The rise of the Internet has opened new questions about the rights of the authors of contributions to a collective work. When a newspaper is reproduced in its entirety the reproduction falls under the collective work regime. Publication in successive editions of a newspaper during the course of the day, each of which reproduces a large part of the previous edition, is not seen as publication in another newspaper. Electronic publication of the entire newspaper could therefore be seen as an edition of the same collective work. However, partial or selective reproduction may require the agreement of the contributors. As an example of digital reproduction of the full work, since 2005 the
Bibliothèque nationale de France (BnF) has been digitizing editions of daily and weekly periodicals that were published before 1943. Some of this has been through agreements with the publishers
L’Ouest-Éclair and
Le Monde diplomatique. Where the BnF does not have such an agreement, the BnF considers the newspaper to be a collective work that entered the public domain 70 years after publication. Some of these digitized journals may contain contributions for which the individual author's rights have not expired. Thus the cover of the digitized
La Baïonnette of 2 December 1915 has an illustration by the artist
Albert Jarach, who died in 1962 and whose rights would not expire until 2033. France was the first country to introduce an
online newspaper, with the
Minitel service in the 1980s. Today the online and print versions of newspaper are typically run by different departments and have different appearance, with the online versions updated frequently and providing video boxes and interactive features. Some newspapers are online only. A case between the French
national union of journalists and
Le Figaro newspaper was heard on 14 April 1999 by the Court of First Instance in Paris.
Le Figaro had created a website where articles by the journalists could be consulted online. The court ruled that although the printed newspaper was a collective work, the rights of the journalists concerning their articles had been infringed.
Le Figaro only had the right to publish the articles in the printed newspaper, and the website would be considered another newspaper or magazine. On 9 December 1999 the Lyon Court of Appeal ruled similarly that the daily newspaper
Le Progrès was guilty of forgery for having published its journalists' articles on the internet. Although the newspaper was a collective work, the right of the owner to reproduction was limited to the paper edition, and the website could not be seen as an extension of that edition. A similar judgement was issued by the Court of Cassation on 3 July 2013 in a case concerning the newspaper ''L'Union''. The court said that whether or not that newspaper was a collective work, which had not been proven, the consent of a contributor was required before his contributions could be reproduced on an Internet site and reproduced in another newspaper. Newspapers have responded by signing agreements with journalist's unions that took different approaches to cover online publication of articles. ''Les Derniéres Nouvelles d'Alsace'' paid journalists for online use.
Le Monde compensated journalists for ceding their copyright.
Les Échos made an agreement that treated the print and online versions as one. ==Notes==