The
warning from Günther Oettinger, Germany’s EU commissioner, is the
latest in a series of outspoken criticisms that single out Google and
reflect Europe’s political mood against Silicon Valley.
“If
Google takes intellectual property from the EU, and makes use of it,
then the EU can protect this property and impose a levy on Google for
it,” Mr Oettinger told Handelsblatt.
Since his nomination to oversee
Europe’s digital sector, Mr Oettinger, currently energy commissioner,
has suggested Google could be forced to be neutral and objective in
presenting search results, has called for its market power to be curbed,
and raised concerns about it providing software for cars.
“It
must not happen that Google makes future products such as cars or
televisions and European companies remain the role of the supplier,” he
said earlier this month.
Asked about Google and copyright protection, a spokesperson for the outgoing digital commissioner Neelie Kroes said “the commission’s job is to solve market failures and enforce rules, not target companies”.
“There
are many legal and social issues Google needs to address,” the
spokesperson said. “But the EU acts on facts and complaints, not
theories and prejudices and that legal base isn’t going to change. It’s
not OK to turn a company into a punching bag and I wouldn’t expect the
new Commission to do so.”
Copyright reform within
the EU is fraught with difficulty, with member states, the parliament
and even parts of the European Commission taking starkly opposing
positions on what it should entail and who it should benefit.
Mr Oettinger’s aides said that he has yet to flesh out his views on the detail of copyright reform.
Mr
Oettinger’s suggestions resemble changes to the copyright law in
Germany, which gave publishers the right to license their web content
for others’ use.
But Google and other aggregators
were able to continue using snippets of news articles after legislators
amended the law to allow the use of “single words or small text
excerpts”.
A number of media groups including
Axel Springer are pursuing legal action for compensation from Google,
the dominant search engine in Europe.
At a forum
in Berlin this month, Germany’s economics minister Sigmar Gabriel
supported the publishers’ cause, criticising Google for using press
material without compensation.
“We have to first
define what intellectual property is,” Mr Oettinger said. “Then we have
to stipulate the rights of the creators – the artists, academics and
authors. Finally, there is the matter of compensation.”
The minister said: “I think that’s a funny business model.”
Mr Gabriel appeared at the forum alongside Eric Schmidt, Google’s executive chairman, who said the company’s search engine drew readers to publishers’ websites.
One
senior Brussels lobbyist derided Mr Oettinger’s suggestions of an
EU-wide levy as an “unbelievable” attempt “to set up a system to
transfer wealth to my friends in German industry...it is a clear signal
that Europe is in protectionist mode”.
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