Producer of CES®

Copyright in the Single Market Directive Will Hurt EU Startups and Small Businesses

September 14, 2018

  • Izzy Santa
Article Summary
This directive is harsh and anti-consumer – the mandatory filtering and other provisions will dramatically reduce free speech and creativity on the internet. Banning sports fans from posting their pictures and videos from professional sporting events does not help fix copyright issues.
The following statement is attributed to Gary Shapiro, president and CEO, Consumer Technology Association (CTA), regarding the European Parliament’s preliminary vote to impose the Copyright in the Single Market Directive:

“This directive is harsh and anti-consumer – the mandatory filtering and other provisions will dramatically reduce free speech and creativity on the internet. Banning sports fans from posting their pictures and videos from professional sporting events does not help fix copyright issues.

“It is no wonder that the US Congress overwhelmingly rejected similar provisions, SOPA/PIPA, in 2012.

“The EU’s imposition of yet another vast regulatory regime will smother European startups already reeling from the costly demands of GDPR. Only the largest companies have the resources to comply with the directive and police the entire internet for copyright infringement. If Europe wants to increase competition on the internet, they must stop crushing their entrepreneurs with massive and unwieldy regulation.”

More Press Releases

  • CES

    CES Foundry Brings Together Innovators for Programming, Demos and Networking

    December 1, 2025
  • CES

    CTA Announces Official CES 2026 Media Days Schedule

    November 25, 2025
  • CTA

    CTA CEO: America Leads the AI Race When We Think Big

    November 24, 2025
  • CES

    Siemens Unveils Industrial Tech for the AI Era in CES 2026 Keynote

    November 24, 2025