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Decision of the Munich I Regional Court on embedding media libraries
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The Munich I Regional Court addressed the question of whether a streaming platform may integrate content from public-service media libraries into its own offering. According to the decision described in the Juraforum report, the court prohibited such embedding if it is carried out without the necessary rights or without corresponding consent (source: Juraforum, “LG München: Streaming platform may not embed media libraries”, available at: https://www.juraforum.de/news/lg-muenchen-streamingplattform-darf-mediatheken-nicht-einbinden_265298).
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Subject matter of the dispute
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Streaming platform as a central access point
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According to the source, the focus was on a platform model intended to enable users to access content from various media libraries within its own user interface. This did not merely involve linking to freely accessible websites; rather, the content was to be embedded into an in-house system and made findable and accessible there.
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Distinction from mere linking
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According to the account, the facts did not concern only the placement of individual links. Instead, what was decisive was the technical and visual integration into a platform structure, through which the third-party content could appear to users as part of the platform’s own offering.
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Legal classification of the contested embedding
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Relevance of copyright exploitation rights
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The starting point for the court’s assessment is that audiovisual content is typically protected under copyright and related rights. Anyone who makes such content available to the public or integrates it into their own offering generally requires corresponding authorization from the rights holders or a legal basis that supports such use.
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Making available to the public and platform responsibility
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According to the report, the decision illustrates that a platform which organizes and enables access to protected content within its own environment cannot readily invoke that it is merely providing neutral technical infrastructure. Depending on its design, independent responsibilities come to the fore, in particular where the platform controls the presentation, findability, and use in its own context.
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Significance of the decision for digital business models
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Requirements for clearing rights
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According to the source, the judgment makes clear that when combining third-party media offerings within a central interface, the rights and terms of use must be carefully observed. Particularly in the case of media libraries, public availability for on-demand access cannot automatically be equated with authorization to integrate the content into third-party platforms.
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Relevance for aggregators and comparable services
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According to the report, the decision does not concern only traditional streaming services, but may also be significant for platforms that systematically bundle, curate, or make third-party content available via a uniform user interface. Decisive factors are the mode of operation, the degree of integration, and the external presentation of the service.
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Assessment by MTR Legal
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Digital platform models often operate at the intersection of copyright law, IT-law frameworks, contract drafting, and liability issues. Anyone designing business models or adapting existing services will regularly have to deal with questions regarding the permissible use of third-party content, the technical design of integrations, and the legally compliant formulation of terms of use. For corresponding assessment and support in this area, MTR Legal is available in the context of legal advice in IT law.
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