Current UK Copyright System Allows Both Innovation and Access

By Authors Licensing Collecting Society, PRNE
Monday, March 7, 2011

LONDON, March 8, 2011 - Submissions responding to the government's 'Independent Review of
Intellectual Property and Growth' (also known as the Hargreaves Review) were
due in last Friday and ALCS' response was submitted against a backdrop of a
real success story - the UK creative industries.

The ALCS submission made the case that:

    - The success of the UK creative industries is built upon the talent of
      creative individuals without which there would be no product to sell.
      These individuals need to be supported and incentivised; income from
      streams such as ALCS and PLR help to provide incentive and support for
      these writers.

    - Writers want their works to be read and the UK has developed effective,
      low cost licensing solutions that enable access to works which promote
      learning and innovation, but also provide adequate incentive for
      writers which enable them to keep writing.

    - Licensing solutions have evolved to provide flexible access to works
      for education and business needs; these solutions continue to be
      developed in the current digital use environment. Licenses currently
      provided by collective management organisations like ALCS offer
      high-volume rights clearance at a single point. This provides
      certainty of access while minimising bureaucracy and costs.

The submission included case studies from writers such as Wendy Cope and
Philip Pullman who made the case that many writers rely on the payments they
receive from secondary uses of their work like the lending of their books in
libraries (from Public Lending Right in the UK and from overseas PLR schemes
via the Authors' Licensing & Collecting Society), particularly when embarking
on a career in writing when they provided welcome incentive.

Renowned children's writer, Philip Pullman says: "I am strongly in favour
of secondary payments systems such as Public Lending Right and the Authors'
Licensing & Collecting Society. Before I had a bestselling book, the annual
payments for the use of my work often made a difference to my ability to
continue working in the way I was doing."

Another case study, from writer Mal Peet, voicing his concerns about the
American model says: "The PM appears to believe that the American 'fair
usage' approach to copyright encourages 'innovation' whereas our system
stifles it. Actually, the opposite is true. 'Fair usage' is so nebulous a
concept that it occasions incessant litigation. What has happened in the
States is that money has been diverted from writers and creators (who need
it) into the coffers of lawyers (who don't)."

With the contribution of our core copyright sector to the overall UK
economy greater than in the US and anywhere else in Europe, to maintain this
sector as a driver of future economic growth government policy must evaluate
carefully the role of the current structures that enable innovation.

ALCS

ALCS collects fees on behalf of the whole spectrum of UK writers:
novelists, film & TV script writers, literary prize winners, poets and
playwrights, freelance journalists, translators and adaptors, as well as
thousands of professional and academic writers who include nurses, lawyers,
teachers, scientists, and college lecturers. All writers are eligible to join
ALCS: further details on membership can be found at www.alcs.co.uk

The Society collects fees that are difficult, time-consuming or legally
impossible for writers and their representatives to claim on an individual
basis: money that is nonetheless due to them. Fees collected are distributed
to writers twice a year in March and September. Since its inception, ALCS has
distributed over GBP205 million to the nation's writers.

Contact information: ALCS, The Writers' House, 13 Haydon Street, London
EC3N 1DB Tel: +44(0)20-7264-5700; email alcs@alcs.co.uk. Website:
www.alcs.co.uk

Editors Notes

Full Submission details can be found at www.alcs.co.uk

Contact: Alison Baxter or Barbara Hayes at ALCS, +44(0)20-7264-5700, Alison.baxter at alcs.co.uk

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