Probing into Copyright Infringement by Sampling: from USA to EU Cover Image

Probing into Copyright Infringement by Sampling: from USA to EU
Probing into Copyright Infringement by Sampling: from USA to EU

Author(s): Kamrul Faisal
Subject(s): Commercial Law
Published by: European Scientific Institute
Keywords: Sampling; fair use; de minimis; United States, Germany

Summary/Abstract: Sampling has become a part and parcel of the musical industry in the postmodern culture. With the booming of the hip-hop and electronic genre of music, sampling revolution has been brought to the industry which is responsible for the emergence of copyright infringement issues in both alleged and substantiated forms. Sampling founded its origin in the United States, where the legal system seemed to be efficient in dealing with the balancing of competing rights between the intellectual property right holders and the users of those respective properties. It took almost three decades to the US legal system to develop a cross and check mechanism or licensing model which checks the permissibility of sampling through its own established rules comprised of law, doctrines and case laws. Now, similar issues have been referred to the European Court of Justice by the German Federal Supreme Court to determine the probability of EU copyright law’s allowing sampling. The question urges the enthusiasm of investigating the existing legal framework of the EU, prima facie, sought strong protection against the right holders to leave any room for permitting sampling. This paper particularly focused to show how the US Fair Use and de minimis fits to the EU legal frame to answer the derived questions asked by the German court to the ECJ which will pave the way of licensing mechanism for sampling in the EU.

  • Issue Year: 6/2019
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 30-46
  • Page Count: 17
  • Language: English