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Conditional Access Convention

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Conditional Access Convention
European Convention on the Legal Protection of Services based on, or consisting of, Conditional Access
Signed24 January 2001
LocationStrasbourg
Effective1 July 2003
Condition3 ratifications
Signatories11
Parties7 COE states and the European Union
DepositarySecretary General of the Council of Europe
LanguagesEnglish and French[1]

The Conditional Access Convention, formally the European Convention on the Legal Protection of Services based on, or consisting of, Conditional Access is a convention of the Council of Europe, designed to prevent unauthorized access to services protected by conditional access. The convention is based on the Conditional Access Directive which already required European Union member states to enact similar legislation.

Parties to the convention must outlaw the manufacture, importation, distribution, sale, rental, possession, installation, maintenance, replacement, or commercial promotion, marketing, or advertising of "illicit devices". The convention defines "illicit devices" as equipment and software which bypasses conditional access measures for television, radio broadcasting, and "information society services".[1]

As of September 2015, seven COE members as well as the European Union are party to the convention, covering in total 31 states.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b "European Convention on the Legal Protection of Services based on, or consisting of, Conditional Access". Council of Europe.
  2. ^ "European Convention on the Legal Protection of Services based on, or consisting of, Conditional Access, parties". Retrieved 15 September 2015.