Tag: CII

  • Indian telecom and broadband take centre-stage at CII event

    Indian telecom and broadband take centre-stage at CII event

    MUMBAI: Telecom and broadband will be taking a centre-stage at Telecom and Broadband Summit and Expo 2006, organised by Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) at the MMRDA Grounds, Mumbai on 23 and 24 November.

    This year’s theme is: India – The emerging telecom hub.

    The event has been planned to be a platform bringing together the entire telecom and broadband industry under one floor, as they display some of their technologies, discuss the business opportunities explored and unfold the current issues and future challenges in the sector. The event will have three main sections: the exhibition, the summit and the CEO’s round table, asserts an official release.

    The exhibition will focus on the growth of broadband connectivity and other new technologies in areas such as cellular technology, wireless network, broadcasting, etc, as well as their impact on this emerging market that is rapidly growing in global significance. The event emphasises on the impact of emerging technologies in the real life business environment.

    The summit will focus on mobile technology, business applications, next generation networks and broadband communications. It will focus and examine the opportunities existing for business to work in India and to achieve its goal in Telecom sector now and in long term, with the aim of accelerating its developments of convergent technologies and services.

    The CEO’s round table will be one of the highlights of the event, where the industry’s top minds will gather to deliberate on key strategic issues, adds the release.

    The event will have sessions on:

    – E-governance
    – WiMAX
    – Broadband deployment
    – NGN
    – Mobile telephony
    – Billing and CRM
    – Digital entertainment

    The visitors will primarily be engineers, technicians, buyers, production managers and sales managers from a diverse range of sectors including broadband and telecom.

  • International products and technology innovations to be unveiled at Wire & Cable India 2006

    International products and technology innovations to be unveiled at Wire & Cable India 2006

    MUMBAI: With Prime Minister Manmohan Singh having assigned priority status to infrastructure, a strong impetus has been provided to construction, power and telecom sectors. This, in turn, is giving a major boost to the wire and cable industries, and the related input technologies, equipment and products.

    All these key aspects of this high growth potential segment will be presented this week at Wire & Cable India 2006, which will be held from November 16 to 18, 2006 at MMRDA Grounds, Bandra Kurla Complex.
    Organized by the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII), this flagship event will feature over 120 exhibitors from 20 countries, showcasing the latest products and world-class technology innovations. Around 4000 trade visitors from India and its neighboring countries are expected to attend the three-day event.

    With 50% of the exhibitor profile comprising International players from Germany , Italy, Spain, Japan and China and Korea , Wire & Cable India 2006 will provide a common industry platform for meeting key clients and partners from across the globe in a comprehensive, cost-effective format.

    Wire & Cable India 2006 is exclusively for materials, machinery and accessories for the production of wires & cables, optical fibre cables, fasteners, springs, wire ropes and other wire products. A variety of finished products including wires will also be displayed.

    The exhibitors will unveil the most modern wire manufacturing and finishing machinery, spring manufacturing machinery, cable and stranding machines, process technology tools, process technology materials, lubricants, measuring and controlling technology, process monitoring systems, quality assurance and measuring systems, drive and control technology, “finished product” testing system, all types of wires, cables, wire rods, bright, bars, sheet metal and specialty wires.

    Visitors will primarily be engineers, technicians, buyers, production managers and sales managers from a diverse range of sectors including the wires, cables, automotive supply, electricals, aerospace supply, electrical engineering and electronics, telecommunications, computer manufacturing, chemicals and construction.

  • CII to organise a Big Picture conference at intl film festival in Goa

    CII to organise a Big Picture conference at intl film festival in Goa

    MUMBAI: On the occasion of the International Film Festival of India (IFFI) in Goa which kicks off later this month the Confederation of Indian Industries (CII) will organise a conference Big Picture from 22-23 November 2006.

    The conference is dedicated to the changing face of Indian cinema and envisions to provide direction for catalysing growth of the Indian film entertainment space. Focussed on the content and financing aspects of the film business with individual sessions on film marketing, communication, co-production and new technologies, the CII endeavours to open new vistas through a series of keynotes, panel discussions and case studies, presenting growth opportunities and strategies to overcome challenges facing the Indian film industry. The conference provides an opportunity to network with the key executives from different organisations.

    The speakers include Silicon Image, USA president and CEO Steve Tirado, E&Y global media and entertainment head John Nendick,
    Kuwait National Cinema Co head Hisham Alghanim, Motion Pictures Association senior VP and regional director – Asia Pacific region Mike Ellis.

    There will be knowledge sessions on home entertainment, financing, mobile entertainment revenues, digital technology and co productions. There is so much talk about the emerging mobile entertainment in the small screen. Where are we headed and what’s the opportunity in this space? That is one of the questions this seminar will tackle.

    Around 180 movies will be screened over 11 days of the festival. The films that will be shown include the critically acclaimed Babel with Brad Pitt and Cate Blanchett that could get a Best Picture Oscar nomination next year. It closes the festival. Volver from Spanish maestro Pedro Almodovar is the opening film of IFFI 2006. The country focus
    this year at IFFI will be Argentina. A retrospective of Spanish film actor Javier Bardem will also be part of the action.

    The majority of the Indian Panorama movies are available for overseas distribution and theatrical rights. Visitors can can meet the right holders at the Film Bazaar, The Indian Panorama section would feature 20 films, including Madhur Bhandarkar’s Corporate, Girish Kasaravalli’s Kannada film Nayi Neralu, K. Satyanarayan’s Telugu film Hope, Madhu Kaithapuram’s Malayalam film Ekantham and Cheran’s Dhavmai Dhavamirrunthu.

    In the cinema of the world section films that will be screened will include the American comedy Borat
    Cultural learnings of America for make benefit glorious nation of Kazakhs. Then there is the Italian film Le Caimanby from Nanni Moretti. The film tackles Italian politics and love as seen through the eyes of a failing film producer. From France there is Little Jerusalem by Kairn Albou The story focuses on sisters Laura (a philosophy student falling in love with an exiled Algerian Muslim) and Matilde (a devout mother of four torn by her husband’s infidelities).

    Following her characters from ancient religious rituals to contemporary situations, Albou vividly brings to life the challenges made to religious faith by secular society.

    This year the festival will feature a special retrospective of Prithviraj Kapoor’s films, and a special screening of Richard Attenborough’s oscar winner Gandhi will also be held to mark the centenary of Satyagraha movement launched by Mahatma Gandhi.

    Goa Chief Minister Shri Pratapsing Rane said, ‘Goa is slated to be India’s next entertainment super-hub and IFFI 2006 is spearheading its growing recognition as an International cinema destination. This year IFFI 2006 synergises global participation, high profile glamour, world-class entertainment and internationally applauded films. Add to that a beautiful locale and the frills and fancies that come with a red carpet event and you have the perfect concoction of fun, glitz and quality entertainment’.

    Entertainment Society of Goa (ESG) CEO Nandini Paliwal says, ‘IFFI 2006 will offer the best of world cinema. With acclaimed films from across the globe, the festival represents a kaleidoscope of cultures and creates a medium to appreciate and share cinematic excellence. In fact, ESG is in the process of making a yearly event calendar encouraging associated ventures with international brands in the field of cinema and will work towards making Goa the entertainment heart of the country”.

  • CII, Lawquest release White Paper on Copyright and Emerging Technologies

    CII, Lawquest release White Paper on Copyright and Emerging Technologies

    MUMBAI: The Confederation of Indian Industries (CII) and Lawquest have released a White Paper on Copyright and Emerging technologies. The paper discusses issues relating to copyright on content that may be used in mobile phones.

    LawQuest partner Poorvi Chothani who wrote the Paper notes that digital technology has made it easier to copy content. “People feel that once they buy digital content they can use it anywhere and anyhow. The customer’s attitude is “If I buy a downloadable movie I want to be able to play it in a number of places. My Mobile Phone. My Mac. My PC. My Video Pod 2 (for lack of a better term).” This is a flavour of what consumers are demanding and will demand in the future “I bought it so I own it, so I can use it how I like, when I like and where I like!””

    Moreover, the paper notes that technology is making it possible, whether use of content on these instruments or media is authorised or not. Rapidly changing technology enables the same content to be used in different ways on mobile phones, an iPod; in an online database retrieval systems in whole or in part on a CD Rom; on MP3 players; in whole or in part on a DVD on the Internet; on a website on the World Wide Web; for personal use and/or for podcasting or video casting; on an electronic bulletin board such as those included with Internet Service Providers; or on a blog initiated by an individual.

    Whatever be the medium, once a work that is entitled to copyright, is placed or used on any of the media, described above, there will be issues pertaining to copyright ownership, royalty, license, infringement and plagiarism, to name a few. This requires an examination of what can be copyrighted.

    The paper notes that copyright statutes were originally enacted for literary property, extended to other forms of creativity and as technologies change as an Intellectual Property Right (IPR) has been increasingly commodified, rendered easily transferable and in many cases susceptible to easy infringement. However, the speed with which technology evolves, a clear and timely definition of the ultimate bundle of rights, which is increasingly divisible into thinner and often ephemeral slivers, is almost imposgible.

    Since innovators cannot foresee all its future uses it is impossible to expect technology, judges and legislators to anticipate future protection and enforcement of copyrights. This is further complicated by the common perception that what is ‘freely’ available on the Internet is ‘free’ to use. This is based on the rationale that if it was not to be used free of cost it would not be ‘freely’ available or ‘free’ further exacerbates the problems. It is also worth noting that there is no copyright on an idea. There is however copyright on the expression of an idea.

    The paper looks at the different kinds of content available for mobile and internet and copyrights herein. A few of them are:

    WalIpapers: A wallpaper is an image used as a background on a computer screen. Wallpapers for the mobile phones are an extension of this term and could qualify as an artistic work for copyright protection notes the Paper. The right to a copyrighted pictorial, graphic, or sculptural work in copies includes the right to reproduce the work in or on any kind of article. Therefore, the right to create a “wallpaper” of a painting, for example, would lie with the artist that created the original painting or the subsequent owner of such a right.

    The Paper offers the case of the Daily Calendar Supplying Bureau vs. United Concern. The Court, when examining the copyright in a picture of a Hindu deity in a human form, found that ideas cannot be copyrighted but the skill and originality of thought and form of expression can be. Therefore, a “wallpaper,” where the artistic work shows “skill and originality of thought and form of expression” could qualify for copyright protection and can be exploited by the original author or the owner/licensee of the copyright. Further, under existing law a “wallpaper” may be protected as a derivative work if it consists of a contribution of original material to a pre existing work so as to recast, transform or adapt the preexisting work.

    It should be noted that in order to qualify for a separate copyright as a derivative work, the additional matter injected in a prior work or the manner of rearranging or otherwise transforming a prior work, must constitute more than a minimal contribution .

    Some websites that provide downloaclable wallpapers bring to the notice of customers that the sites contain wallpapers that are copyrighted, and cannot be distorted or distributed without prior permission. When sections of a film or other artistic work are used as wallpapers they would need to be authorised by the original copyrights owner. Any use in contravention of these provisions would amount to infringement.

    iTunes: As readers probably know downloads from Apples’ iTunes online music store is a popular source of purchasing legitimate content which will now be available on certain mobile phones. The problem is that control of copyright on content downloaded from this site or similar sites is difficult. Initial downloads are monitored by digital rights management systems.

    However, there is very little control on subsequent copies. iTunes does place contractual obligations on its users, and its terms of usage restriction on access and download from the site, which include that their “Products” may be used only “for personal, noncommercial use”, on “five Apple authorized devices at any time.” The user is further entitled to “export, burn (if applicable) or copy Products solely for personal, noncommercial use” and is explicitly “not entitled to burn Video Products.” In addition the user is “authorised to burn an audio playlist up to seven times” and can “store Products from up to five different Accounts on certain devices,

    Similar contractual restrictions are found on some other sites, but the challenge lies in the enforcement and monitoring of such restrictions. An Indian court might uphold such restrictions and grant relief provided the owner could prove infringement. Other service providers, including mobile operators could introduce such contractual obligations but are likely to find it difficult to enforce and monitor.

    Ring Tones : Many portals and cellular operators offer ring tones and caller tunes, but whether all of them offer licensed products is questionable. Since many of these ringtones are music notes of the original songs, the service provider needs to take the permission from the concerned company or the person under the Copyright Act. Anyone providing them without the consent of the “rights owner” does so illegally.

    Sound recordings of the original track to be used as ringtones would require licensing. The offer of “samples” of sound recordings by cellular operators to customers may require different treatment. Since this allows a customer to ‘sample’ or ‘try out’ the product before purchasing it. An analogy in the physical world would be that of a shop that offers several products and allows its customers to pick up, touch or feel objects before he/she makes a purchase. Whether such “samples” should be subject to licensing or not is the matter of great concern to mobile phone operators and other service providers.

    In addition, “samples” created so that they can be only heard on a computer with a sound card and the full version of the ring tone can be downloaded only after paying for it might be a viable solution. This would, of course, limit the market penetration due to the disproportion between the number of mobile users and the lack of access to computers for many of them.

    Mobile Phone Games: These are usually downloaded via the mobile operator’s network, but sometimes via other technology. Games are developed using various computer related technologies and software programming, in conjunction with different hardware and vivid graphics. The artistic graphics, which add to a Game’s appearance, is an important part of its success. Copyright does not protect the idea or concept behind a Game, nor does it protect the information as to how the Game is to be played (although it may protect a particular written expression of such rules). Ideas, information and styles are not protected by copyright. However, the underlying software and the graphics of the game would be entitled to copyright, as literary and artistic work respectively.

    Under the Copyright Act as amended in 1994, “Literary work” now includes computer programmes, table and compilations including computer data bases. According to section 14 of this Act, it is illegal to make or distribute copies of copyrighted software without proper or specific authorization. These rights are only available to the owner of the copyright. The only exceptions provided by section 52 of the Act, which allows a backup copy purely as a temporary protection against loss, distribution or damage to the original copy and certain “non commercial personal use.” In view of this any unauthorised uses or downloads of Games would amount to infringement of the owner’s copyrights as a literary and/or artistic work.

    Of course, there are several issues linked to the very ‘mobility’ and transferability’ of the medium mobile phones. When Games can be permanently saved on mobile phones, and the phone is sold to another individual the Game would also be transferred, thereby adding value to the mobile phone. Will this amount to ‘non commercial personal use’? Under US law this might be covered by the ‘first sale doctrine,’ which allows the purchaser to transfer (i.e. sell or give away) a particular, legally acquired copy of protected work without permission once it has been obtained.

    The first sale doctrine on whether this privilege should be extended from physical to digital goods has been actively debated in the US. This was further analyzed by the US Copyright Office, in a study required as part of the 1998 Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). The DMCA did not extend the first sale doctrine to digital content per se but even the US law regarding sale of devices with copyrighted content remain ambiguous.

    Fife Sharing: The Paper notes that file sharing on the Internet is rampant in India. With the enhanced availability of broadband this is likely to grow. The liability of Internet Service Providers (ISPs) for copyright infringement is not expressly covered by the Indian Copyright Act. The Indian Information Technology Act, 2000 exempts ISPs from liability if they can prove that they had no knowledge of the occurrence of the alleged act, and that they had taken sufficient steps to prevent a violation.

    However, if the ISP fails to take steps within a reasonable time to remove the infringing material from the network or fails to prevent infringement of copyright in the above circumstances he may not be entitled to the plea of ignorance of infringement.

    Last year while ruling in the famous Grokster Case, the US Supreme Court had exposed the file sharing companies to potential liability. It ruled that they were found to intentionally induce or encourage the theft of copyrighted works and could be held liable .24 Following this decision, the US entertainment industry sent notices last fall to seven file sharing software companies warning them to shut down or prepare to face lawsuits. Some services shut down while others settled with the entertainment industry with a view to launching similar licensed services.

    Ripping: Generally, an individual that makes a legal purchase of copyrighted material, like a CD can legitimately use the contents of that CD on any CD player. The very nature of the medium permits its use on devices like PCs that make many copies of the digital information carrying the material as an individual listens to music or uses other content.

    Is this automatic copying infringement? Whether any copies of the material on the CD made on a laptop, PC, or iPod for his/her personal rule is unlicensed use or not remains unchallenged at present. It seems that as long as the material is used for the individual’s benefit it would be licensed. However, when the same individual uses that material for commercial gain, to a larger audience, it would seem to be unlicensed use.

    The Paper adds that it is not correct for users to presume that, when one buys a CD, one has bought a license for the music on the CD. Instead, the buyer has only acquired the ownership of a tangible copy and everything else he/she does with that recording may fall under some form of fair dealing, if confined to the individual user.

    Then there is the question of reusing old recordings with technologies that were not contemplated at the time when the original was recorded on another medium like vinyl. One may wish to copy analogue content, already paid for, onto an iPod or to a mobile phone. Does one need to purchase it again from iTunes even though one might have paid for it several times on different media?

    Converting it from analogue to digital can be quite tedious and to have it done professionally may be expensive. The convenience of downloading digital content from iTunes, or similar portals, might encourage the purchase of the content once again even though one owns an analogue copy.

    Suggested Changes: The Paper states that copyright is a balancing act where public interest safeguards, the idea expression dichotomy and the fair use privilege need to be balanced with the right itself. In view of this certain changes to help protect these rights and to allow the public to have access to copyrighted work in an equitable manner are needed.

    To help protect rights, India could pass preemptive laws in keeping with the European Union Copyright Directive (The EU Directive) which provides for the protection of “rights management information”, which is metadata such as identifying “watermarks” which is combined with a work whereby the EU Directive prohibits the removal or modification of rights management information.

    However the controversial fallout of this is that as the tracking information monitors illegal users there are issues of infringing user privacy, as it would be illegal to write or use software to strip out the information in an attempt to preserve the user’s privacy rights. India will have to balance these issues when considering similar legislation.

    In addition, India could emulate the Technical Protective Measures under the EU Directive, which requires member states to provide adequate legal protection against the circumvention of any effective technological measures that are introduced with the objective of protecting copyrights.30 A measure is deemed to be “effective” if the use of a protected work or other subject matter is controlled by the rightholders through application of an access control or protection process, such as encryption, scrambling or other transformation of the work or other subject matter or a copy control mechanism, which achieves the protection objective.

    Another recommednation is to increase the penalty levied in the case of copyright infringement. In the US penalties levied are far higher. Along with a notice of copyright ownership, required by the Copyright Act ’32 it might be a deterrent to include information about penalties and criminal punishments applicable to copyright infringement, similar to those that are required by federal law in the US. On US DVDs for instance there is an FBI warning at the beginning.

    To protect public interest, Indian law could introduce flexible provisions to govern fair use. The US courts have used principles of ‘fair use’ in the interest of promoting copyright’s overall policy goals and is not rigidly applied; instead the four factors are applied in a balanced fashion on a case by case basis to arrive at an equitable result. A flexible application of ‘fair use’ instead of the present list of rigid provisions pertaining to ‘fair dealing’ under the Indian Copyright Act, 1957, might lead to a more equitable balance of copyrights, their use and ownership. For example a ‘fair use’ of “samples” of sound recordings could be exempted from licensing requirements to enable the public to check whether they really want access to the product.

    Free “samples” may be subject to size restrictions; for example a free “sample” of a sound recording could be restricted to 30 seconds of play time (as is the case with amazon.com and some other sites), and mobile operators or other content providers could be precluded from charging their customers for “samples” because they would not have to pay royalties for use of such “samples.”

  • CII workshop seeks to address copyright issues in the Indian entertainment sector

    MUMBAI: The Confederation of Indian Industries (CII) will orgabnise the second edition of its legal workshop series Technology, Value Adds & The Law on 13 September 2006.

    The aim is to address copyright issues in the Indian entertainment sector. The workshop will focus on copyright issues with respect to new technologies and value add services (Vas).
    At the workshop the CII-Lawquest legal paper Copyrights & Emerging Technologies will be released.
    There will also be a panel discussion. Today technology is evolving at great speed with it increasing the importance of electronic and digital media. At the same time, the innovators cannot foresee all its future uses, which calls for urgent attention of copyright owners towards electronic and digital rights issues.

    The session will be moderated by Tata Teleservices VP Vas Pankaj Sethi. The speakers are Star senior VP – interactive services Viren Popli, Hutchison Essar VP vas SP Narayanan, ,
    UTV VP international Ashoka Holla and Raj Tilak who is a consultant
     

     

  • CII throws producers networking party at Cannes

    CII throws producers networking party at Cannes

    CANNES: At the Cannes Film Mart, the Confederation of Indian Industries (CII) threw a producers networking party yesterday in the International Village. Attended by many Indians from all over the world, the party also had some producers and distributors from Canada in attendance.

    The Indian brigade who attended comprised Sudhir Mishra, Ruchika Narain, Krishna Shah, Amit Bhatnagar, Sahara One’s Sandeep Bhargava, Celluloid Dreams’ Kanad Kashyap and Divya Seengal, iDream CEO Ashish Bhatnagar and Rohit Sharma, Aditya Bhattacharya and Saregama CEO Subroto Chattopadhya.

    The party, a good initiative from CII, provided a chance for Indians the world over to network together. What would help is if many more international producers, financiers, distributors, buyers would also make it to such parties.