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Online Attorney
. * * * Certainly
such a result cannot have been intended for it would likely
effect the immediate resurgence of piracy of pre-February 15,
1972, sound recordings.
The Department recommended that section 301(b) be amended to
exclude sound recordings fixed prior to February 15, 1972 from the
effect of the preemption.
The Senate adopted this suggestion when it passed S. 22. The
result of the Senate amendment would be to leave pre-1972 sound
recordings as entitled to perpetual protection under State law,
while post-1972 recordings would eventually fall into the public
domain as provided in the bill.
The Committee recognizes that, under recent court decisions,
pre-1972 recordings are protected by State statute or common law,
and that should not all be thrown into the public domain instantly
upon the coming into effect of the new law. However, it cannot
agree that they should in effect be accorded perpetual protection,
as under the Senate amendment, and it has therefore revised clause
(4) to establish a future date for the pre-emption to take effect.
The date chosen is February 15, 2047 which is 75 years from the
effective date of the statute extending Federal protection to
recordings.
Subsection (c) makes clear that nothing contained in Title 17
annuls or limits any rights or remedies under any other Federal
statute.
-REFTEXT-
REFERENCES IN TEXT
Section 610(a) of the Visual Artists Rights Act of 1990 [Pub. L.
101-650], referred to in subsec. (f)(1), (2)(A), is set out as an
Effective Date note under section 106A of this title.
-MISC2-
AMENDMENTS
1998 - Subsec. (c). Pub. L. 105-298 substituted "2067" for "2047"
wherever appearing.
1990 - Subsec. (b)(4). Pub. L. 101-650, Sec. 705, added par. (4).
Subsec. (f). Pub. L. 101-650, Sec. 605, added subsec. (f).
1988 - Subsec. (e). Pub. L. 100-568 added subsec. (e).
EFFECTIVE DATE OF 1990 AMENDMENT
Amendment by section 605 of Pub. L. 101-650 effective 6 months
after Dec. 1, 1990, see section 610 of Pub. L. 101-650, set out as
an Effective Date note under section 106A of this title.
Amendment by section 705 Pub. L. 101-650 applicable to any
architectural work created on or after Dec. 1, 1990, and any
architectural work, that, on Dec. 1, 1990, is unconstructed and
embodied in unpublished plans or drawings, except that protection
for such architectural work under this title terminates on Dec. 31,
2002, unless the work is constructed by that date, see section 706
of Pub. L. 101-650, set out as a note under section 101 of this
title.
EFFECTIVE DATE OF 1988 AMENDMENT
Amendment by Pub. L. 100-568 effective Mar. 1, 1989, with any
cause of action arising under this title before such date being
governed by provisions in effect when cause of action arose, see
section 13 of Pub. L. 100-568, set out as a note under section 101
of this title.
-End-
-CITE-
17 USC Sec. 302 01/19/04
-EXPCITE-
TITLE 17 - COPYRIGHTS
CHAPTER 3 - DURATION OF COPYRIGHT
-HEAD-
Sec. 302. Duration of copyright: Works created on or after January
1, 1978
-STATUTE-
(a) In General. - Copyright in a work created on or after January
1, 1978, subsists from its creation and, except as provided by the
following subsections, endures for a term consisting of the life of
the author and 70 years after the author's death.
(b) Joint Works. - In the case of a joint work prepared by two or
more authors who did not work for hire, the copyright endures for a
term consisting of the life of the last surviving author and 70
years after such last surviving author's death.
(c) Anonymous Works, Pseudonymous Works, and Works Made for Hire.
- In the case of an anonymous work, a pseudonymous work, or a work
made for hire, the copyright endures for a term of 95 years from
the year of its first publication, or a term of 120 years from the
year of its creation, whichever expires first. If, before the end
of such term, the identity of one or more of the authors of an
anonymous or pseudonymous work is revealed in the records of a
registration made for that work under subsections (a) or (d) of
section 408, or in the records provided by this subsection, the
copyright in the work endures for the term specified by subsection
(a) or (b), based on the life of the author or authors whose
identity has been revealed. Any person having an interest in the
copyright in an anonymous or pseudonymous work may at any time
record, in records to be maintained by the Copyright Office for
that purpose, a statement identifying one or more authors of the
work; the statement shall also identify the person filing it, the
nature of that person's interest, the source of the information
recorded, and the particular work affected, and shall comply in
form and content with requirements that the Register of Copyrights
shall prescribe by regulation.
(d) Records Relating to Death of Authors. - Any person having an
interest in a copyright may at any time record in the Copyright
Office a statement of the date of death of the author of the
copyrighted work, or a statement that the author is still living on
a particular date. The statement shall identify the person filing
it, the nature of that person's interest, and the source of the
information recorded, and shall comply in form and content with
requirements that the Register of Copyrights shall prescribe by
regulation. The Register shall maintain current records of
information relating to the death of authors of copyrighted works,
based on such recorded statements and, to the extent the Register
considers practicable, on data contained in any of the records of
the Copyright Office or in other reference sources.
(e) Presumption as to Author's Death. - After a period of 95
years from the year of first publication of a work, or a period of
120 years from the year of its creation, whichever expires first,
any person who obtains from the Copyright Office a certified report
that the records provided by subsection (d) disclose nothing to
indicate that the author of the work is living, or died less than
70 years before, is entitled to the benefits of a presumption that
the author has been dead for at least 70 years. Reliance in good
faith upon this presumption shall be a complete defense to any
action for infringement under this title.
-SOURCE-
(Pub. L. 94-553, title I, Sec. 101, Oct. 19, 1976, 90 Stat. 2572;
Pub. L. 105-298, title I, Sec. 102(b), Oct. 27, 1998, 112 Stat.
2827.)
-MISC1-
HISTORICAL AND REVISION NOTES
HOUSE REPORT NO. 94-1476
In General. The debate over how long a copyright should last is
as old as the oldest copyright statute and will doubtless continue
as long as there is a copyright law. With certain exceptions, there
appears to be strong support for the principle, as embodied in the
bill, of a copyright term consisting of the life of the author and
50 years after his death. In particular, the authors and their
representatives stressed that the adoption of a life-plus-50 term
was by far their most important legislative goal in copyright law
revision. The Register of Copyrights now regards a life-plus-50
term as the foundation of the entire bill.
Under the present law statutory copyright protection begins on
the date of publication (or on the date of registration in
unpublished form) and continues for 28 years from that date; it may
be renewed for a second 28 years, making a total potential term of
56 years in all cases. [Under Public Laws 87-668, 89-142, 90-141,
90-416, 91-147, 91-555, 92-170, 92-566, and 93-573, copyrights that
were subsisting in their renewal term on September 19, 1962, and
that were scheduled to expire before Dec. 31, 1976, have been
extended to that later date, in anticipation that general revision
legislation extending their terms still further will be enacted by
then.] The principal elements of this system - a definite number of
years, computed from either publication or registration, with a
renewal feature - have been a part of the U.S. copyright law since
the first statute in 1790. The arguments for changing this system
to one based on the life of the author can be summarized as
follows:
1. The present 56-year term is not long enough to insure an
author and his dependents the fair economic benefits from his
works. Life expectancy has increased substantially, and more and
more authors are seeing their works fall into the public domain
during their lifetimes, forcing later works to compete with their
own early works in which copyright has expired.
2. The tremendous growth in communications media has
substantially lengthened the commercial life of a great many
works. A short term is particularly discriminatory against
serious works of music, literature, and art, whose value may not
be recognized until after many years.
3. Although limitations on the term of copyright are obviously
necessary, too short a term harms the author without giving any
substantial benefit to the public. The public frequently pays the
same for works in the public domain as it does for copyrighted
works, and the only result is a commercial windfall to certain
users at the author's expense. In some cases the lack of
copyright protection actually restrains dissemination of the
work, since publishers and other users cannot risk investing in
the work unless assured of exclusive rights.
4. A system based on the life of the author would go a long way
toward clearing up the confusion and uncertainty involved in the
vague concept of "publication," and would provide a much simpler,
clearer method for computing the term. The death of the author is
a definite, determinable event, and it would be the only date
that a potential user would have to worry about. All of a
particular author's works, including successive revisions of
them, would fall into the public domain at the same time, thus
avoiding the present problems of determining a multitude of
publication dates and of distinguishing "old" and "new" matter in
later editions. The bill answers the problems of determining when
relatively obscure authors died, by establishing a registry of
death dates and a system of presumptions.
5. One of the worst features of the present copyright law is
the provision for renewal of copyright. A substantial burden and
expense, this unclear and highly technical requirement results in
incalculable amounts of unproductive work. In a number of cases
it is the cause of inadvertent and unjust loss of copyright.
Under a life-plus-50 system the renewal device would be
inappropriate and unnecessary.
6. Under the preemption provisions of section 301 and the
single Federal system they would establish, authors will be
giving up perpetual, unlimited exclusive common law rights in
their unpublished works, including works that have been widely
disseminated by means other than publication. A statutory term of
life-plus-50 years is no more than a fair recompense for the loss
of these perpetual rights.
7. A very large majority of the world's countries have adopted
a copyright term of the life of the author and 50 years after the
author's death. Since American authors are frequently protected
longer in foreign countries than in the United States, the
disparity in the duration of copyright has provoked considerable
resentment and some proposals for retaliatory legislation.
Copyrighted works move across national borders faster and more
easily than virtually any other economic commodity, and with the
techniques now in common use this movement has in many cases
become instantaneous and effortless. The need to conform the
duration of U.S. copyright to that prevalent throughout the rest
of the world is increasingly pressing in order to provide
certainty and simplicity in international business dealings. Even
more important, a change in the basis of our copyright term would
place the United States in the forefront of the international
copyright community. Without this change, the possibility of
future United States adherence to the Berne Copyright Union would
evaporate, but with it would come a great and immediate
improvement in our copyright relations. All of these benefits
would accrue directly to American and foreign authors alike.
The need for a longer total term of copyright has been
conclusively demonstrated. It is true that a major reason for the
striking statistical increase in life expectancy since 1909 is the
reduction in infant mortality, but this does not mean that the
increase can be discounted. Although not nearly as great as the
total increase in life expectancy, there has been a marked increase
in longevity, and with medical discoveries and health programs for
the elderly this trend shows every indication of continuing. If
life expectancy in 1909, which was in the neighborhood of 56 years,
offered a rough guide to the length of copyright protection, then
life expectancy in the 1970's which is well over 70 years, should
offer a similar guide; the Register's 1961 Report included
statistics indicating that something between 70 and 76 years was
then the average equivalent of life-plus-50 years. A copyright
should extend beyond the author's lifetime, and judged by this
standard the present term of 56 years is too short.
The arguments as to the benefits of uniformity with foreign laws,
and the advantages of international comity that would result from
adoption of a life-plus-50 term, are also highly significant. The
system has worked well in other countries, and on the whole it
would appear to make computation of terms considerably simpler and
easier. The registry of death dates and the system of presumptions
established in section 302 would solve most of the problems in
determining when an individual author died.
No country in the world has provisions on the duration of
copyright like ours. Virtually every other copyright law in the
world bases the term of protection for works by natural persons on
the life of the author, and a substantial majority of these accord
protection for 50 years after the author's death. This term is
required for adherence to the Berne Convention. It is worth noting
that the 1965 revision of the copyright law of the Federal Republic
of Germany adopted a term of life plus 70 years.
A point that has concerned some educational groups arose from the
possibility that, since a large majority (now about 85 percent) of
all copyrighted works are not renewed, a life-plus-50 year term
would tie up a substantial body of material that is probably of no
commercial interest but that would be more readily available for
scholarly use if free of copyright restrictions. A statistical
study of renewal registrations made by the Copyright Office in 1966
supports the generalization that most material which is considered
to be of continuing or potential commercial value is renewed. Of
the remainder, a certain proportion is of practically no value to
anyone, but there are a large number of unrenewed works that have
scholarly value to historians, archivists, and specialists in a
variety of fields. This consideration lay behind the proposals for
retaining the renewal device or for limiting the term for
unpublished or unregistered works.
It is true that today's ephemera represent tomorrow's social
history, and that works of scholarly value, which are now falling
into the public domain after 28 years, would be protected much
longer under the bill. Balanced against this are the burdens and
expenses of renewals, the near impossibility of distinguishing
between types of works in fixing a statutory term, and the
extremely strong case in favor of a life-plus-50 system. Moreover,
it is important to realize that the bill would not restrain
scholars from using any work as source material or from making
"fair use" of it; the restrictions would extend only to the
unauthorized reproduction or distribution of copies of the work,
its public performance, or some other use that would actually
infringe the copyright owner's exclusive rights. The advantages of
a basic term of copyright enduring for the life of the author and
for 50 years after the author's death outweigh any possible
disadvantages.
Basic Copyright Term. Under subsection (a) of section 302, a work
"created" on or after the effective date of the revised statute
[Jan. 1, 1978] would be protected by statutory copyright "from its
creation" and, with exceptions to be noted below, "endures for a
term consisting of the life of the author and 50 years after the
author's death."
Under this provision, as a general rule, the life-plus-50 term
would apply equally to unpublished works, to works published during
the author's lifetime, and to works published posthumously.
The definition of "created" in section 101, which will be
discussed in more detail in connection with section 302(c) below,
makes clear that "creation" for this purpose means the first time
the work is fixed in a copy or phonorecord; up to that point the
work is not "created," and is subject to common law protection,
even though it may exist in someone's mind and may have been
communicated to others in unfixed form.
Joint Works. Since by definition a "joint work" has two or more
authors, a statute basing the term of copyright on the life of the
author must provide a special method of computing the term of
"joint works." Under the system in effect in many foreign
countries, the term of copyright is measured from the death of the
last survivor of a group of joint authors, no matter how many there
are. The bill adopts this system as the simplest and fairest of the
alternatives for dealing with the problem.
Anonymous Works, Pseudonymous Works, and Works Made for Hire.
Computing the term from the author's death also requires special
provisions to deal with cases where the authorship is not revealed
or where the "author" is not an individual. Section 302(c)
therefore provides a special term for anonymous works, pseudonymous
works, and works made for hire: 75 years from publication or 100
years from creation, whichever is shorter. The definitions in
section 101 make the status of anonymous and pseudonymous works
depend on what is revealed on the copies or phonorecords of a work;
a work is "anonymous" if "no natural person is identified as
author," and is "pseudonymous" if "the author is identified under a
fictitious name."
Section 302(c) provides that the 75- and 100-year terms for an
anonymous or pseudonymous work can be converted to the ordinary
life-plus-50 term if "the identity of one or more authors * * * is
revealed" in special records maintained for this purpose in the
Copyright Office. The term in such cases would be "based on the
life of the author or authors whose identity has been revealed."
Instead of forcing a user to search through countless Copyright
Office records to determine if an author's identity has been
revealed, the bill sets up a special registry for the purpose, with
requirements concerning the filing of identifying statements that
parallel those of the following subsection (d) with respect to
statements of the date of an author's death.
The alternative terms established in section 302(c) - 75 years
from publication or 100 years from creation, whichever expires
first - are necessary to set a time limit on protection of
unpublished material. For example, copyright in a work created in
1978 and published in 1988 would expire in 2063 (75 years from
publication). A question arises as to when the copyright should
expire if the work is never published. Both the Constitution and
the underlying purposes of the bill require the establishment of an
alternative term for unpublished work and the only practicable
basis for this alternative is "creation." Under the bill a work
created in 1980 but not published until after 2005 (or never
published) would fall into the public domain in 2080 (100 years
after creation).
The definition in section 101 provides that "creation" takes
place when a work "is fixed in a copy or phonorecord for the first
time." Although the concept of "creation" is inherently lacking in
precision, its adoption in the bill would, for example, enable a
scholar to use an unpublished manuscript written anonymously,
pseudonymously, or for hire, if he determines on the basis of
internal or external evidence that the manuscript is at least 100
years old. In the case of works written over a period of time or in
successive revised versions, the definition provides that the
portion of the work "that has been fixed at any particular time
constitutes the work as of that time," and that, "where the work
has been prepared in different versions, each version constitutes a
separate work." Thus, a scholar or other user, in attempting to
determine whether a particular work is in the public domain, needs
to look no further than the particular version he wishes to use.
Although "publication" would no longer play the central role
assigned to it under the present law, the concept would still have
substantial significance under provisions throughout the bill,
including those on Federal preemption and duration. Under the
definition in section 101, a work is "published" if one or more
copies or phonorecords embodying it are distributed to the public -
that is, generally to persons under no explicit or implicit
restrictions with respect to disclosure of its contents - without
regard to the manner in which the copies or phonorecords changed
hands. The definition clears up the question of whether the sale of
phonorecords constitutes publication, and it also makes plain that
any form or dissemination in which a material object does not
change hands - performances or displays on television, for example
- is not a publication no matter how many people are exposed to the
work. On the other hand, the definition also makes clear that, when
copies or phonorecords are offered to a group of wholesalers,
broadcasters, motion picture theaters, etc., publication takes
place if the purpose is "further distribution, public performance,
or public display."
Although the periods of 75 or 100 years for anonymous and
pseudonymous works and works made for hire seem to be longer than
the equivalent term provided by foreign laws and the Berne
Conventions, this difference is more apparent than real. In
general, the terms in these special cases approximate, on the
average, the term of the life of the author plus 50 years
established for other works. The 100-year maximum term for
unpublished works, although much more limited than the perpetual
term now available under common law in the United States and under
statute in some foreign countries, is sufficient to guard against
unjustified invasions of privacy and to fulfill our obligations
under the Universal Copyright Convention.
Records and Presumption as to Author's Death. Subsections (d) and
(e) of section 302 together furnish an answer to the practical
problems of how to discover the death dates of obscure or unknown
authors. Subsection (d) provides a procedure for recording
statements that an author died, or that he was still living, on a
particular date, and also requires the Register of Copyrights to
maintain obituary records on a current basis. Under subsection (e)
anyone who, after a specified period, obtains certification from
the Copyright Office that its records show nothing to indicate that
the author is living or died less than 50 years before, is entitled
to rely upon a presumption that the author has been dead for more
than 50 years. The period specified in subsection (e) - 75 years
from publication or 100 years from creation - is purposely uniform
with the special term provided in subsection (c).
AMENDMENTS
1998 - Subsecs. (a), (b). Pub. L. 105-298, Sec. 102(b)(1), (2),
substituted "70" for "fifty".
Subsec. (c). Pub. L. 105-298, Sec. 102(b)(3), in first sentence,
substituted "95" for "seventy-five" and "120" for "one hundred".
Subsec. (e). Pub. L. 105-298, Sec. 102(b)(4), in first sentence,
substituted "95" for "seventy-five", "120" for "one hundred", and
"70" for "fifty" in two places.
-SECREF-
SECTION REFERRED TO IN OTHER SECTIONS
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