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In a move sought by a broad music industry coalition, the European Union Parliament overwhelmingly approved Articles 11 and 13 Wednesday. The legislation includes strong new copyright protections for all creators.Included is a new directive that will force popular sites like YouTube to 'filter' or pre-check material upload to its site and hold the companies liable if the content is not properly licensed. Google and other critics argue the law will severely limit the flow of creative content. The approved legislation reads:“Article 13 creates an obligation on information society service providers storing and giving access to large amounts of works and other subject-matter uploaded by their users to take appropriate and proportionate measures to ensure the functioning of agreements concluded with rightholders and to prevent the availability on their services of content identified by rightholders in cooperation with the service providers”EU and UK trade groups including IMPALA and the Music Publishers Association hailed the vote on Article 13 as "historic."[IMPALA Statement] European Parliament gives the thumbs up on copyright reform – Great result for Europe’s creators -> https://t.co/KUP6x7OMRc pic.twitter.com/PAF0LTrNFM
— IMPALA (@IMPALAMusic) September 12, 2018
The #CopyrightDirective was adopted today! It’s a landslide win for European culture and democracy, with 438 votes in favor, 226 against and 39 abstentions! #EuropeForCreators #Europe #Culture https://t.co/bAJZ5rOnmt pic.twitter.com/CvzUMpe2jq
— Europe For Creators (@EUForCreators) September 12, 2018