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Massive Online Micro Justice: Towards Global ADR Mechanisms for Disputes with Internet Platforms?

Lundi, 17 septembre, 2018 13:00à14:30
Chancellor Day Hall NCDH 316, 3644 rue Peel, Montreal, QC, H3A 1W9, CA

Le Centre des politiques en propriété intellectuelle () accueille le professeur Jacques de Werra, ¹ó²¹³¦³Ü±ô³Ùé de droit, Université de Genève, pour une présentation sur les modes alternatifs de résolution de conflits pour les différends survenant sur les plateformes internet.

Une demande d'accréditation pour 1,5 heures de formation continue obligatoire pour juristes a été déposée auprès d'un dispensateur reconnu.

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[En anglais seulement] The power of Internet platforms is enormous. Their power particularly includes the ability to control the availability of content on their platform, which can lead to various types of disputes with Internet users. Disputes about the availability of illegal content on Internet platforms can take multiple forms, which can range from IP infringements (specifically copyright and trademark infringement) to the violation of other rights and interests (e.g. protection of privacy, personal data; protection against criminal activities, etc.). Traditional litigation before national courts is frequently not adequate for solving these disputes because of its usual drawbacks in terms of accessibility, costs and duration.

This is why alternative dispute resolution (ADR) mechanisms can offer a viable option for solving such Internet-related disputes and can help address the challenges of Massive Online Micro-Justice (MOMJ), i.e. an online justice system that aims at solving a massive amount of micro Internet-related disputes affecting citizens and companies alike that are presently submitted to online platforms and decided by them. On this basis, the presentation will discuss the need to develop global policies governing online alternative dispute resolution mechanisms for disputes with Internet platforms. This appears critical in order to avoid fragmentation and to maintain access to justice in cyberspace. The presentation will further analyze different policy projects that have been initiated in Europe in order to regulate Internet platforms from the perspective of the development of alternative dispute resolution mechanisms. It will specifically discuss the Recommendation of the European Commission on measures to effectively tackle illegal content online of March 1, 2018 and the Recommendation CM/Rec(2018) of the Committee of Ministers to member States on the roles and responsibilities of internet intermediaries of the Council of Europe adopted on March 7, 2018.

Le conférencier

[En anglais seulement] is professor of contract law and intellectual property law at the Law School of the University of Geneva, Switzerland since 2006 and is vice-rector of the University of Geneva since 2015. Jacques de Werra researches, publishes and speaks on intellectual property law, contract law and Internet, IT and technology law. He has developed a particular expertise in IP commercial law including transfer of technology, licensing and franchising, as well as in alternative dispute resolution mechanisms for IP and technology disputes (specifically arbitration). He has widely published in leading law reviews (including the Harvard Journal of Law and Technology and the Columbia VLA Journal of Law and the Arts) and has authored / edited various books of reference including a Research Handbook on Intellectual Property Licensing (Edward Elgar 2013) and (in co-edition with Prof. Irene Calboli) the Law and Practice of Trademark Transactions (Edward Elgar 2016). He is the coordinator for the University of Geneva of the joint WIPO - University of Geneva Summer school on Intellectual Property and of the University of Geneva summer school on Internet law (). Jacques de Werra is the scientific editor of an IP books series (), in which the proceedings of the annual intellectual property law conferences that he organizes at the University of Geneva are published ().

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