Acknowledgements.- Introduction.- Responsibility Rules of Copyright Enforcement on Hosting Platforms.- Active or Passive: A Threshold for Hosting ISPs to Enter a “Safe Harbor”.- Hosting ISPs’ Secondary Liability under the Roof of “Safe Harbor” Provisions.- Notice-and-takedown procedures in the US, the EU and China.- Disclosure of Internet Users’ Identities in the US, EU and China.- Self-regulation of Copyright Enforcement on Hosting Platforms.- Summary and conclusion.- Bibliography.- Summary.
Jie Wang (China P. R. 1985) is Assistant Researcher at the KoGuan Law School, Shanghai Jiaotong University. He holds an LL.B. degree (Zhongnan University of Economics and Law, China, 2007) and a Master degree in Intellectual Property Law (Zhongnan University of Economics and Law, China, 2010). Jie Wang spent about two years doing his research at Max Planck Institute for Innovation and Competition as a scholarship holder, and received his degree of Ph.D. at Maastricht University (the Netherlands, 2016).
This book employs a comparative approach to comprehensively discuss hosting ISPs’ responsibilities for copyright infringement in the US, EU and China. In particular, it details how the current responsibility rules should be interpreted or revised so as to provide hosting ISPs maximum freedom to operate in these jurisdictions.
In addition to examining relevant state regulations, the book assesses self-regulation norms agreed upon between copyright owners and hosting ISPs, and concludes that self-regulation is better suited to preserving hosting ISPs’ freedom to operate. The results of this study will be interesting for a broad readership, including academics and practitioners whose work involves hosting ISPs’ copyright responsibilities.