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Bulletins Story:
INTERNATIONAL RECOGNITION OF TV FORMATS CONTINUES: ENDEMOL
WINS MALTESE BIG BROTHER CASE
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Date: 22.05.2007
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The format trade is now worth well over Euro 2 billion per annum
worldwide, and its value grows steadily. The American Idol
format alone was recently valued at $2.5 billion. Despite these
remarkable numbers, and the vast sums of money that change hands
daily in licence fees for television formats, the law in this area
remains far from certain. There is still no statutory recognition
anywhere in the world for this immensely valuable species of
intellectual property.
Until legislatures find time to make amendments to their
copyright statutes to include formats as a species of copyright
work, we must continue to draw lessons from the litigation there is
on this subject. A body of international case law is building up
which will enable the television industry – and the specialist
lawyers that serve it – to advise on this difficult area of the
law.
The first specific recognition by any court of the existence of
the format in an unscripted broadcast programme (in that case it
was a radio programme) was in 2001 by the Supreme Court of Hungary.
Since then decisions by courts in a number of countries including
Holland and Brazil have confirmed that in appropriate circumstances
a court will afford protection to television formats.
The leading champion of format rights protection has been
Endemol, which has recognized that it cannot expect broadcasters to
pay licence fees for formats which Endemol will not protect by
policing them worldwide. Endemol has recognized the commercial
importance of an uncompromising attitude to infringers, and has
brought groundbreaking actions around the world to protect the
value in its formats. The most recent action was in Malta.
After a tense legal battle, on 2 May a Maltese court ruled in
Endemol International’s favor in its proceedings against the
broadcasters and producers of L-iSpjun, a copycat version
of the international hit format, Big Brother. The
offending series was broadcast on Malta’s national television
station, Public Broadcasting Services (TVM), and Melita Cable TV,
and was streamed live on Go Mobile on its cellular phone network.
Watermelon Media & Communications and P&D Communications
were the producers of the series.
Endemol had filed a claim against the broadcasters and producers
behind L-iSpjun, claiming its intellectual property rights
in the Big Brother format had been infringed. Endemol had
demanded that the derivative show be pulled and was also seeking
unspecified damages against the producers. At the end of April, as
part of the legal process, Endemol filed a series of precautionary
warrants against all parties involved.
The Maltese court upheld these warrants and ordered the seizure
of the TV studio equipment, props, tapes and other devices used as
part of the production of the show, as well as freezing other
assets of the defendants, including bank accounts. According to
reports in the Maltese media there was a “ping pong legal battle”
with the local producers persuading the court to sit in the evening
in an attempt to keep their show on air. In the end the show was
dropped in the face of Endemol’s concerted legal action.
Wim Hoen, the intellectual property rights manager at Endemol
International, commented: “We’re delighted with the Maltese
Courts’ decision which fully vindicates our view that this
production was in breach of our rights. We hope this sends a clear
message that this kind of infringement will not be tolerated and
will be acted upon.”
How then do you give yourself the best chance of protecting your
format as a copyright work? What do you do if you find that you are
developing a format which is too close to another format for
comfort? What do you do about copycats in your own territory or
overseas? The International Format Lawyers Association (www.ifla.tv) offers a practical seminar
which answers those questions. If you would like further
information please contact Stephanie Taylor (stephanie.taylor@swanturton.com
/ +44 20 7520 9589).
Jonathan Coad
Film
& TV
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