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(2)(B) did not contain references to "clause (5)". See 1990
Amendment note above.
Subsec. (f). Pub. L. 99-397, Sec. 2(b), substituted "subsection
(d)(1)" for "subsection (d)(2)" in third undesignated par.,
defining a cable system.
Pub. L. 99-397, Sec. 1, inserted provision in fourth undesignated
par., defining "local service area of a primary transmitter", to
cover that term in relation to low power television stations.
EFFECTIVE DATE OF 1995 AMENDMENT
Amendment by Pub. L. 104-39 effective 3 months after Nov. 1,
1995, see section 6 of Pub. L. 104-39, set out as a note under
section 101 of this title.
EFFECTIVE DATE OF 1994 AMENDMENT
Amendment by section 3(b) of Pub. L. 103-369 effective July 1,
1994, see section 6(d) of Pub. L. 103-369, set out as an Effective
and Termination Dates of 1994 Amendment note under section 119 of
this title.
EFFECTIVE DATE OF 1990 AMENDMENT
Section 3(e)(1) of Pub. L. 101-318 provided that: "The amendments
made by subsections (a) and (b) [amending this section and section
801 of this title] shall be effective as of August 27, 1986."
EFFECTIVE DATE OF 1988 AMENDMENT
Amendment by Pub. L. 100-667 effective Jan. 1, 1989, see section
206 of Pub. L. 100-667, set out as an Effective Date note under
section 119 of this title.
-TRANS-
TERMINATION OF TRUST TERRITORY OF THE PACIFIC ISLANDS
For termination of Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands, see
note set out preceding section 1681 of Title 48, Territories and
Insular Possessions.
-SECREF-
SECTION REFERRED TO IN OTHER SECTIONS
This section is referred to in sections 106, 110, 114, 119, 122,
501, 510, 511, 801, 802, 803 of this title; title 18 section 2319;
title 47 sections 325, 534, 573.
-End-
-CITE-
17 USC Sec. 112 01/19/04
-EXPCITE-
TITLE 17 - COPYRIGHTS
CHAPTER 1 - SUBJECT MATTER AND SCOPE OF COPYRIGHT
-HEAD-
Sec. 112. Limitations on exclusive rights: Ephemeral recordings
-STATUTE-
(a)(1) Notwithstanding the provisions of section 106, and except
in the case of a motion picture or other audiovisual work, it is
not an infringement of copyright for a transmitting organization
entitled to transmit to the public a performance or display of a
work, under a license, including a statutory license under section
114(f), or transfer of the copyright or under the limitations on
exclusive rights in sound recordings specified by section 114(a),
or for a transmitting organization that is a broadcast radio or
television station licensed as such by the Federal Communications
Commission and that makes a broadcast transmission of a performance
of a sound recording in a digital format on a nonsubscription
basis, to make no more than one copy or phonorecord of a particular
transmission program embodying the performance or display, if -
(A) the copy or phonorecord is retained and used solely by the
transmitting organization that made it, and no further copies or
phonorecords are reproduced from it; and
(B) the copy or phonorecord is used solely for the transmitting
organization's own transmissions within its local service area,
or for purposes of archival preservation or security; and
(C) unless preserved exclusively for archival purposes, the
copy or phonorecord is destroyed within six months from the date
the transmission program was first transmitted to the public.
(2) In a case in which a transmitting organization entitled to
make a copy or phonorecord under paragraph (1) in connection with
the transmission to the public of a performance or display of a
work is prevented from making such copy or phonorecord by reason of
the application by the copyright owner of technical measures that
prevent the reproduction of the work, the copyright owner shall
make available to the transmitting organization the necessary means
for permitting the making of such copy or phonorecord as permitted
under that paragraph, if it is technologically feasible and
economically reasonable for the copyright owner to do so. If the
copyright owner fails to do so in a timely manner in light of the
transmitting organization's reasonable business requirements, the
transmitting organization shall not be liable for a violation of
section 1201(a)(1) of this title for engaging in such activities as
are necessary to make such copies or phonorecords as permitted
under paragraph (1) of this subsection.
(b) Notwithstanding the provisions of section 106, it is not an
infringement of copyright for a governmental body or other
nonprofit organization entitled to transmit a performance or
display of a work, under section 110(2) or under the limitations on
exclusive rights in sound recordings specified by section 114(a),
to make no more than thirty copies or phonorecords of a particular
transmission program embodying the performance or display, if -
(1) no further copies or phonorecords are reproduced from the
copies or phonorecords made under this clause; and
(2) except for one copy or phonorecord that may be preserved
exclusively for archival purposes, the copies or phonorecords are
destroyed within seven years from the date the transmission
program was first transmitted to the public.
(c) Notwithstanding the provisions of section 106, it is not an
infringement of copyright for a governmental body or other
nonprofit organization to make for distribution no more than one
copy or phonorecord, for each transmitting organization specified
in clause (2) of this subsection, of a particular transmission
program embodying a performance of a nondramatic musical work of a
religious nature, or of a sound recording of such a musical work,
if -
(1) there is no direct or indirect charge for making or
distributing any such copies or phonorecords; and
(2) none of such copies or phonorecords is used for any
performance other than a single transmission to the public by a
transmitting organization entitled to transmit to the public a
performance of the work under a license or transfer of the
copyright; and
(3) except for one copy or phonorecord that may be preserved
exclusively for archival purposes, the copies or phonorecords are
all destroyed within one year from the date the transmission
program was first transmitted to the public.
(d) Notwithstanding the provisions of section 106, it is not an
infringement of copyright for a governmental body or other
nonprofit organization entitled to transmit a performance of a work
under section 110(8) to make no more than ten copies or
phonorecords embodying the performance, or to permit the use of any
such copy or phonorecord by any governmental body or nonprofit
organization entitled to transmit a performance of a work under
section 110(8), if -
(1) any such copy or phonorecord is retained and used solely by
the organization that made it, or by a governmental body or
nonprofit organization entitled to transmit a performance of a
work under section 110(8), and no further copies or phonorecords
are reproduced from it; and
(2) any such copy or phonorecord is used solely for
transmissions authorized under section 110(8), or for purposes of
archival preservation or security; and
(3) the governmental body or nonprofit organization permitting
any use of any such copy or phonorecord by any governmental body
or nonprofit organization under this subsection does not make any
charge for such use.
(e) Statutory License. - (1) A transmitting organization entitled
to transmit to the public a performance of a sound recording under
the limitation on exclusive rights specified by section
114(d)(1)(C)(iv) or under a statutory license in accordance with
section 114(f) is entitled to a statutory license, under the
conditions specified by this subsection, to make no more than 1
phonorecord of the sound recording (unless the terms and conditions
of the statutory license allow for more), if the following
conditions are satisfied:
(A) The phonorecord is retained and used solely by the
transmitting organization that made it, and no further
phonorecords are reproduced from it.
(B) The phonorecord is used solely for the transmitting
organization's own transmissions originating in the United States
under a statutory license in accordance with section 114(f) or
the limitation on exclusive rights specified by section
114(d)(1)(C)(iv).
(C) Unless preserved exclusively for purposes of archival
preservation, the phonorecord is destroyed within 6 months from
the date the sound recording was first transmitted to the public
using the phonorecord.
(D) Phonorecords of the sound recording have been distributed
to the public under the authority of the copyright owner or the
copyright owner authorizes the transmitting entity to transmit
the sound recording, and the transmitting entity makes the
phonorecord under this subsection from a phonorecord lawfully
made and acquired under the authority of the copyright owner.
(2) Notwithstanding any provision of the antitrust laws, any
copyright owners of sound recordings and any transmitting
organizations entitled to a statutory license under this subsection
may negotiate and agree upon royalty rates and license terms and
conditions for making phonorecords of such sound recordings under
this section and the proportionate division of fees paid among
copyright owners, and may designate common agents to negotiate,
agree to, pay, or receive such royalty payments.
(3) No later than 30 days after the date of the enactment of the
Digital Millennium Copyright Act, the Librarian of Congress shall
cause notice to be published in the Federal Register of the
initiation of voluntary negotiation proceedings for the purpose of
determining reasonable terms and rates of royalty payments for the
activities specified by paragraph (1) of this subsection during the
period beginning on the date of the enactment of such Act and
ending on December 31, 2000, or such other date as the parties may
agree. Such rates shall include a minimum fee for each type of
service offered by transmitting organizations. Any copyright owners
of sound recordings or any transmitting organizations entitled to a
statutory license under this subsection may submit to the Librarian
of Congress licenses covering such activities with respect to such
sound recordings. The parties to each negotiation proceeding shall
bear their own costs.
(4) In the absence of license agreements negotiated under
paragraph (2), during the 60-day period commencing 6 months after
publication of the notice specified in paragraph (3), and upon the
filing of a petition in accordance with section 803(a)(1), the
Librarian of Congress shall, pursuant to chapter 8, convene a
copyright arbitration royalty panel to determine and publish in the
Federal Register a schedule of reasonable rates and terms which,
subject to paragraph (5), shall be binding on all copyright owners
of sound recordings and transmitting organizations entitled to a
statutory license under this subsection during the period beginning
on the date of the enactment of the Digital Millennium Copyright
Act and ending on December 31, 2000, or such other date as the
parties may agree. Such rates shall include a minimum fee for each
type of service offered by transmitting organizations. The
copyright arbitration royalty panel shall establish rates that most
clearly represent the fees that would have been negotiated in the
marketplace between a willing buyer and a willing seller. In
determining such rates and terms, the copyright arbitration royalty
panel shall base its decision on economic, competitive, and
programming information presented by the parties, including -
(A) whether use of the service may substitute for or may
promote the sales of phonorecords or otherwise interferes with or
enhances the copyright owner's traditional streams of revenue;
and
(B) the relative roles of the copyright owner and the
transmitting organization in the copyrighted work and the service
made available to the public with respect to relative creative
contribution, technological contribution, capital investment,
cost, and risk.
In establishing such rates and terms, the copyright arbitration
royalty panel may consider the rates and terms under voluntary
license agreements negotiated as provided in paragraphs (2) and
(3). The Librarian of Congress shall also establish requirements by
which copyright owners may receive reasonable notice of the use of
their sound recordings under this section, and under which records
of such use shall be kept and made available by transmitting
organizations entitled to obtain a statutory license under this
subsection.
(5) License agreements voluntarily negotiated at any time between
1 or more copyright owners of sound recordings and 1 or more
transmitting organizations entitled to obtain a statutory license
under this subsection shall be given effect in lieu of any
determination by a copyright arbitration royalty panel or decision
by the Librarian of Congress.
(6) Publication of a notice of the initiation of voluntary
negotiation proceedings as specified in paragraph (3) shall be
repeated, in accordance with regulations that the Librarian of
Congress shall prescribe, in the first week of January 2000, and at
2-year intervals thereafter, except to the extent that different
years for the repeating of such proceedings may be determined in
accordance with paragraph (3). The procedures specified in
paragraph (4) shall be repeated, in accordance with regulations
that the Librarian of Congress shall prescribe, upon filing of a
petition in accordance with section 803(a)(1), during a 60-day
period commencing on July 1, 2000, and at 2-year intervals
thereafter, except to the extent that different years for the
repeating of such proceedings may be determined in accordance with
paragraph (3). The procedures specified in paragraph (4) shall be
concluded in accordance with section 802.
(7)(A) Any person who wishes to make a phonorecord of a sound
recording under a statutory license in accordance with this
subsection may do so without infringing the exclusive right of the
copyright owner of the sound recording under section 106(1) -
(i) by complying with such notice requirements as the Librarian
of Congress shall prescribe by regulation and by paying royalty
fees in accordance with this subsection; or
(ii) if such royalty fees have not been set, by agreeing to pay
such royalty fees as shall be determined in accordance with this
subsection.
(B) Any royalty payments in arrears shall be made on or before
the 20th day of the month next succeeding the month in which the
royalty fees are set.
(8) If a transmitting organization entitled to make a phonorecord
under this subsection is prevented from making such phonorecord by
reason of the application by the copyright owner of technical
measures that prevent the reproduction of the sound recording, the
copyright owner shall make available to the transmitting
organization the necessary means for permitting the making of such
phonorecord as permitted under this subsection, if it is
technologically feasible and economically reasonable for the
copyright owner to do so. If the copyright owner fails to do so in
a timely manner in light of the transmitting organization's
reasonable business requirements, the transmitting organization
shall not be liable for a violation of section 1201(a)(1) of this
title for engaging in such activities as are necessary to make such
phonorecords as permitted under this subsection.
(9) Nothing in this subsection annuls, limits, impairs, or
otherwise affects in any way the existence or value of any of the
exclusive rights of the copyright owners in a sound recording,
except as otherwise provided in this subsection, or in a musical
work, including the exclusive rights to reproduce and distribute a
sound recording or musical work, including by means of a digital
phonorecord delivery, under sections 106(1), 106(3), and 115, and
the right to perform publicly a sound recording or musical work,
including by means of a digital audio transmission, under sections
106(4) and 106(6).
(f)(1) Notwithstanding the provisions of section 106, and without
limiting the application of subsection (b), it is not an
infringement of copyright for a governmental body or other
nonprofit educational institution entitled under section 110(2) to
transmit a performance or display to make copies or phonorecords of
a work that is in digital form and, solely to the extent permitted
in paragraph (2), of a work that is in analog form, embodying the
performance or display to be used for making transmissions
authorized under section 110(2), if -
(A) such copies or phonorecords are retained and used solely by
the body or institution that made them, and no further copies or
phonorecords are reproduced from them, except as authorized under
section 110(2); and
(B) such copies or phonorecords are used solely for
transmissions authorized under section 110(2).
(2) This subsection does not authorize the conversion of print or
other analog versions of works into digital formats, except that
such conversion is permitted hereunder, only with respect to the
amount of such works authorized to be performed or displayed under
section 110(2), if -
(A) no digital version of the work is available to the
institution; or
(B) the digital version of the work that is available to the
institution is subject to technological protection measures that
prevent its use for section 110(2).
(g) The transmission program embodied in a copy or phonorecord
made under this section is not subject to protection as a
derivative work under this title except with the express consent of
the owners of copyright in the preexisting works employed in the
program.
-SOURCE-
(Pub. L. 94-553, title I, Sec. 101, Oct. 19, 1976, 90 Stat. 2558;
Pub. L. 105-304, title IV, Secs. 402, 405(b), Oct. 28, 1998, 112
Stat. 2888, 2899; Pub. L. 106-44, Sec. 1(b), Aug. 5, 1999, 113
Stat. 221; Pub. L. 107-273, div. C, title III, Sec. 13301(c)(1),
Nov. 2, 2002, 116 Stat. 1912.)
-MISC1-
HISTORICAL AND REVISION NOTES
HOUSE REPORT NO. 94-1476
Section 112 of the bill concerns itself with a special problem
that is not dealt with in the present statutes but is the subject
of provisions in a number of foreign statutes and in the revisions
of the Berne Convention since 1948. This is the problem of what are
commonly called "ephemeral recordings": copies or phonorecords of a
work made for purposes of later transmission by a broadcasting
organization legally entitled to transmit the work. In other words,
where a broadcaster has the privilege of performing or displaying a
work either because he is licensed or because the performance or
display is exempted under the statute, the question is whether he
should be given the additional privilege of recording the
performance or display to facilitate its transmission. The need for
a limited exemption in these cases because of the practical
exigencies of broadcasting has been generally recognized, but the
scope of the exemption has been a controversial issue.
Recordings for Licensed Transmissions. Under subsection (a) of
section 112, an organization that has acquired the right to
transmit any work (other than a motion picture or other audiovisual
work), or that is free to transmit a sound recording under section
114, may make a single copy or phonorecord of a particular program
embodying the work, if the copy or phonorecord is used solely for
the organization's own transmissions within its own area; after 6
months it must be destroyed or preserved solely for archival
purposes.
Organizations Covered. - The ephemeral recording privilege is
given by subsection (a) to "a transmitting organization entitled to
transmit to the public a performance or display of a work."
Assuming that the transmission meets the other conditions of the
provision, it makes no difference what type of public transmission
the organization is making: commercial radio and television
broadcasts, public radio and television broadcasts not exempted by
section 110(2), pay-TV, closed circuit, background music, and so
forth. However, to come within the scope of subsection (a), the
organization must have the right to make the transmission "under a
license or transfer of the copyright or under the limitations on
exclusive rights in sound recordings specified by section 114(a)."
Thus, except in the case of copyrighted sound recordings (which
have no exclusive performing rights under the bill), the
organization must be a transferee or licensee (including compulsory
licensee) of performing rights in the work in order to make an
ephemeral recording of it.
Some concern has been expressed by authors and publishers lest
the term "organization" be construed to include a number of
affiliated broadcasters who could exchange the recording without
restrictions. The term is intended to cover a broadcasting network,
or a local broadcaster or individual transmitter; but, under
clauses (1) and (2) of the subsection, the ephemeral recording must
be "retained and used solely by the transmitting organization that
made it," and must be used solely for that organization's own
transmissions within its own area. Thus, an ephemeral recording
made by one transmitter, whether it be a network or local
broadcaster, could not be made available for use by another
transmitter. Likewise, this subsection does not apply to those
nonsimultaneous transmissions by cable systems not located within a
boundary of the forty-eight contiguous States that are granted a
compulsory license under section 111.
Scope of the Privilege. - Subsection (a) permits the transmitting
organization to make "no more than one copy or phonorecord of a
particular transmission program embodying the performance or
display." A "transmission program" is defined in section 101 as a
body of material produced for the sole purpose of transmission as a
unit. Thus, under section 112(a), a transmitter could make only one
copy or phonorecord of a particular "transmission program"
containing a copyrighted work, but would not be limited as to the
number of times the work itself could be duplicated as part of
other "transmission programs."
Three specific limitations on the scope of the ephemeral
recording privilege are set out in subsection (a), and unless all
are met the making of an "ephemeral recording" becomes fully
actionable as an infringement. The first requires that the copy or
phonorecord be "retained and used solely by the transmitting
organization that made it," and that "no further copies or
phonorecords are reproduced from it." This means that a
transmitting organization would have no privilege of exchanging
ephemeral recordings with other transmitters or of allowing them to
duplicate their own ephemeral recordings from the copy or
phonorecord it has made. There is nothing in the provision to
prevent a transmitting organization from having an ephemeral
recording made by means of facilities other than its own, although
it would not be permissible for a person or organization other than
a transmitting organization to make a recording on its own
initiative for possible sale or lease to a broadcaster. The
ephemeral recording privilege would extend to copies or
phonorecords made in advance for later broadcast, as well as
recordings of a program that are made while it is being transmitted
and are intended for deferred transmission or preservation.
Clause (2) of section 112(a) provides that, to be exempt from
copyright, the copy or phonorecord must be "used solely for the
transmitting organization's own transmissions within its local
service area, or for purposes of archival preservation or
security". The term "local service area" is defined in section
111(f).
Clause (3) of section 112(a) provides that, unless preserved
exclusively for archival purposes, the copy or phonorecord of a
transmission program must be destroyed within six months from the
date the transmission program was first transmitted to the public.
Recordings for Instructional Transmissions. Section 112(b)
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