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Australian copyright holders are in a stronger position to block online infringement following recent amendments to the Australian Copyright Act.
Under the original blocking injunction regime in section 115A of the Australian Copyright Act, the Federal Court of Australia can, on the application of a copyright owner, grant an injunction requiring a carriage service provider (CSP) to take reasonable steps to disable access to an online location outside Australia.
Before granting a blocking injunction, the Court must be satisfied that:
In issuing the injunction, the Court may take into account a number of factors that are set out in section 115A(5) of the Copyright Act. These include whether:
The original regime has been bolstered by additional provisions that look to place copyright holders in a stronger position to combat online infringement.
Under the new scheme the online location is now presumed to be outside Australia unless proven otherwise, removing a substantial evidentiary burden that was faced by copyright owners.
Copyright owners can now request that a blocking injunction extends to online search engine providers, requiring such providers to take the steps that the Court considers reasonable so as to not provide a search result that refers users to the online location.
At least in the case of search providers, such as Google, that have sophisticated ‘take-down’ measures to remove infringing content, it is possible that copyright holders will continue to use existing voluntary regimes rather than make use of these new provisions. Indeed, the Government has acknowledged that these new provisions are designed as a ‘backstop’ in the event that existing voluntary measures are ineffective.1
So called ‘adaptive’ injunctions have been introduced, recognising the fact that copyright infringers regularly host the same infringing content at multiple sites or may change the domain names, URLs and IP addresses. Under the new provisions, the Court may grant an injunction that requires a CSP (or online search engine provider) to take reasonable steps to block other domain names, URLs and IP addresses that the copyright owner and CSP (or online search engine provider) agree have started to provide access to the same online location targeted by the injunction.
Even before the introduction of this provision, the Court already demonstrated that it is able to respond to the need to provide for injunctions that can ‘adapt’ to changes in domain name, URL or IP address of targeted online locations. The orders of Justice Nicholas in Roadshow Films Pty Ltd v Telstra Corporation Ltd provided a mechanism for the copyright holder to approach the Court to have the terms of the existing injunction apply to a domain name, URL or IP address for the new location/s of the online location the subject of the injunction.2 If the copyright holder did approach the Court in such a scenario ‘very little in the way of further evidence’ might be required before the ‘adapted’ injunction was granted.3
While the new provision in the Copyright Act bypasses the need for judicial oversight of the specific variation (instead leaving it to agreement between the parties), it will remain at the discretion of the Court as to whether an adaptive injunction is in fact an appropriate order in a given case.
A blocking injunction can now be granted in respect of an online location not only if it has the primary purpose but also if it has the primary effect of infringing, or facilitating the infringement of, copyright.
While ‘primary effect’ is not defined in the Copyright Act, the Explanatory Memorandum accompanying the Bill makes clear that expanding the test to include ‘primary effect’ is intended to capture sites with large amounts of infringing content, such as ‘cyberlockers’.v
As with the primary purpose test, the threshold is intended to be sufficiently high so as to exclude online locations that contain primarily legitimate content (the Explanatory Memorandum gives the example of Pinterest).v
In consultations on the draft Bill, concern was raised that small search engine providers might be caught by the expanded regime and that the primary effect test might be so broad as to capture sites that provide legitimate services.
The Government sees the factors in section 115A(5) as an important mechanism to protect against the application of the regime to such providers and content that is not intended to be captured by the regime. In particular, the factors of proportionality and public interest are intended to provide appropriate checks and balances on the Federal Court’s power to grant injunctions.4
In the case of small search engine providers, there are a number of other considerations that make it unlikely that the regime will apply to them. For example, as noted in the Explanatory Memorandum, if a small provider does ‘not have the capability to not provide a search result that refers a user to an online location’, the Federal Court is unlikely to find that there are any ‘reasonable steps’ that can be taken by the provider.5 Additionally, the costs and time associated with Federal Court litigation are likely to act as a further deterrent against using these new provisions against smaller providers.6
As a further measure to mitigate the possibility of action being taken against small search engine providers, new section 115A(8B) provides that the Minster may specifically exclude particular online search engineer providers or a class of online search engine providers from the application of the blocking injunction.
The revised blocking injunction regime addresses many of the issues raised in submissions to the review of the original regime conducted by the Department of Communication and the Arts in March 2018. With the Bill received strong bipartisan support, there is every indication that both sides of Parliament are committed to strengthening the intellectual property rights of creators of creative content. The government and opposition have both agreed to a review of the effectiveness of the revised blocking injunction provisions in two years.
It remains to be seen whether Australian courts will follow the lead of UK courts in granting blocking injunctions that require CSPs to take down online locations that carry products that infringe trade mark owners’ rights. While the Australian Trade Marks Act does not have a provision equivalent to section 115A of the Copyright Act, the broad general powers of the Federal Court arguably provide scope to adopt a similar approach to that taken in the Cartier International AG v British Sky Broadcasting Limited litigation.7
The amendments to the Copyright Act 1968 (Cth) were made by the Copyright Amendment (Online Infringement) Act 2018 (Cth). The new provisions came into force on 11 December 2018.
The contents of this publication are for reference purposes only and may not be current as at the date of accessing this publication. They do not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Specific legal advice about your specific circumstances should always be sought separately before taking any action based on this publication.
© Herbert Smith Freehills 2025
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