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EU rules we can get live footie on the cheap from abroad

by Scott Bicheno on 4 October 2011, 12:47

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European champions

The case of the pub landlady who was showing live Premier League football in her pub via a Greek broadcaster, which was much cheaper than Sky, and who was thus subject to legal action from the Premier League, has been ruled on by the European Court of Justice.

Karen Murphy, landlady of the Red, White and Blue pub in Portsmouth, brought the matter to the ECJ's attention when she got a legal letter last year. The case hinges on whether it's within EU law to prohibit people from buying services from only domestic suppliers, and additionally what the copyright implications are for broadcasting this content to third parties.

The ECJ ruling today is only in Murphy's favour to some degree, but seems to set legal precedent that is potentially even more significant than defined by the original parameters of the case. In summary, the ECJ has ruled that national laws which prohibit the import and sale of foreign premium TV decoder cards cannot be justified under European law. You can read the full ruling here.

Furthermore, exclusive licenses that prohibit the supply of decoder cards to people outside a specific country run contrary to competition law. And the Premier League doesn't even own the footie matches in terms of copyright - only the graphics, logos, highlights, etc that the Premier League embellishes the coverage with.

The only good news for the Premier League, Sky and footballers' salaries is that showing the footie in a pub constitutes a ‘communication to the public' for which the permission of the copyright holder is required. So, in principle, as long as the Premier League saturates the coverage it makes available to all broadcasters with sufficient branded crap, it can still enforce its will on pub landlords.

Where this leaves things regarding domestic viewing, however, is still very much up in the air. This ruling seems to say there's nothing to stop any of us paying for cheaper foreign broadcasts if we want and, presumably, the Premier League and its biggest customer - Sky - will appeal this as far as they can. We had yet to hear back from Sky following a request for comment at time of writing.

 



HEXUS Forums :: 13 Comments

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Appologies in advance for the caps but…

BEST NEWS EVER!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Kicked sky into touch a while ago as I was sick of paying through the nose for sports I do not watch. The day they removed the season pass was the day they started down a slippery slope.

Glad to see this ruling. Now, off to see who I can get it from!
We have Polish satellite and the in-laws pay something like £5 per month and we get lots of English Sport including the Premier football games, F1 and cricket. Only down side is the commentary is in Polish most of the time.
All these zoning/region/exclusivity deals/demands/crony laws should be ripped up and thrown away. It's all a load of anti-competitive inflationary hokum.
So, how can I, legally, get the entire F1 season next year without going through Sky? I've no wish to pay for their sports package for one item.
pauldarkside
So, how can I, legally, get the entire F1 season next year without going through Sky? I've no wish to pay for their sports package for one item.

Might need to wait a bit to see which overseas companies will be buying it…..I'm guessing they might wait for this season to finish beforehand.

The biggest part of this ruling is that it would mean they now cannot block us from using TV operators streaming services……until now you could tune in with a satelite dish (and of course, you are limited to satelites in your area of the sky) but because of laws they would block certain foreign IPs from using the online features……..so the choice may end up being huge.

Just to put it in perspective and show why sky and espn will fight it….

Before Ofcom decided the football had to be split up for “the benefit of the viewing public” - I paid £50 per year for a season pass.

Now, to get the same games I have to subscribe to Sky Sports 1, 2, 3 and 4 AND ESPN for 9 months a year…around £180

For around the same price, you can get a Saudi satelite network that shows a ton of stations, including EVERY SINGLE PREMIERSHIP GAME LIVE. Thats all 10 (or so) LIVE EVERY WEEK. Instead of the 2-3 you get via Sky/ESPN.

And they wonder why people are circumventing them……