A European Court of Justice ruling in a case over an English pub owner who used a Greek decoder to let her access less expensive Greek broadcasts of Premier League soccer games may have an unusual application: It could settle once and for all the disagreements between US and UK publishers over how to handle open-market English-language exports into continental Europe. That’s because the ruling appears to limit territorial rights limitations within Europe. As interpreted by attorney C.E. Petit on his blog Scrivener’s Error, the court has said that “an identical work can essentially only be licensed once for redistribution […]