
Ireland has taken a
regulatory approach to intellectual property, passing a comprehensive Copyright
Act, which contains extensive provisions relating to the infringement
intellectual property rights. It covers
not only the traditional areas that are dealt within copyright situations, but
also takes into account the impact that rapid improvement in technology has had
on the area.
According to the Business
Software Alliance (BSA), the software piracy rate in Ireland is 42%, up 1% from
2001. BSA interprets this piracy rate
as resulting in revenue losses of almost $40 million for the Irish software
industry. A piracy rate of 42% translates into almost one in every two business
software programs installed in Ireland is an illegal copy.[1]
There is no requirement in
Irish or EU law to register copyright.
Once a work qualifies for copyright protection, copyright subsists in
it. Copyright law protects literary works,
artistic works, musical works, films and sound recordings, among others.
Computer programs are
protected as literary works.
Accordingly, a computer program in its source code, object code and any
other form is protected by copyright, provided that it is original. The standard of originality required is low
and essentially requires that the program is not a reproduction of another
program.
Copyright will subsist under
Irish copyright law for the lifetime of the author and 70 years after the
author’s death, regardless of the date when the work was published or otherwise
lawfully made available to the public.
The Irish Copyright and
Related Rights Act of 2000 updated Irish copyright law to take account of
many changes that have taken place since the Copyright Act, 1963. The Act consolidates most of the previous
legislation and implements a number of EU Directives. The Act attempts, in its terminology to be as technology-neutral
as possible, so as to ensure certainty in the law in the future.[2]
The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and
Numbers (ICANN) is the non-profit corporation that was formed to assume
responsibility for the Internet Protocol (IP) address space allocation,
protocol parameter assignment, domain name system management, and root server
system management functions previously performed under U.S. Government contract
by IANA and other entities.
The domain registry for the
country code TLD “.it” was originally assigned to the University College Dublin
by ICANN with the approval of the national administration.[3] The responsibility for the registry is
currently with the Ireland Domain Registry (IEDR), which is not a governing or
regulatory body but a private sector non-profit company, and provides the “.ie”
TLD as a public service.[4] The IEDR applied to have the “.ie” TLD
re-delegated to it from ICANN, and as of October 9, 2002, the Irish Department
of Communications has not yet decided whether to re-delegate the “.ie” TLD to a
private sector company by open competition or to a designated public body. Under section 31 of the Electronic Commerce
Act, the Minister of Public Enterprise has the ultimate control over the
regulation of domain names.
Digital signature laws are
contained in the Electronic Commerce Act of 2000. The Act permits the use of digital signatures provided that the
person of a public body or the public body requesting the signature consents to
the use of an electronic signature and it is in accordance with information
technology and procedural requirements.
The law requires that any digital signature be an advanced electronic
signature based on a qualified certificate issued by an accredited certification
service provider or that it is created by a secured signature creation
device. Electronic signatures are also
permitted where they are required to be witnessed provided that the document to
be signed indicates that it is to be witnessed, that the signature to be
witnessed and the witnesses’ signature are advanced electronic signatures based
on a qualified certificate.[5]
The Data Protection Act
of 1988 governs the use of personal data in Ireland. The Act has been supplemented by a number of
European Directives that address the processing of individuals data and free
movement of such data.[6]
A working group
investigating illegal and harmful use of the Internet recommended a
self-regulatory system by service providers rather than censorship to tackle
problems of illegal use of the Internet.[7] The Irish Government established an Internet
Advisory Board as a non-statutory body to research issues involving the
Internet and provide reports to the government on any findings.[8]
[7] Department of Justice, Equality and Law Reform, Illegal and Harmful Use of the Internet, First Report of the Working Group. http://www.justice.ie/80256996005F3617/vluFileCode2/flJWOD4RYHA4/$file/intrep.pdf