environment. We hope, by working together with publishers, the European Commission and its member states, that the best may indeed be yet to come.

Read the letter from international and European library organizations in Publishers' Weekly, a pdf or below. 

Dear Sir,

It was a great shame that Hachette Livre CEO Arnaud Nourry chose to target libraries at the International Publishers’ Congress this week, as reported in The Bookseller and Publishers Weekly. In particular, we, the library community, reject entirely the argument that we are proxies for the commercial sector. If libraries are for profit, it is for the profit of human development.

Libraries have a proud tradition of independence. We are there to protect and promote the interests of our users – citizens, creators, students – rather than shareholders.

Moreover, libraries are specifically designated worldwide as institutions necessary for serving the global public interest for a non-commercial purpose, as we have already stated many times at WIPO and elsewhere. We go about our work for no direct or indirect economic gain.

Libraries support a balanced copyright system where everyone has access to information and creativity, and authors are fairly rewarded. Authors themselves regularly underline their own support for libraries as places to research, raise awareness of their work, and build a reading culture. It goes without saying that publishers benefit from the vibrant creative economy that we nurture, as well as the billions spent by libraries every year on their output.

Indeed, we have long argued that what holds libraries and their users back in this regard is rather the tangled and opaque web of laws, contracts and licenses that prevails today. Where exceptions and limitations exist, they are restricted and often overridden by contract terms or other means. And even when this does not happen, uneven application hinders access to information across borders.

It is for that reason that we are calling for limited reforms which will strengthen the legal base on which libraries operate, both within our local communities and, increasingly, globally. Librarians are trained professionals and careful in respecting the law. To fulfil their missions at a national, European and international level, they need a core of basic enforceable exceptions and limitations, suited to the digital age and the opportunities this creates. This would hardly represent the ‘vast exceptions’ Mr Nourry cites.

We look forward to working further in partnership with publishers, the European Commission, WIPO and its member states to achieve this. If we do, as Mr Nourry himself hopes, the best may well still be yet to come.

Yours faithfully,

Donna Scheeder, President, IFLA (International Federation of Library Associations)

Jukka Relander, President, EBLIDA (European Bureau of Library, Information and Documentation Associations)

Kristiina Hormia-Poutanen, President, LIBER (Association of European Research Libraries)

Naomi Korn, Chair, LACA (Libraries and Archives Copyright Alliance)

Rima Kupryte, Director, EIFL (Electronic Information for Libraries)

Ilona Kish, Public Libraries 2020 Programme Director, Reading & Writing Foundation

Further reading:

Arnaud Nourry parle d'exceptions au copyright, les bibliothèques s'étouffent in Actualitté, 14.04.2016

Blog post Communia Association: Contrary to what publishers think, Libraries serve the Public

Follow the EU copyright reform process here.