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Matthew Le Merle, Booz
& Company: SOPA - Stop Online Piracy Act - Jeopardizes DCI Venture
Capital
November 21, 2011
A
large majority of the angel investors and venture capitalists who took
part in a Booz & Company study say they will not put their money in
digital content intermediaries (DCIs) if governments pass tough new
rules allowing websites to be sued or fined for pirated digital content
posted by users. (DCIs are the companies that provide search, hosting,
and distribution services for digital content such as YouTube, Facebook,
SoundCloud, eBay, and thousands of others.) More than 70% of angel
investors reported they would be deterred from investing if anti-piracy
regulations against “user uploaded” websites were increased.
The Impact of U.S. Internet Copyright Regulations
on Early-Stage Investment A Quantitative Study PDF
The United States House Judiciary Committee is currently considering
this type of measure, with the recently proposed “Stop Online Piracy
Act.” The issue of who owns digital content, and who should be punished
if it is posted or used without permission is once again being heavily
debated. Angel investors and venture capitalists currently invest more
than $40 billion annually in early-stage companies. It has long been
speculated that this type of investment would dry up if new rules were
introduced, and the Booz & Company study appears to confirm this.
“The
debate over digital content is a vast landscape peppered with many
opinions and very little real data,” says Matthew Le Merle, a partner at
the global management consulting firm Booz & Company. “We decided to
conduct this empirical study to shed light on one important issue. Would
angel investors really take their money elsewhere if the regulatory
landscape fundamentally changed with regard to copyright regulation and
the internet? The answer was definitive.”
The findings are contained in a study called “The Impact of Internet
Copyright Regulations on Early-Stage Investment: A Quantitative Study,”
released today by Booz & Company. This is the first study of its kind in
the United States. More than 200 prominent angel investors and venture
capitalists were interviewed between August and November 2011. The
results provide a comprehensive picture of their views on digital
copyright regulation. This report was financed by Google Inc. It was
independently researched and written by Booz & Company, drawing on
expertise from its consumer, media, and technology practice, and also on
academic and public research, publicly available information, and
primary research.
Additional
key findings include:
- More than
80%of the angel investors would prefer to invest
in a risky, weak economy (with the current
internet regulations) vs. a strong economy (but
with the new, more stringent proposed
regulations on copyright infringement).
- If the
legal framework for digital content was
clarified, and penalties on copyright
infringement were limited for content providers
acting in good faith, the pool of angels
interested in investing would increase by nearly
115%.
“The most surprising
result was the sheer magnitude of investors who say they will exit
investing in DCIs if their risk and liability is increased by new laws,”
says Mr. Le Merle. “We hope this type of research can assist in
data-driven decision making on this important issue. Laws like these
could shape the future of the internet, with sweeping implications for
innovation, competitiveness, and the broader economy.” |