European Court of Justice

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  • THE HAGUE, NETHERLANDS - JUNE 24: The Apple logo hangs outside its store on June 24, 2020 in The Hague, Netherlands. (Photo by Yuriko Nakao/Getty Images)

    Apple and Ireland win European appeal over multi-billion tax deal

    by 
    Daniel Cooper
    Daniel Cooper
    07.15.2020

    Europe's second-highest court has ruled in favor of Apple and Ireland.

  • Nicolas Economou/NurPhoto via Getty Images

    Poland challenges EU's new copyright law over censorship fears

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    05.26.2019

    The EU's contentious copyright law is already facing some opposition from one of its existing members. Poland has submitted a complaint to the European Court of Justice arguing that the law's requirement for filtering content had the potential for censorship. This would violate both the Polish constitution as well as EU treaties, Deputy Foreign Minister Konrad Szymanski told TVP Info.

  • UK High Court rules ISPs to block Pirate Bay, forgets it ain't the boss anymore

    by 
    Daniel Cooper
    Daniel Cooper
    04.30.2012

    The High Court has ruled that British ISPs must block web-browsing citizens from accessing the infamous Pirate Bay. The controversial ruling comes just six months after the European Court of Justice (a superior court) declared that companies like Sky and TalkTalk were protected against injunctions to block, filter or monitor internet traffic for that purpose. Virgin Media told the BBC that it would comply, before sensibly adding that censorship measures like this are ineffective in the long term.

  • Do we have the right to be 'forgotten' on Google? Spain asks ECJ to investigate

    by 
    Sharif Sakr
    Sharif Sakr
    03.05.2012

    Google has already tasted European hot water over its revised privacy policy, and soon the European Court of Justice (ECJ) may expand its remit to consider other related issues too. Spanish judges are asking the top court to consider complaints from 100 Spaniards who wish to have their names removed from news articles and websites. Among the complainants are a plastic surgeon who wants to delete archived references to a botched operation, and a man who appears on the Google News aggregator for alleged non-payment of social security. Google itself told Reuters that it supports the "right to be forgotten," but only if it's applied to search engines "in a way that protects both the right to privacy and the right to free expression." If only life was as simple as Pay N' Spray.

  • Pub owner Karen Murphy wins appeal in TV-decoder battle against Sky

    by 
    Edgar Alvarez
    Edgar Alvarez
    02.25.2012

    It's been a few months since we last heard about the legal kerfuffle between Sky and pub owner Karen Murphy. In case you've been out of the loop, it all started when the UK broadcasting giant went after Murphy for using what was deemed to be an illegal method for screening FA Premier League matches at her, or any, bar. The Greece Nova decoder, which is considered a legal bit in the privacy of your own home, was helping Murphy bypass Sky's £480 ($740) required monthly fees for bar owners and saving her over £350 ($555) in the process. Now, over $260,000 in legal fees later, Mrs. Murphy's conviction has been overturned by the relentless High Court. The ruling allows her to keep using the troubled Greek gadget to screen any EPL game without facing any troubles -- except the occasional drunken fracas. So, now you know where to go the next time you're in Portsmouth and want to catch a good ol' footy match.

  • European Court: It's free trade for a reason, dummy

    by 
    Daniel Cooper
    Daniel Cooper
    10.04.2011

    Primer: The EU is many nations with a single market, if wine is cheaper in France, a German can simply purchase it there. It's why Apple was censured back in 2007 for territorial iTunes stores that stopped people from shopping around. Anything sold in Europe on a per-country basis hangs within a grey area of free trade. That includes what many call "The Greatest Show on Earth" -- The FA Premier League. Sky, the Premier League's media partner in Europe charges £480 ($740) a month for pub and bar owners to screen their matches in their establishments. That's what prompted cash-strapped publican Karen Murphy to buy a decoder box and card from Greece's Nova company for only £118 ($180) a month. Following a legal challenge that has lasted nearly 7 years, the European Court of Justice has ruled that whilst it's legal (or at least, not illegal) to own a foreign decoder in your own home, it is illegal for pubs and other public spaces to use them on copyright grounds. This means that many home users could snap up cheaper European services and erode the value of Sky's £1bn ($1.5bn) Premier League deal, which would make the greatest show on earth just a little less great.