ECPA seeks enforcement of online book ban |
Written by Eric Tiansay |
Thursday, 18 March 2010 03:15 PM America/New_York |
On behalf of a coalition of member publishers, the Evangelical Christian Publishers Association (ECPA) recently asked the High Court in London to hold the owner of a U.K.-based Web site in contempt of court for his repeated refusal to comply with a court order that required him to stop posting copyrighted materials without permission. ECPA first became aware more than six years ago of www.biblecentre.net, operated by Andrew Amue, which provided the full text of hundreds of Christian books for download without acquiring the necessary licenses from the publishers. Amue first offered product downloads for free, but then started charging a membership fee. ECPA and the publishers repeatedly demanded Amue respect the copyright of the works, but he refused to secure the necessary licenses or to remove the content from his Web site, ECPA officials said. ECPA and the publishing coalition--which comprised Thomas Nelson Publishers, Zondervan, Baker Publishing Group, Tyndale House Publishers, Moody Publishers, Logos Software and Inter-Varsity Press U.K.--then filed a copyright infringement lawsuit in October 2007. In March 2008, the ECPA coalition secured an order from the High Court in London requiring Amue to cease the infringement. For more than a year, he reportedly moved residences and changed his name, apparently in an attempt to avoid being served the court order. After he was served the court order last June, Amue promised to stop posting the copyrighted materials, but he has continued to operate the Web sites, which include www.evanglibrary.org.uk, ECPA officials said. "After numerous and extraordinary efforts to stop Amue from illegally using and selling copyrighted materials from many authors and several publishers, we had no choice but to collectively ask the court to back its previous order," said Zondervan Executive Vice President and Editor-in-Chief Stan Gundry. "Amue asserts that he believes the copyright laws are, in his words, ‘un-Christian.' "In reality, he is stealing the works of others," Gundry continued. "Originally, he gave this copyrighted content away. For most of the past six years, he charged customers for the stolen material. The facts speak for themselves." ECPA President and CEO Mark Kuyper added: "Given the increased movement toward the digital distribution of intellectual property, it is more important than ever to affirm the boundaries of the law. As good stewards of their authors' copyrights, these publishers are fulfilling their responsibility to address blatant and continued infringement." |