EU Court Rules Against Exclusive TV Licensing Deal
First time accepted submitter r5r5 writes "In possibly a ground-breaking rule, European Court of Justice ruled against exclusive rights to broadcast sporting events within a single member state. The motivation is that such an agreement would enable each broadcaster to be granted absolute territorial exclusivity in the area covered by its licence and would therefore eliminate all competition between broadcasters in the field of those services and would thus partition the national markets in accordance with national borders. Could this be the beginning of dismounting the legacy system of exclusive distribution rights awarded to one company in one state?"
Is to support the legal position that a citizen of an EU member state cannot be restricted from purchasing goods or services from any other member state - this is a rule that has been in position for years, and the FA were trying to have it not applied to their TV rights (as they gain billions from UK tv rights to Sky, which are now massively devalued).
It doesn't affect purchases of goods and services from outside of the EU.
Apple underwent a similar issue a few years ago over their iTunes store restrictions within the EU.
Btw, this is *not* a free market solution because it is the government imposing a restriction on what may be agreed upon between consenting parties.
The whole concept of a ban on unauthorized decryption of satellite transmissions is a government-imposed restriction anyway.
It is about football (for now)- but it has much wider implications.
For other sports, yes, but this has the ability to change how the whole information distribution across Europe changes.
Now Europe, for TV distribution sake, is one. What shows in Greece can be shown in England- What shows in Germany can be shown in Spain.
Local broadcasters cannot hold a monopoly on individual countries on anything. This could eventually turn into a big euro-fight of the media distributors and we could see a lot of mergers and aquisitions- and big european-wide media giants emerge.
"That's the way to do it" - Punch