A/HRC/58/60
60.
In any case, it is up to source and heritage communities to prove that their digitalized
heritage falls within the above-mentioned exceptions so that they can be in control of its use.
Clearance of the rights of the source or heritage community from any copyright restrictions
takes time and involves costs, which may make their claims unfeasible. Their claims may
also be unsuccessful in the case of orphan works (i.e. where copyright owners cannot be
identified or located), resulting in the “locking up” of culturally relevant material.
61.
Obtaining copyright for the source or heritage community over the original or the
digital form of the heritage also poses problems. Apart from the cost and time barriers,
conventional intellectual property frameworks tend to prioritize individual ownership, often
failing to recognize the collective nature of many cultural heritage and living practices. For
Indigenous Peoples in particular, protection mechanisms must respect collective ownership
so that Indigenous Peoples can maintain sovereignty over their knowledge. Indigenous
heritage is often excluded from conventional intellectual property frameworks, leaving it
vulnerable to unauthorized use. 82 Despite the good practice to not impose copyright on
heritage, even if collective ownership becomes possible and the difficulties that communities
face are overcome, the digitalization process would only secure copyright for the source or
heritage community for a specific period. Once the period of exclusive economic and moral
rights was over, copyright law would no longer protect the “moral and material” interests of
the “authors”, leaving the source communities without legal protection over their inherited
cultural expressions because they are now open to all.
62.
Overall, market actors are much more likely to use intellectual property regimes to
impose limitations on access to and use of digitalized products by all, even source and
heritage communities. Limited attempts have been made to address this imbalance. Article 14
of the European Union directive on copyright and related rights in the digital single market
provides that there will be no new copyright on reproductions of visual art once the original
copyright has expired, but it does not apply to all works. This directive also permits
exceptions for the digitization of copyrighted works by cultural institutions for preservation
purposes.
63.
The protection of authorship represents an important safeguard for the recognition of
the work of creators and is compatible with the protection of the moral and materials interests
of creators. However, it is very evident and well documented that copyright rules can violate
cultural rights. To ensure that the right balance is found, a cultural rights approach to
copyright needs to be applied and recognized by intellectual property systems and
organizations at the national, regional and international levels. In its general comment No. 17
(2005), the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights provides important guidance
in this regard.
64.
A complementary mechanism would be the establishment of licensing systems in
international agreements to ensure fair compensation and benefit-sharing for communities
when their cultural heritage is digitized. Cultural protocols, in which guidance is provided on
how cultural materials can be shared, the terms under which they can be shared and the
obligations of digital platforms to engage with and represent diverse cultural expressions in
a fair and respectful manner, have been initiated and are gaining momentum. However, these
practices must be followed by more generic, better regulated multilateral agreements
encompassing the processes related to digitalized heritage.
65.
Despite years of scholarship and interventions that acknowledge the problems, there
are still no specific and agreed global standards that articulate the intellectual property regime
in a way that is compatible with international human rights standards. Differing national laws
and practices result in inconsistent protection and accessibility of digitized heritage,
disproportionately affecting marginalized communities and large areas of the world. In recent
years, the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) has considered the need to
account for both cultural rights and intellectual property in matters relating to traditional
knowledge, but its scope is too limited to provide for a universal approach to the heritage of
all. There needs to be a sui generis system in which the collective nature of cultural
expressions, as opposed to individual ownership, is recognized. WIPO could develop, or at
82
16
A/HRC/28/57, para. 58.
GE.25-01705