EU regulators accept Paramount geoblocking concessions

Studio was accused of stopping viewers outside UK and Ireland accessing Sky UK

Paramount Pictures will now allow viewers outside Britain and Ireland to access content broadcast by Sky UK.
Paramount Pictures will now allow viewers outside Britain and Ireland to access content broadcast by Sky UK.

European Union antitrust regulators on Tuesday accepted Paramount Pictures' concessions to end anti-competitive movie-licensing deals with British pay-TV group Sky UK, but said the case against five other Hollywood studios would continue.

The US studio's offer came after the European Commission in July last year accused it of preventing viewers outside Britain and Ireland from accessing films and other content broadcast by Sky UK.

NBCUniversal, Disney, Sony, Twentieth Century Fox and Time Warner Inc unit Warner Brothers as well as Sky UK also faced the charges.

Determined to create a single digital market across the 28-country EU to boost growth and jobs, the commission is cracking down on so-called geoblocking where companies stop consumers in another EU country from buying their products or services.

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Paramount Pictures, which is part of Viacom, will now allow viewers outside Britain and Ireland to access films and other content broadcast by Sky UK.

Paramount will also now allow non-UK broadcasters sell their Paramount films to UK and Irish viewers in response to unsolicited requests.

The commission said the concessions, which are valid for five years and cover both online services and satellite broadcast services, addressed its concerns.

Paramount Pictures did not admit any wrongdoing as part of the deal.

“Today’s agreement eliminates the possibility of fines and enables the commission to close similar pending cases against Viacom and Paramount relating to broadcasters in Italy, France, Germany and Spain,” the company said in a statement.

The EU competition authority said the investigation into the other five studios’ deals with Sky UK would continue, putting them at risk of a fine up to 10 per cent of their global turnover if found guilty of breaching EU rules.