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EU court says Germany has to notify EU of copyright law targeting Google

BRUSSELS, Sept 12: Google won a victory on Thursday after Europe’s top court said Germany has to notify the European Commission of a rule allowing publishers to demand a copyright fee from the U.S. tech giant for using news snippets.
By Reuters

BRUSSELS, Sept 12: Google won a victory on Thursday after Europe’s top court said Germany has to notify the European Commission of a rule allowing publishers to demand a copyright fee from the U.S. tech giant for using news snippets.


The case underlines the battle between publishers and Alphabet unit Google over the share of revenues from distributing news.


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EU countries back copyright reform targeting Google, Facebook


VG Media, a consortium of around 200 publishers, took Google to a German court for using text excerpts, images and videos produced by its members without paying them. The lawsuit was based on a German ancillary copyright law in force since August 2013.


The German court subsequently sought guidance from the Luxembourg-based Court of Justice of the European Union (ECJ), Europe’s highest.


Germany has to notify the EU executive first for its ruling to take effect, ECJ judges said.

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