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Bulletins Story:
COPYRIGHT AND FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION: PADDY ASHDOWN v THE
SUNDAY TELEGRAPH
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Date: 20.07.2001
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Copyright is a property right which by definition comes into
conflict with a fundamental human right: the right of freedom of
expression. The Court of Appeal decided this week that on
rare occasions freedom of expression will “trump” copyright, giving
a public interest defence to a copyright infringement claim.
The Sunday Telegraph published extensive extracts from a
confidential record which Mr (now Lord) Ashdown had made of an
important meeting at 10 Downing Street in 1997. Ashdown sued
the Telegraph Group for copyright infringement and breach of
confidence. The High Court awarded Ashdown summary judgment,
dismissing the Telegraph’s defences including defences based on
freedom of expression and fair dealing. The Telegraph’s
appeal failed, but the Court of Appeal’s findings on the conflict
between copyright and freedom of expression establish an important
principle. The Human Rights Act can, in effect if not in
legal theory, override the Copyright Act.
The circumstances in which freedom of expression will prevail
over copyright are rare. Copyright protects the expression of
ideas, not the ideas themselves. The public interest which
newspapers serve in disclosing information such as the matters
referred to in Ashdown’s confidential record can normally be
protected without the newspaper copying the exact words.
Copyright will not be an issue in such cases.
Occasionally, however, it is necessary for a newspaper to
publish documents verbatim, for example to ensure
credibility. The form of the document, on such occasions, is
of equal importance to the content. Even then, a newspaper
may still have a fair dealing defence under the Copyright Act
itself. But what if there is no fair dealing defence?
Can it still be right for a newspaper to publish substantial
verbatim extracts from a document?
In the Ashdown case the Court of Appeal decided that the Sunday
Telegraph need only have published one or two short extracts to
establish authenticity. The Sunday Telegraph had gone further
than this: “the minute was deliberately filleted in order to
extract colourful passages that were most likely to add flavour to
the article.” This was furthering the Telegraph Group’s
commercial interests in a manner which was “essentially
journalistic”. But in cases where the publication of longer
extracts is genuinely necessary in the public interest, newspapers
will now be able to rely on their right of freedom of
expression.
The court also considered the meaning of “reporting current
events”, one of the fair dealing defences under the Copyright
Act. It confirmed that a liberal interpretation should be put
on the word “current”. A matter could be of current interest
to the public even if it concerned events which had taken place
some time ago. Current events do not always have to be recent
events.
Charlie Swan
July 2001
80
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