Lorna Woods, Professor of Internet Law, University of Essex
The last couple of weeks have
seen a number of judgments relating to the control of information on the
internet by the subject of the information.
The cases of GC et al
(Case C-136/17) and Google
v CNIL (Case C-507/17) concern the interpretation of General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR),
looking at the obligations of search engines. The most recent case, Glawischnig-Piesczek
v Facebook (Case C-18/18) concerned the impact of the e-Commerce
Directive (Directive 2000/31/EC), specifically the prohibition on general
monitoring found in Article 15 of that Directive, on ‘stay down’ notices. The
focus of this post is on Glawischnig-Piesczek,
but there is a question that reaches beyond the impact of that case on the
e-Commerce Direcitve: to what extent is there a coherent approach to issues
arising from the Internet across the various legal measures that intersect with
it. This may go beyond the e-Commerce Directive and the GDPR to include measures
related to intellectual property (notably the recent controversial Directive on
Copyright in the Digital Single Market (Directive 2019/790/EU)
and the Enforcement
Directive (Directive 2004/48/EC)) and the combating of child exploitation
(Directive on combatting the sexual abuse and sexual exploitation of children
and child pornography (Directive
2011/93/EU)) and terrorism (Terrorism Directive (Directive
2017/541/EU)).
The Judgment
The facts giving rise to this
reference are simple.
Glawischnig-Piesczek complained to Facebook about some defamatory posts.
Facebook did not remove the posts so Glawischnig-Piesczek obtained a court
order requiring Facebook to stop publishing the impugned content. The precise
scope of the order gave rise to further litigation and the Austrian Supreme
Court referred a number of questions to the CJEU, asking:
-
Are “stay down” notices in relation to
identically worded content compatible with Article 15 of the e-commerce Directive?
-
Are there geographic limitations to the
obligation?
-
Are such notices in relation to content with
equivalent content to that which has been found unacceptable which does not use
the same words but conveys the same meaning acceptable?
-
In relation to posts with equivalent meaning,
does the obligation accrue when the intermediary becomes aware of the content?
The Court started its analysis by
making clear that the immunity from suit granted by Article 14 of the Directive
is not a general immunity from every legal obligation. Specifically the
national authorities remain competent to require a host to terminate access to
or remove illegal information. The Court also noted that Article 18 of the
e-Commerce Directive requires Member States to have in place appropriate court
actions to deal with illegal content. It states:
Member States
shall ensure that court actions available under national law concerning
information society services’ activities allow for the rapid adoption of
measures, including interim measures, designed to terminate any alleged
infringement and to prevent any further impairment of the interests involved.
The Court held that no limitation
on the scope of such national measures can be inferred from the text of the
e-Commerce Directive [para 30].
It then turned to the impact of
Article 15. It highlighted the fact that while Article 15 prohibited general
monitoring as recital 47 in the preamble of the Directive makes clear,
monitoring ‘in a specific case’ does not fall within that prohibition. It then
held that
[s]uch a
specific case may, in particular, be found, as in the main proceedings, in a
particular piece of information stored by the host provider concerned at the
request of a certain user of its social network ….. [35].
Given the nature of information
flows there is a risk that any such information may be re-posted, so
‘.. in order
to ensure that the host provider at issue prevents any further impairment of
the interests involved, it is legitimate for the court having jurisdiction to
be able to require that host provider to block access to the information
stored, the content of which is identical to the content previously declared to
be illegal, or to remove that information, irrespective of who requested the
storage of that information. In particular, in view of the identical content of
the information concerned, the injunction granted for that purpose cannot be
regarded as imposing on the host provider an obligation to monitor generally
the information which it stores, or a general obligation actively to seek facts
or circumstances indicating illegal activity, as provided for in Article 15(1)
of Directive 2000/31 [37].
The Court determined “equivalent
meaning” to be about the message the information posted conveys and which was
“essentially unchanged”. Given the focus on meaning not form, the Court held
that an injunction could extend to non-identical posts as otherwise the effects
of an injunction could easily be circumvented.
The Court then considered the balance between the competing interests.
The Court commented that the “equivalent information” identified by court order
should contain specific elements to identify the offending content and in
particular must not require the host to carry out its own independent
assessment. In terms of assessing the burden on the host, the court noted that
the host would have recourse to “automated search tools and technologies” [para
46].
The court concluded that the
injunctions would not constitute a general obligation to monitor all content
and specifically no obligation to seek facts or circumstances indicating
illegal activity.
The Court also noted that Article
18 of the Directive makes no provision for territorial limitations on what
measures Member States may make available. In principle, world-wide effects
would be permissible [para 50], but this is subject to the proviso that EU
rules must be consistent with the international law framework.
The court felt it unnecessary to
respond to the third question without elaborating further.
Comment
There are a number of comments
that could be made about this judgment. This post comments on three: the
approach of the Court to general monitoring; non-identical content; and the
issue of territorial scope. It also discusses freedom of expression issues.
General Monitoring
In this judgment there is a clear
confirmation that searching for specific pieces of information/types of content
does not constitute general monitoring. The Court makes it clear, at para 35,
that the searching for individual pieces of content constitutes a ‘specific
case’ within recital 47. The Court gives
the searching for specific information as an example of a ‘specific case’;
presumably the searching of a targeted user’s stored date could be another
such. This is the first time the
approach has been adopted in regards to defamation. Perhaps the fact that the case concerns
defamation rather than, for example, intellectual property explains the dearth
of previous case law cited in the court’s judgment.
The statement of the Court that
searching for an individual item of content does not constitute general
monitoring does not address the fact that such a search would presumably
involve search all content held. Yet in McFadden (Case C-484/14), the Court described
the scope of Article 15 thus:
As regards,
first, monitoring all of the information transmitted, such a measure must be
excluded from the outset as contrary to Article 15(1) of Directive 2000/31,
which excludes the imposition of a general obligation on, inter alia,
communication network access providers to monitor the information that they
transmit. [McFadden, 87]
This is broadly similar to the
approach in the early case of L’Oreal (Case C-324/09) which
referred to Article 15 precluding ‘an active monitoring of all the data of each
of its customers in order to prevent any future infringement ...’ [para 139]. The prevention of future infringements in the
context of L’Oreal could be achieved
– in the view of the Court – however by the suspension of the perpetrator. Yet monitoring of the data of all customers
seems to be what would be required to find the specific case of content. The
matter remains unacknowledged in the Court’s analysis in Glawischnig-Piesczek.
Perhaps the assumption is (a) that the concern underpinning the
prohibition in Article 15 derives from privacy; and (b) that when we look for
one thing we do not really see the other things that we look at during our
search – and that this might particularly be so when the searching is
automated. Of course, arguments that
automated review of communications data does not constituted an invasion of
privacy have not been accepted by the Court (e.g. Watson/Tele2). In any event, further support for the
distinction between searching for an identified piece of content and searching
in a less targeted fashion is found in the context of the fight against child
sexual abuse and exploitation and in the context of enforcement of intellectual
property.
Non-identical content
The clarification that an
injunction may also extend to non-identical content raises a number of
issues. While the Court states that a
host should not be required to make its own judgment on these matters it is not
clear how similar the content needs to be.
It is also unclear whether the Court is concerned here with the wording
or the message conveyed. At [40] it refers to the ‘message conveyed’, which
could refer to the idea in issue rather than its precise expression. The Court
then referred to ‘information, the content of which, whilst essentially
conveying the same message, is worded slightly differently …’ [41]. An approach
based on wording (or presumably identifiable items of content such as images)
has the benefit of being more easily described by order. It is probably easier
to circumvent. There seems to be an
assumption in the judgment that technological means are available to implement
this sort of requirement, though whether that is the case is another question.
Territorial Scope
The territorial scope of the
order is also worth mentioning. Like its
Advocate
General, Szpunar, the Court does not envisage any territorial limitation of
the removal/blocking as a result of EU law.
It is important to note that the Court does not say that injunctions must have such extraterritorial effect.
Rather the question is about the interplay between each national legal system’s
own way of dealing with these issues (and area the Court noted gave Member
States wide discretion) and the fact that Article 18 is silent as to any
limitations. The silence of EU law allows Member States freedom to take action. A further issue is that the Court noted the
impact of international law without however elaborating what it meant – are we
talking fundamental human rights (this seems unlikely given the existence of
the EU Charter) or international comity, for example?.
This is one of a number of cases
in which the Court has had to consider the territorial scope of EU law in the
context of the Internet – the most recent being the Right to be Forgotten case:
Google v CNIL (Case C-507/17). There
the Court held that
Where a search
engine operator grants a request for de-referencing …, that operator is not
required to carry out that de-referencing on all version of its search engine,
but on the version of that search engine corresponding to all the Member
States. [73]
It seems then that the opposite
conclusion has been reached. This is overstating the point. While the fact that EU law does not require
extraterritoriality, the GDPR’s silence on the point gives space to a national
court to make an order with extra-territorial effect, a point the Court makes
express in para 72. A national could then, within the constraints of its own
national rules, make such an order. In such a situation the position would seem
similar to that under Article 18 e-Commerce Directive as understood in Glawischnig-Piesczek. A contrast to the
silence of the EU legislature on extraterritoriality of blocking/de-listing can
be seen in the Terrorism Directive. There Article 21 imposes an obligation on
Member States to obtain the removal of terrorist content hosted outside their
territory, but it also recognises that that may not be possible.
In Google v CNIL, while the Court recognised the possibility for
national courts to make orders for de-referencing with extra-territorial
effect, it expressly noted that in doing so they must weigh up the competing
interests of the data subjects and the
right of others to freedom of information [para 72]. It is noticeable that in Glawischnig-Piesczek the balancing is
different. The Court notes the interest of the subject of the information and
also the need not to impose an excessive burden on the host provider [para 45,
para 46]. The existence of other rights: the right of the host to carry on a
business and the rights of those posting the material and those wishing to
receive it – both aspects of freedom of expression - are not expressly
mentioned. To some extent the issue of rights will be covered through the
national courts, which will be the bodies to carry out that balancing within
their own national frameworks and within the limits of EU law. By contrast to Google v CNIL, however, there is no
instruction from the Court that these are matters to be considered, nor any
express recognition that the balance between the right to private life
(including the protection of reputation) and freedom of expression differs
between territories. What might be seen as the legitimate protection of private
life in one place is an infringement of speech in another. So, while the matter was not directly the
Court’s concern in this case, it is somewhat surprising that the issues were
not directly considered.
Barnard
& Peers: chapter 9
Photo
credit: Department of Defense, via Wikicommons
Very interesting. Thank You
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