YouSee boycott
board set up by the Danish Parliament and dragging out the conflict
Konflikten mellem YouSee og rettighedshaverne er ikke løst, den midlertidige aftale i december sikrede udelukkende, at der var en aftale om brugen og en vis betaling, mens sagen blev behandlet ved de rette instanser. Men YouSee har den 31. marts 2025 meddelt, at de ikke længere vil bidrage ved Ophavsretslicensnævnet i sagen om, hvad YouSee skal betale de mange rettighedshavere, der står bag de danske film og udsendelser, som YouSee bruger i deres tv-pakker.
YouSees boykot kommer efter et års sagsbehandling ved Ophavsretslicensnævnet, udveksling af talrige processkrifter og bilag, og det kommer på et tidspunkt, hvor Ophavsretslicensnævnet var klar til at fastsætte en tidsramme for behandling af sagen. Sagen ville forventeligt kunne være afgjort i 1. halvår 2026, dvs. indenfor et år.
This is not only contrary to good business practice and propriety, but also challenges the Copyright Licence Board, which the Danish Parliament has established for these cases, and drags the case out unnecessarily.
Prospect of a decade without final payment to rights holders
YouSee's decision means that there is now the prospect of a protracted conflict in which YouSee will only deal with the case it has brought before the courts, demanding a reduction in the price of Danish TV content of more than 70 %. A decision that could take up to 10 years with appeals and the involvement of the European Court of Justice, as YouSee has announced it will.
While the conflict is ongoing, temporary agreements have been made. But you will not receive your full payment for YouSee's use of your content until the case is finalised. Something that could take up to 10 years with this development in the case.
READ ALSO: Temporary agreement with YouSee secures rights payment
YouSee challenges the Danish model and the rights system
The Copyright Licensing Board is an impartial and specialised board headed by a Supreme Court judge, set up by the Danish Parliament to quickly and efficiently resolve conflicts like this one between rights holders and TV distributors like YouSee.
When YouSee at the 11th hour chooses to boycott the board, YouSee runs away from the general rules of the game that the Danish Parliament has created to ensure quick and objective decisions in the field of culture. Instead of behaving properly and following the designated ways to resolve a conflict, YouSee, like the tech giants, chooses to undermine the established systems and social structures.
If companies with bottomless pockets for litigation can simply choose to ignore the Danish system with the Copyright Licence Board, which is supposed to ensure fast and qualified decisions on disputes, it could set a precedent for other tech giants. This will put pressure not only on Danish rights holders, but on the entire Danish model.
The rights holders are therefore doing everything we can to get YouSee to respect the democratic rules of the game and re-enter the case at the Copyright Licence Board so that we can get an expert and fast processing of the conflict. We will continuously confront both YouSee and the owners behind YouSee - PFA, PKA and ATP - with the untenable and deeply problematic nature of their behaviour. In addition, the rights holders themselves will continue the case at the Copyright Licence Board and ensure that the Board has an adequate basis on which to make a decision.
Yousee er også blevet solgt
For nyligt meddelte den australske kapitalfond Macquarie Group, der i forvejen ejer 50 procent af TDC Group, hvori YouSee indgår, at kapitalfonden har indgået en aftale om at købe resten af selskabet fra de danske ejere; pensionsselskaberne ATP, PFA og PKA. Handlen forventes efter planen afsluttet inden udgangen af 2025 afhængigt af bl.a. myndighedernes godkendelse.
Ift. pensionsopsparingerne er det godt, at danske kunstnere og kulturproducenters pensionsmidler nu ikke længere vil gå til at presse den danske kulturbranche.
Udsigt til et årti uden fuld betaling
Rettighedshavernes modpart er nu fuldt ud er en australsk kapitalfond med et virkeligt dårligt ry – The Times har navngivet Macquarie ”Vampyrkænguruen”. I stedet for at have samfundsbærende danske ejere som 50 % af sin ejerkreds, er YouSee nu altså 100 % en udenlandsk techgigant.
Og tilbage står, at kunstnere og kulturproducenter kan se ind i et årti uden fuld betaling for vores indhold, fordi YouSee undergraver det demokratiske system og trækker en afgørelse i unødigt langdrag, når YouSee vil føre en sag ved domstolene i stedet for det specialerede nævn, som er nedsat af Folketinget til denne slags konflikter – nemlig Ophavsretslicensnævnet.
Rettighedshaverne vil derfor fortsat arbejde for at få YouSee til at respektere det etablerede system og genindtræde i processen med Ophavsretslicensnævnet, så vi kan få en sagkyndig og hurtig behandling af konflikten, som det også er Folketingets hensigt med nævnet.
Macquaries opkøb af YouSee har kun gjort det endnu vigtigere, at vi som rettighedshavere står sammen. Vi vil ikke acceptere, at udenlandske techgiganter tilsidesætter vores demokratiske instanser til at løse konflikter i Danmark. Det handler om principper, rettigheder og ordentlighed. Principper som også bør gælde for australske techgiganter.
Facts about the YouSee conflict
- In March 2024, YouSee cancelled all agreements on payment to the rights holders.
- YouSee also demanded a more than 70 per cent reduction in payment - even if YouSee continues to use the same content as before.
- In autumn 2024, rights holders and YouSee signed a temporary agreementuntil a relevant body had assessed the case.
- On 31 March 2025, YouSee announced that YouSee will no longer participate in the Copyright Licensing Board's processing of the case and sees the trial in the Maritime and Commercial Court as the only relevant authority. This means that a quick and impartial decision will now be replaced by a lengthy court case.
Facts about the Copyright Licence Board
The Copyright Licence Board is an objective and specialised body set up by the Danish Parliament to resolve precisely this type of conflict. The Copyright Licence Board is headed by a Supreme Court judge, who is currently also the head of the Competition Appeal Board, and the board also consists of two experts in the field.
The rights holders and YouSee have previously had cases before the Copyright Licence Board, and over the years the parties have respected the decisions in the cases. The parties have also referred to these decisions in the numerous pleadings exchanged before YouSee announced its boycott of the Copyright Licence Board.