Mechanical and Digital Phonorecord Delivery Rate Adjustment Proceeding, 64303-64317 [E6-18426]
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 211 / Wednesday, November 1, 2006 / Notices
[FR Doc. E6–18352 Filed 10–31–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–30–P
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
Copyright Office
[Docket No. RF 2006–1]
Mechanical and Digital Phonorecord
Delivery Rate Adjustment Proceeding
Copyright Office, Library of
Congress.
ACTION: Final Order.
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AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The Copyright Royalty Board,
acting pursuant to statute, referred two
novel questions of law to the Register of
Copyrights. Specifically, the Copyright
Royalty Board requested a decision by
the Register of Copyrights regarding
whether ringtones are subject to the
statutory license for making and
distributing phonorecords under the
Copyright Act, and if so, what legal
conditions and/or limitations would
apply. The Register of Copyrights, in a
timely fashion, transmitted a
Memorandum Opinion to the Copyright
Royalty Board stating, with certain
caveats, that the statutory license
applies to ringtones.
DATES: Effective Date: October 16, 2006.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ben
Golant, Senior Attorney, and Tanya M.
Sandros, Associate General Counsel,
Copyright GC/I&R, P.O. Box 70400,
Southwest Station, Washington, DC
20024. Telephone: (202) 707–8380.
Telefax: (202) 707–8366.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In the
Copyright Royalty and Distribution
Reform Act of 2004, Congress amended
Title 17 to replace the copyright
arbitration royalty panel with the
Copyright Royalty Board (‘‘Board’’). One
of the functions of the new Board is to
make determinations and adjustments of
reasonable terms and rates of royalty
payments as provided in sections
112(e), 114, 115, 116, 118, 119 and 1004
of the Copyright Act. In any case in
which a novel question of law
concerning an interpretation of a
provision of the Copyright Act is
presented in a ratesetting proceeding,
the Board has the authority to request a
decision of the Register of Copyrights
(‘‘Register’’), in writing, to resolve such
questions. See 17 U.S.C. 802(f)(1)(B)(i).
For this purpose, a ‘‘novel question of
law’’ is a question of law that has not
been determined in prior decisions,
determinations, and rulings described in
Section 803(a) of the Copyright Act.
On August 1, 2006, the Recording
Industry Association of America
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(‘‘RIAA’’) requested that the Board refer
a question to the Register of Copyrights
regarding the eligibility of ringtones
(i.e., short digital sound recording file
distributed for use in a cellular
telephone or similar device) for
statutory licensing under Section115 of
the Copyright Act. An opposition to the
RIAA‘s referral motion was submitted,
collectively, by the National Music
Publishers Association, Inc., the
Songwriters Guild of America, and the
Nashville Songwriters Association
International (‘‘Copyright Owners’’).
After considering the arguments of the
parties, the Board agreed that the
matters raised by the RIAA motion did
present novel questions of law and
agreed to submit the questions to the
Register. Accordingly, on September 14,
2006, the Board transmitted to the
Register: (1) an Order, dated August 18,
2006, referring two novel questions of
law; and (2) the Initial and Reply Briefs
filed with the Board by RIAA and the
Copyright Owners. The Board‘s
transmittal triggered the 30–day
decision period prescribed in Section
802 of the Copyright Act. This statutory
provision states that the Register ‘‘shall
transmit his or her decision to the
Copyright Royalty Judges within 30
days after the Register of Copyrights
receives all of the briefs or comments of
the participants.’’ See17 U.S.C.
802(f)(1)(B)(i). On October 16, 2006, the
Register transmitted a Memorandum
Opinion to the Board that answered the
novel questions of law. To provide the
public with notice of the decision
rendered by the Register, the
Memorandum Opinion is reproduced in
its entirety, below.
Dated: October 26, 2006
Marybeth Peters,
Register of Copyrights.
Before the
U.S. Copyright Office
Library of Congress
Washington, D.C. 20559
Docket No. RF 2006–1
In the Matter of
Mechanical and Digital Phonorecord
Delivery Rate Adjustment Proceeding
MEMORANDUM OPINION
I.
Introduction
On September 14, 2006, the Copyright
Royalty Board (‘‘Board’’), acting on a
request by the Recording Industry
Association of America, Inc. (‘‘RIAA’’),
and pursuant to 17 U.S.C. § 802(f)(1)(B),
referred two novel questions of law1 to
1 A ‘‘novel question of law’’ is a question of law
that has not been determined in prior decisions,
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the Register of Copyrights (‘‘Register’’).
Specifically, the Board requested a
decision by the Register as to the
following:
1. Does a ringtone, made available for
use on a cellular telephone or similar
device, constitute delivery of a digital
phonorecord that is subject to statutory
licensing under 17 U.S.C. § 115,
irrespective of whether the ringtone is
monophonic (having only a single
melodic line), polyphonic (having both
melody and harmony), or a mastertone (a
digital sound recording or excerpt
thereof)?
2. If so, what are the legal conditions
and/or limitations on such statutory
licensing?2
In sum, and as stated more fully
below, we believe that ringtones
(including monophonic and polyphonic
ringtones, as well as mastertones)
qualify as digital phonorecord deliveries
(‘‘DPDs’’) as defined in 17 U.S.C. § 15.
Apart from meeting the formal
requirements of Section 115 (e.g.,
service of a notice of intention to obtain
a compulsory license under Section
115(b)(1), submission of statements of
account and royalty payments, etc.),
whether a particular ringtone falls
within the scope of the statutory license
will depend primarily upon whether
what is performed is simply the original
musical work (or a portion thereof), or
a derivative work (i.e., a musical work
based on the original musical work but
which is recast, transformed, or adapted
in such a way that it becomes an
original work of authorship and would
be entitled to copyright protection as a
derivative work).
Procedural Background. On August 1,
2006, the RIAA requested that the
Copyright Royalty Board refer a
question to the Register of Copyrights
regarding the eligibility of a mastertone,
a short digital sound recording file
distributed for use in a cellular
telephone or similar device, for
statutory licensing under 17 U.S.C.
§ 115.3 An opposition to the RIAA‘s
determinations, and rulings described in Section
803(a) of the Copyright Act. See 17 U.S.C.
§ 802(f)(1)(B)(ii).
2 See Mechanical and Digital Phonorecord
Delivery Rate Adjustment Proceeding, Order
Granting in Part the Request for Referral of a Novel
Question of Law, Docket No. 2006–3 CRB DPRA
(Aug. 18, 2006) (‘‘Order’’).
3 The Copyright Royalty Board is currently
conducting a proceeding to determine the
reasonable rates and terms for the making and
distribution of phonorecords under the Section 115
license. See Adjustments or Determination of
Compulsory License Rates for Making and
Distributing Phonorecords, 71 Fed Reg 1454 (Jan. 9,
2006). The answers to the two questions referred to
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referral motion was submitted,
collectively, by the National Music
Publishers Association, Inc., the
Songwriters Guild of America, and the
Nashville Songwriters Association
International (‘‘Copyright Owners’’).
After considering the arguments of the
parties, the Board agreed that the
matters raised by the RIAA motion did
present novel questions of law and
agreed to submit the questions to the
Register.
Accordingly, on September 14, 2006,
the Board transmitted to the Register of
Copyrights the following: (1) the Order,
dated August 18, 2006, referring two
novel questions of law; and (2) the
Initial and Reply Briefs filed with the
Board by RIAA and the Copyright
Owners. The Board‘s transmittal
triggered the 30–day decision period
prescribed in Section 802(f)(1)(B) of the
Copyright Act. This statutory provision
states that the Register of Copyrights
‘‘shall transmit his or her decision to the
Copyright Royalty Judges within 30
days after the Register of Copyrights
receives all of the briefs or comments of
the participants.’’4
In addition to reviewing the Initial
Briefs and Reply Briefs filed in this
proceeding, the Office concluded that it
would be helpful to conduct oral
argument relating to the novel questions
of law.5 On October 4, 2006, the
Copyright Office convened a hearing
and questioned counsel on matters
raised in the briefs filed by RIAA and
Copyright Owners.6
Summary of Arguments. RIAA argues
that ringtones are digital phonorecord
deliveries as that term is defined in the
Copyright Act and are subject to
statutory licensing under the plain
language of Section 115, without
limitation. It argues that ringtones in
general and mastertones,7 in particular,
contain no new original material, are
not protectable as derivative works, and
therefore cannot infringe on the
derivative work rights of the Copyright
Owners. Moreover, even if they were
the Register will help determine the scope of the
ratesetting proceeding before the Board.
4 17 U.S.C. § 802(f)(1)(B).
5 See In the Matter of Mechanical and Digital
Phonorecord Delivery Rate Adjustment Proceeding,
Notice of Oral Argument, Docket No. RF 2006–1
(Sept. 28, 2006).
6 We note that for demonstration purposes at the
oral argument, RIAA and Copyright Owners have
created CDs containing many examples of ringtones
as well as full length versions of some of the
musical works from which the ringtones were
based. Copyright Owners‘ CD also contains
ringtones downloaded from specific mobile phone
operators. These CDs are now part of the record in
this proceeding as is the oral testimony of the
parties.
7 These types of ringtones are described in more
detail below.
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derivative works, RIAA argues that
Section 115(a)(2), the arrangement
privilege, expressly authorizes their
creation. In any event, RIAA argues that
once the copyright owner of a musical
work distributes a new ringtone to the
public, anyone can obtain a statutory
license to use the musical work in that
ringtone. RIAA concludes that the
Register should find that ringtones are
subject to statutory licensing under
Section 115 of the Copyright Act, and
all of the conditions under the provision
should apply.
Copyright Owners assert that all
ringtones are excluded from the Section
115 statutory license. They argue that
the statutory license for making and
distributing phonorecords of musical
works is narrow in scope and does not
encompass ringtones. They argue that
ringtones are not covered by Section 115
because they involve only a portion of
the underlying composition, not the
entire musical work. Copyright Owners
argue that ringtones are derivative
works and thus fall outside the express
language of the statute. As for Section
115(a)(2), they argue that ringtones
cannot be considered ‘‘arrangements’’ as
that term is understood in the music
industry, and in any event, ringtones
change the basic melody and
fundamental character of the musical
work. Copyright Owners also argue that
ringtones fail to satisfy Section 115’s
requirement that the phonorecords be
distributed for private use. Copyright
Owners conclude that although
variations exist among ringtones, none
of them fit within the Section 115
licensing scheme.
Summary of Decision. We find that
ringtones (including monophonic and
polyphonic ringtones, as well as
mastertones) are phonorecords and the
delivery of such by wire or wireless
technology meets the definition of DPD
set forth in the Copyright Act. However,
there are a variety of different types of
ringtones ranging from those that are
simple excerpts taken from a larger
musical work to ones that include
additional material and may be
considered original musical works in
and of themselves. Ringtones that are
merely excerpts of a preexisting sound
recording fall squarely within the scope
of the statutory license, whereas those
that contain additional material may
actually be considered original
derivative works and therefore outside
the scope of the Section 115 license.8
8 We note that Section 115 permits the creation
of derivative works, but this privilege under the
statutory license is limited to making musical
arrangements necessary to conform it to the style or
manner of interpretation of the performance
involved. 17 U.S.C. § 115(a)(2). For purposes of our
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Moreover, we decide that a ringtone is
made and distributed for private use
even though some consumers may
purchase them for the purpose of
identifying themselves in public. We
also conclude that if a newly created
ringtone is considered a derivative
work, and the work has been first
distributed with the authorization of the
copyright owner, then any person may
use the statutory license to make and
distribute the musical work in the
ringtone. For those ringtones that are
covered by Section 115 of the Copyright
Act, all of the rights, conditions, and
requirements in the Act would apply.
For those ringtones that fall outside the
scope of Section 115, the rights at issue
must be acquired through voluntary
licenses. While the Copyright Royalty
Judges need not know which specific
ringtones fall within/outside the scope
of the license for the purpose of setting
rates, and the parties have not asked the
Register to undertake such a granular
analysis here, we nevertheless offer
some guidance on the legal matters
raised in this proceeding.
II.
Section 115 of the Copyright Act
Almost a century ago, Congress added
to the Copyright Act the right for
copyright owners to make and
distribute, or authorize others to make
and distribute, mechanical
reproductions (known today as
phonorecords) of their musical
compositions. Due to its concern about
potential monopolistic behavior,
Congress also created a statutory
license, Section 115 of the Act, to allow
anyone to make and distribute a
mechanical reproduction of a musical
composition without the consent of the
copyright owner provided that the
person adhered to the provisions of the
license, most notably paying a
statutorily established royalty to the
copyright owner. Although originally
enacted to address the reproduction of
musical compositions on perforated
player piano rolls, the statutory license
has for most of the past century been
used primarily for the making and
distribution of phonorecords and, more
recently, for the digital delivery of
music online.9
discussion in this proceeding, when we refer to
derivative works not covered by Section 115, we
mean those types of works that exhibit a degree of
‘‘originality’’ as that term is defined in court
precedent. The addition of original material would
not only take a ringtone outside the scope of the
privilege of making arrangements, it would also
take the ringtone outside the Section 115 license
altogether.
9 Statement of Marybeth Peters, Register of
Copyrights, Before the Subcommittee on
Intellectual Property: Music Licensing Reform, U.S.
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In 1995, Congress recognized that
‘‘digital transmission of sound
recordings [was] likely to become a very
important outlet for the performance of
recorded music.’’10 Moreover, it realized
that ‘‘[t]hese new technologies also may
lead to new systems for the electronic
distribution of phonorecords with the
authorization of the affected copyright
owners.’’11 For these reasons, Congress
made changes to Section 115 to meet the
challenges of providing music in a
digital format when it enacted the
Digital Performance Right in Sound
Recordings Act of 1995 (‘‘DPRA’’)12
which also granted copyright owners of
sound recordings an exclusive right to
perform their works publicly by means
of a digital audio transmission subject to
certain limitations.13 Specifically,
Congress wanted to reaffirm the
mechanical rights of songwriters and
music publishers in the new world of
digital technology. The changes to
Section 115 were also designed to
minimize the burden on transmission
services by placing record companies in
the position to license not only their
own rights, but also, if they chose to do
so, the rights of writers and music
publishers to authorize digital
phonorecord delivery.14 It is the DPRA
amendments to Section 115 that are of
particular interest here.
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III. Ringtone Types
Before addressing the questions raised
by the Copyright Royalty Judges, we
must first determine the scope of the
subject matter in this proceeding.
According to RIAA, a ringtone is a
digital file, generally no more that 30
seconds in length, played by a cellular
phone or other mobile device to alert
the user of an incoming call or
message.15 RIAA states that, initially,
mobile carriers and other ringtone
vendors distributed synthesized
ringtones that embodied versions of
musical works, but not recorded
performances by featured recording
artists. It states that these earlier forms
of ringtones are commonly known as
‘‘monophonic’’ ringtones (having only a
House of Representatives, 109th Cong., 1st Sess. at
20 (June 21, 2005).
10 S. Rep. No. 104-128, 104th Cong., 1st Sess. at
14 (1995).
11 Id.
12 Pub. L. No. 104-39, 109 Stat. 336 (1995).
13 See 17 U.S.C. § 114.
14 S. Rep. No. 104-128, at 37 (1995).
15 Cellular phones typically have the ability to
accept downloads of ringtones, usually directly
over the cellular telephone network. Over the last
decade, a new consumer market has developed for
musical ringtones. According to RIAA, the vast
majority of ringtones (99 percent) now in the
marketplace consist of excerpts from sound
recordings. Oral Argument Transcript at 7, 10.
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single melodic line) and ‘‘polyphonic’’
ringtones (having both melody and
harmony). RIAA explains that typical
commercial monophonic and
polyphonic ringtones consist of a
segment of the musical work
representing its ‘‘hook,’’ or most
memorable portion of the melody, with
little or no revision.16
RIAA states that advances in
technology now allow mobile devices to
play digital copies of commercial sound
recordings. As a result, mobile phone
manufacturers are incorporating the
functionality of stand–alone portable
digital music players, thus permitting
consumers to download sound
recordings via the Internet or a
computer connected to the Internet.
RIAA states that, in addition to full song
downloads of commercial recordings to
such phones, there is consumer demand
for downloads of shorter (partial–copy)
excerpts of sound recordings for use as
ringtones. These ringtones are
commonly referred to as
‘‘mastertones.’’17 RIAA asserts that
mastertones are displacing monophonic
and polyphonic ringtones as the
ringtone of choice amongst
consumers.18 RIAA acknowledges that
record companies and ringtone vendors
must obtain licenses to reproduce and
distribute the relevant musical works in
ringtones and that Section 115 exists to
enable use of musical works when
licenses are not otherwise available.19
Copyright Owners describe ringtones
as ten–to–thirty–second ‘‘snippets’’ of
full–length musical works that are
created to serve as ringers on cell
phones and other mobile devices.20
Copyright Owners alternatively describe
a ringtone as a ten–to–thirty–second
derivation of a musical work, sometimes
repeated in a ‘‘looping’’ sequence and
sometimes not.21 Copyright Owners
assert that the creation of ringtones,
16 RIAA Initial Brief at 3-4; see also Neil J. Rosini
and Michael I. Rudell, Ring Tone Revenues Foster
Copyright Detente, 234 N.Y.L.J. 3, col. 1 (2005)
(‘‘Originally, musical ring tones were only available
in ‘monophonic’ form: a simple series of tones–each
a single note–that might remind one of several bars
from a favorite CD as performed by a very simple
computer. Technology then advanced to the
‘polyphonic’ level, which are like monophonic ring
tones with multiple notes played at the same time,
creating harmonies. They sound closer to that
favorite CD, but without original instrumentation or
vocals.’’)(Hereinafter ‘‘Rosini and Rudell’’).
17 RIAA explains that record companies hire
contractors to select hooks from popular sound
recordings and then create ringtones including
these hooks. Oral Argument Transcript at 10.
18 See Rosini and Rudell (Mastertones ‘‘not only
sound like a favorite CD but are that favorite CD.’’).
19 RIAA Initial Brief at 4-5.
20 Copyright Owners Initial Brief at 1–2.
21 Id. at 9. We note that looping involves a portion
of a musical performance that is then sequenced in
a repetitive manner.
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including mastertones, involves
‘‘substantial’’ creativity and
‘‘significant’’ changes to the underlying
work. They state, for example, that
making a ringtone requires creative
determinations as to which portions of
the work should be selected to best
capture the ‘‘hook’’ of the full length
recording and also to be most appealing
as ringtones. They further state that
many mastertones are designed to be
looped, repeating the selected portions
of the song multiple times until the
phone or mobile device is answered.22
Some songs have multiple hooks, each
of which can be made into a separate
ringtone. Other ringtones, they assert,
include new content not present in the
underlying work.23
Analysis. While RIAA and the
Copyright Owners may disagree as to
the amount of creativity it takes to
create a ringtone, they do agree that, in
general, ringtones are a unique category
of sound recordings that are used to
announce an incoming call. The most
rudimentary ringtone, in musical terms,
is the monophonic ringtone that only
contains a musical work‘s melody (or a
portion of the melody). One level up the
musical hierarchy is the polyphonic
ringtone that contains a work‘s melody
and harmony (or a portion thereof). The
most musically complex ringtones are
mastertones. A mastertone is a portion
of a pre–existing full length musical
work that may play sequentially or is
looped in a sequence. A mastertone
could also contain a portion of a
musical work combined with a message
from the recording artist designed
specifically for the ringtone user. It is
important to note that there are also
non–musical ringtones that are
becoming increasingly popular with
consumers.24 As discussed below,
different types of ringtones may be
treated differently for Section 115
purposes.
22 RIAA states that ringtone producers do not
intentionally create looping sequences; instead,
looping is the product of cellphones that do not
have adequate storage capacity (memory). Oral
Argument Transcript at 13-14.
23 Copyright Owners Reply Brief at 5, 7.
24 See Rosini and Rudell (‘‘[C]onsumers aren‘t
settling merely for musical ringtones and ringbacks.
Audio clips from films and television programs;
comic routines from Comedy Central; pithy
observations by Donald Trump; and announcement
of baseball plays are also available as ring tones.’’);
see also https://cyberextazy.wordpress.com/2006/
09/01/ringtones-in-mtvs-video-music-awards/,
Ringtones in MTV‘s Video Music Awards(Sept. 1,
2006) (stating that ringtones are evolving into
watchtones, which are ringtones combined with
video clips).
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IV. The Applicability of Section 115 to
Ringtones
Statutory Language. Section 115 of
the Copyright Act provides a
‘‘compulsory license to make and
distribute phonorecords’’ of any musical
work previously recorded once a
phonorecord of a nondramatic musical
work has been ‘‘distributed to the public
in the United States under authority of
the copyright owner.’’25 Such a license
‘‘includes the right of the compulsory
licensee to distribute or authorize the
distribution of a phonorecord of a
nondramatic musical work by means of
a digital transmission which constitutes
a digital phonorecord delivery.’’26 The
term ‘‘digital phonorecord delivery’’ or
‘‘DPD’’ is defined, in part, as ‘‘each
individual delivery of a phonorecord by
digital transmission of a sound
recording which results in a specifically
identifiable reproduction by or for any
transmission recipient of a phonorecord
of that sound recording.’’27
Congress created the statutory
mechanical license, as part of the
Copyright Act of 1909, to prevent
monopolistic control over musical
works while ensuring that music
publishers and songwriters receive an
appropriate royalty.28 Congress revisited
the issue of statutory licensing in 1976
and 1995 and has reaffirmed these same
purposes.29 Congress added the DPD
provisions to Section 115, as part of the
DPRA of 1995, with support of the
music publishers, noting: ‘‘The
intention in extending the mechanical
compulsory license to digital
phonorecord deliveries is to maintain
and reaffirm the mechanical rights of
25 17
U.S.C. § 115(a)(1).
U.S.C. § 115(c)(3)(A).
27 17 U.S.C. § 115(d). The legislative history
accompanying this provision states, inter alia, that:
(1) the phrase ‘‘specifically identifiable
reproduction’’ should be understood to mean a
reproduction specifically identifiable to the
transmission service; and (2) a transmission by a
noninteractive subscription transmission service
that transmits in real time a continuous program of
music selections chosen by the transmitting entity,
for which the consumer pays a monthly fee would
generally not be considered a DPD.
28 SeeH. R. Rep. No. 60–2222, at 7 (1909) (‘‘The
main object to be desired in expanding copyright
protection accorded to music has been to give to the
composer an adequate return for the value of his
composition, and it has been a serious and difficult
task to combine the protection of the composer with
the protection of the public, and to so frame an act
that it would accomplish the double purpose of
securing to the composer an adequate return for all
use made of his composition and at the same time
prevent the formation of oppressive monopolies,
which might be founded upon the very rights
granted to the composer for the purpose of
protecting his interests.)’’
29 See H. R. Rep. No. 94–1476, at 107 (1976) (‘‘[A]
compulsory licensing system is still warranted as a
condition for the rights of reproducing and
distributing phonorecords of copyrighted music.’’).
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songwriters and music publishers as
new technologies permit phonorecords
to be delivered by wire or over the
airwaves rather than by the traditional
making and distribution of records,
cassettes, and CDs.’’30 The question
presented here is whether ringtones
qualify as digital phonorecord deliveries
within the scope of Section 115.31
RIAA argues that, under the plain
language of the Copyright Act, a
distribution of a ringtone is a DPD
subject to statutory licensing under the
Copyright Act. RIAA asserts that a
ringtone results from the fixation of a
series of musical, spoken, or other
sounds and therefore meets the
definition of a ‘‘sound recording’’ in
Section 101 of the Copyright Act; its
fixation in a material object is a
‘‘phonorecord.’’ According to RIAA, it is
a phonorecord of the relevant musical
work as well. In the case of a
mastertone, the sound recording is a
clip of the commercially distributed
recording. In the case of monophonic
and polyphonic ringtones, the fixed
sounds are rendered by a synthesizer in
the telephone and so do not represent
ambient sound in a recording studio.32
RIAA asserts that downloads of
ringtones are DPDs because, when a
ringtone is downloaded, there is a
digital transmission of the sound
recording that results in a specifically
identifiable reproduction for the
transmission recipient. RIAA argues that
the statutory license under Section 115
includes the right of the licensee to
distribute ringtones just as it includes
the right of the licensee to make and
authorize other kinds of downloads.33
RIAA asserts that statutory licensing of
ringtones is consistent with
Congressional intent, as they are just the
type of new technology contemplated by
Congress to be included within the
scope of the DPRA.34
Copyright Owners do not argue that
ringtones are not DPDs, stating instead
that since ringtones are not covered by
Section 115, there is no need to address
the question.35 Rather, Copyright
30 See
S. Rep. No. 104–128, at 37 (1995).
note that the Harry Fox Agency, Inc., a
subsidiary of the National Music Publishers
Association and the leading musical work licensing
agency, released a notice in 2004 informing all
licensees of its stated position that Section 115 does
not cover ringtones or mastertones. See Mario F.
Gonzales, Are Musical Compositions Subject to
Compulsory Licensing for Ringtones?, 12 UCLA Ent.
L. Rev. 11, 11–12 (2004). RIAA asserts that its
dispute with the Harry Fox Agency over the
interpretation of Section 115 remains unresolved
and ‘‘has cast a pall of legal uncertainty over the
ringtone market.’’ RIAA Initial Brief at 6.
32 Id. at 6–7.
33 Id. at 8.
34 Id. at 21, 23.
35 Oral Argument Transcript at 55.
31 We
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Owners argue that the statutory license
for making and distributing
phonorecords or musical works is
narrow in scope and does not
encompass uses such as ringtones. They
assert that the inclusion of ringtones
within the statutory license would
contravene Congress‘ intent that Section
115 be a narrowly construed exception
to certain exclusive rights of the musical
work copyright owner. Copyright
Owners state that, as a ‘‘limited
exception’’ to certain exclusive rights
granted to copyright owners, courts
consistently have held that the statutory
license ‘‘be construed narrowly, lest the
exception destroy, rather than prove, the
rule.’’36
With regard to the DPRA of 1995,
Copyright Owners assert that Congress‘
clarification that Section 115 covered
not only ‘‘brick and mortar’’ sales did
not extend the license to cover any and
all digital uses. They state that the
existing limitations on the scope of the
license did not change and that use of
a work prior to publication, the creation
of derivative works, and the
synchronization of a musical work, are
uses that remain outside of the license,
whether in digital or physical form.37
Copyright Owners assert that RIAA‘s
interpretation of Section 115 would
‘‘potentially open the door’’ to licensing
of snippets of musical works used to
enhance all sorts of other consumer
products and devices, such as musical
car alarms or doorbells. They state that
the licensing of musical works for
functional uses in consumer products is
not what Congress intended when it
enacted Section 115.38
RIAA, in its Reply, asserts that the
statutory mechanical license has been a
fixture of U.S. copyright law for nearly
a century and argues that it should be
construed in accordance with its terms.
RIAA contests Copyright Owners‘ view
that Section 115 should be construed
narrowly, noting that the legislative
history accompanying the 1976
Copyright Act states: ‘‘The fundamental
question of whether to retain the
compulsory license or do away with it
altogether was a major issue during
earlier stages of the program for general
revision of the copyright law. At the
hearings it was apparent that the
argument on this point had shifted, and
the real issue was not whether to retain
36 Copyright Owners Initial Brief at 5, citing Fame
Publishing Co. v. Alabama Custom Tape, Inc., 507
F. 2d 667, 670 (5th Cir. 1975)(noting that the
compulsory license provision of the 1909 Copyright
Act is a limited exception to the copyright holder‘s
exclusive right to decide who shall make use of his
composition).
37 Copyright Owners Initial Brief at 7–8.
38 Copyright Owners Reply Brief at 14–15.
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the compulsory license but how much
the royalty rate under it should be .
.≥.≥. The Committee‘s conclusion on
this point remains the same as in 1967:
‘that a compulsory license system is still
warranted as a condition for the rights
of reproducing and distributing
phonorecords of copyrighted music.‘’’39
RIAA adds that Congress did not narrow
the license through adoption of the
DPRA in 1995, but rather stated that it
was ‘‘extending the mechanical
compulsory license to digital
phonorecord deliveries’’ and that its
purpose was to ‘‘maintain and reaffirm’’
that the Section 115 license would
apply to ‘‘new technologies.’’40 RIAA
concludes that although some details of
the Section 115 license have changed
over the years, nothing in these
enactments or the legislative history
thereof suggests that Congress intended
a narrow reading of the statute.
Analysis. We find that ringtones meet
the definition of DPDs. The issue
presented is one of pure statutory
construction and there is no actual
dispute on this point.41 Based on the
language of the statute, ringtones easily
meet the requisite definitions under the
Copyright Act to be included in the
Section 115 licensing scheme. First, we
hold that a ringtone meets the definition
of ‘‘sound recording’’ under Section 101
of the Act as a work that results from
‘‘the fixation of a series of musical,
spoken, or other sounds,’’42 and that the
sound recording is fixed in the form of
a ‘‘phonorecord,’’ defined in the statute
as a ‘‘material object in which sounds
are fixed by any method now known or
later developed.’’43 The phonorecord
here is the actual sound recording file
stored as a ‘‘download’’ on either the
cell phone‘s hard drive or on a cell
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39 RIAA
Reply Brief at 3, citing H.R. Rep. No. 94–
1476, at 107 (1976).
40 Id. at 4, citing S.Rep. No. 104–128, at 37 (1995).
41 Id. at 2, citing Doyle v. Huntress, Inc., 419 F.3d
3, 7–8 (1st Cir. 2005) (‘‘A question of statutory
construction presents a purely legal question.’’);
Blackman v. District of Columbia, 2006 WL
2034355, *6 (DC Cir. 2006) (statutory construction
begins with ‘‘the language itself, the specific context
in which that language is used, and the broader
context of the statute as a whole[.]’’).
42 17 U.S.C. § 101 (‘‘‘Sound recordings’ are works
that result from the fixation of a series of musical,
spoken, or other sounds, but not including the
sounds accompanying a motion picture or other
audiovisual work, regardless of the nature of the
material objects, such as disks, tapes, or other
phonorecords, in which they are embodied.’’).
43 17 U.S.C. § 101 (‘‘‘Phonorecords‘ are material
objects in which sounds, other than those
accompanying a motion picture or other
audiovisual work, are fixed by any method now
known or later developed, and from which the
sounds can be perceived, reproduced, or otherwise
communicated, either directly or with the aid of a
machine or device. The term ‘phonorecords‘
includes the material object in which the sounds
are first fixed.’’).
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phone‘s removable memory storage
disk.44 When downloaded through the
Internet or by wireless transmission, a
ringtone is part of a ‘‘digital
phonorecord delivery’’ and a digital
transmission of a sound recording
which results in a ‘‘specifically
identifiable reproduction’’ by or for any
transmission recipient of a phonorecord
of that sound recording.45 We also
believe that our statutory analysis
comports with Congressional intent.
Ringtones are delivered by means of the
type of ‘‘new technologies’’ Congress
intended to be included when it enacted
the DPRA in 1995.46
We disagree with Copyright Owners
that Congress did not intend for
ringtones to be the kind of use of
musical works contemplated for
inclusion under the Section 115
license.47 While we adhere to the
general proposition that statutory
licenses are to be construed narrowly,48
we find that Section 115, as amended by
the DPRA, purposefully broadened the
scope of the statutory license to cover
DPDs, and ringtones appear to fit
comfortably within the definition of
DPDs. On this note, we recognize that
Copyright Owners have cited Fame
Publishing Co. v. Alabama Custom
Tape, Inc., 507 F. 2d at 670, to support
their narrow construction argument.
However, we find this citation is inapt
because the case arose out of a dispute
concerning statutory language found in
the 1909 Act that is not present in the
current version of Section 115. In any
event, the legislative history of the
Copyright Act of 1909 states that from
its inception, this compulsory license
was intended to include all ‘‘mechanical
reproductions’’ and that one of its
purposes was ‘‘to secure to the
composer an adequate return for all use
made of his composition[.]’’49 (emphasis
added). While the concept of the
cellular phone ringtone undoubtedly
would have astonished the members of
the 1909 Congress, the license they
devised was broad enough to include
ringtones. Whether our interpretation
44 See S. Rep. No. 104–128, at 39 (1995) (stating
that storage of data in a ‘‘computer memory’’ is
‘‘technically the making of a phonorecord.’’).
45 17 U.S.C. § 115(d).
46 See S. Rep. No. 104–128, at 37 (1995)
47 We are not saying that Congress specifically
contemplated ringtones and their inclusion in the
Section 115 license. Rather, ringtones generally fall
into the class of ‘‘new technologies’’ that Congress
concluded should be included within the expanded
statutory license.
48 See Public Performance of Sound Recordings:
Definition of a Service, Docket No. RM 2000–B, 65
FR 77,292, 77,297 (Dec. 11, 2000) (noting that the
Copyright Office has historically construed
limitations on copyright narrowly, especially those
constrained by a compulsory license.).
49 See H. R. Rep. No. 60–2222, at 7 (1909).
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‘‘opens the door’’ to licensing of
snippets of musical works to be used in
car alarms or doorbells is a question that
is outside the scope of this proceeding.
Works or Portions of Works.
According to Copyright Owners, Section
115 is expressly limited to the making
and distributing of phonorecords of
‘‘works,’’ not portions of works such as
ringtones. Copyright Owners argue that
because a ringtone is not a reproduction
of the entire musical work, it is not
subject to the statutory license. They
argue that Section 115 throughout its
provisions makes clear that a ‘‘work,’’
and not a ‘‘portion’’ of a work, is its
subject. Copyright Owners state that this
result was not an accident of drafting
nor is it an unintended source of
statutory ambiguity. They state that
Congress had no difficulty using the
term ‘‘portions’’ where in fact that
concept was intended, such as in
Sections 108(h)(1) and 110(2) of the
Copyright Act.50 Copyright Owners
assert that this interpretation is
confirmed by Section 115’s legislative
history which mentions ‘‘cover records’’
as well as cassettes and CDs.51
Copyright Owners remark that it is
obvious that the Section 115 license
applies only to physical or digital
phonorecords of complete works since
industry practices have developed on
the basis of this interpretation of Section
115. They state, for example, that partial
uses of compositions, such as medleys
and samples, are licensed in market
transactions. They further state that
legal commentators have recognized
that the Section 115 license does not
apply to digital sampling and that it
would have to be modified in order to
include sampling within its scope.52
50 Section 108(h)(1) states in part ‘‘a library or
archives. . .may reproduce, distribute, display, or
perform in facsimile or digital form a copy or
phonorecord of such work, or portions thereof, for
purposes of preservation, scholarship, or research.’’
Section 110(2) refers to ‘‘the performance of a
nondramatic literary or musical work or reasonable
and limited portions of any other work, or display
of a work in an amount comparable to that which
is typically displayed in the course of a live
classroom session, by or in the course of a
transmission.’’
51 Copyright Owners Initial Brief at 9–11, citing
Supplementary Register‘s Report on the General
Revision of the U.S. Copyright Law: 1965 Revision
Bill, House Comm. on the Judiciary, 89th Cong.,
Copyright Law Revision Part 6, at 54 (Comm. Print
1965) (discussing ‘‘cover’’ records); H.R. Rep. No.
90–83, at 67 (1967) (referring to ‘‘disks and audio
tapes’’); S. Rep. No. 104–128, at 37 (1995)
(‘‘extending the mechanical compulsory licenses. .
.as new technologies permit phonorecord to be
delivered by wire or over airwaves rather than by
traditional making and distributing of record,
cassettes and CDs’’).
52 Id. at 11, citing Jennifer R.R. Mueller, Note: All
Mixed Up: Bridgeport Music v. Dimension Films
and De Minimis Digital Sampling, 81 IND. L.J. 435,
461 (Winter 2006).
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RIAA asserts that Section 115 applies
to whole musical works as well as
portions of musical works, and that any
other reading would be inconsistent
with other provisions of the Copyright
Act.53 RIAA states that if the Copyright
Owners are correct that the Copyright
Act distinguishes between ‘‘works’’ and
‘‘portions of works,’’ then reproduction
and distribution of ringtones would be
permissible without a license as the
provisions under Section 106 granting
the exclusive rights to reproduction and
distribution only refer to ‘‘works,’’ not
‘‘portions of works.’’ RIAA remarks that
the Copyright Owners do not intend that
interpretation nor is it a correct one.
RIAA adds that Copyright Owners‘
approach to what constitutes a ‘‘work’’
would make other phrases in the statute
superfluous. It notes, for example, that
one of the factors used in determining
whether a use of a work is a fair use
under Section 107(3) is the ‘‘amount
and substantiality of the portion used in
relation to the copyrighted work as a
whole.’’ The phrase ‘‘as a whole’’ would
be superfluous if a ‘‘work’’ in the Act
must always be the whole work and not
a portion thereof.54 RIAA asserts that
although unstated, Copyright Owners
apparently are relying on the canon of
statutory construction expressio unius
est exclusio alterius, which provides a
general inference that omissions in
statutory text are intentional.55 RIAA
notes, however, that this maxim
‘‘requires great caution in its
application’’ and should be disregarded
where ‘‘its application would thwart the
legislative intent made apparent by the
entire act.’’56 It states that such caution
should be exercised here because,
unlike most of the relevant language in
Section 115, the references to
‘‘portions’’ of works that Copyright
Owners cite did not appear in the 1976
Act and were only added years later.
RIAA asserts that there is no indication
that either amendment was intended to
affect the interpretation of the
provisions of the Copyright Act enacted
more that twenty years before. RIAA
concludes that two isolated references
in the Copyright Act to ‘‘portions of
works’’ cannot imply that the hundreds
of unadorned references to ‘‘works’’
apply only to works in their entirety.57
RIAA notes that Copyright Owners‘
argument that ringtones are analogous to
sampling is equally misplaced. It states
53 RIAA
Reply Brief at 7.
at 9, citing 17 U.S.C. § 107(3)
55 Id. at 8, citing 2A Sutherland, Statutes and
Statutory Construction, § 47:25 (Norman Singer ed.,
6th ed. 2005).
56 Id.
57 Id. at 7, 9.
54 Id.
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that ringtones are excerpts that are taken
from musical works and distributed as
such; samples, however, are short
excerpts that are blended into what are
clearly new creative works. RIAA
asserts that the fact that the latter are
licensed apart from Section 115 does
not imply that the former should be.58
Analysis. The Section 115 license is
not limited to the reproduction and
distribution of phonorecords of the
entire musical work, and an excerpt
may qualify for the statutory license if
all other requirements are met. We
believe that the Copyright Act‘s
language and purpose are broad and that
‘‘portions of works’’ should be treated
the same as any other type of work
under Section 115. This provision of the
Act does not expressly exclude
‘‘portions of works’’ from its scope and
we cannot assume that such treatment
was intended in the absence of clear
statutory language to that effect.59
Contrary to Copyright Owners‘
assertion, we cannot find support for
such a limited and narrow reading of
the Act in the legislative history they
cite.60
Moreover, we believe that Copyright
Owners‘ citations to Sections 108 and
110 are inapt as these provisions were
not enacted contemporaneously with
Section 115 and cannot be read to
provide any guidance as to
Congressional intent or the purpose of
the statutory license. We note, in
particular, that their interpretation of
Section 110(2) defies legislative intent
as well as common sense.61 Under
Copyright Owners‘ interpretation,
educators using the distance education
exemption could transmit limited
portions of works other than
nondramatic literary or musical works,
but if they transmit a performance of a
nondramatic literary or musical work,
they would have to transmit the entire
work as a transmission of a portion of
the work would not be permitted.
Congress certainly did not intend this
result.
We also find that Copyright Owners‘
reading of the Copyright Act, if adopted,
would render certain provisions of the
statute superfluous. For example, well–
settled interpretation of and practice
under Section 118 of the Act would be
58 Id.
at n.8.
agree with RIAA that Section 115 makes no
distinction between downloads of song excerpts
and full songs delivered by online music services
such as Apple‘s iTunes Music Store and Verizon
Wireless‘ V Cast Music Store. See RIAA Initial Brief
at 1.
60 See n. 51, supra
61 See 17 U.S.C. § 110(2) (discussing works
‘‘produced or marketed primarily for performance
or display as part of mediated instructional
activities transmitted via digital networks . . .’’).
59 We
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undermined if Copyright Owners‘
interpretation were correct. Under this
provision, licensing agreements and
related fees negotiated between
noncommercial broadcasting entities
and copyright owners of published
nondramatic musical works are subject
to ratesetting by the Copyright Royalty
Board.62 While Section 118 expressly
refers to ‘‘works,’’ it has been
understood to include portions of works
as well. For example, under 37 CFR
§ 253.7(b)(3), which implements the
rates set for the Section 118 statutory
license, ‘‘a ‘Concert Feature‘ shall be
deemed to be the nondramatic
presentation in a program of all or part
of a symphony, concerto, or other
serious work originally written for
concert performance or the nondramatic
presentation in a program of portions of
a serious work written for opera
performances.’’63(emphasis added). If
we were to accept Copyright Owners‘
argument that the Act covers only full
musical works, and not portions of
musical works, then the Board could
never set such rates pursuant to Section
253.7. This result, we believe, was not
intended by Congress.
We also believe that Copyright
Owners analogy to sampling is inapt.
Sampling generally refers to the
appropriation of sounds from an
existing sound recording for
transformative use along with other
sounds in a new work. A mastertone, in
contrast, is taken from a single work, in
the form of an excerpt.
Marketplace Developments.
According to Copyright Owners, the
statutory license was instituted to
ensure a market where none existed, but
there is an active market for freely
negotiated licenses already in place.
They assert that the Register of
Copyrights has stated that ringtones are
a subject more appropriately left to
market forces than government
regulation and that ‘‘there is no need for
Government to legislate what the parties
can negotiate themselves.’’64 They state
that Copyright Owners and record
labels, recognizing that ringtones are not
DPDs subject to the statutory license,
62 See 17 U.S.C. § 118. Section 118(d) gives public
broadcasters permission to engage in certain
‘‘activities with respect to published nondramatic
musical works and published pictorial, graphic, and
sculptural works . . .’’ Under Section 118(d)(1), one
of the activities is ‘‘the performance or display of
a work.’’ 17 U.S.C. § 118(d)(1).
63 See37 CFR § 253.7(b)(3).
64 Copyright Owners Initial Brief at 8, citing
Copyright Office Views on Music Licensing Reform.
Hearings Before the Subcomm. on Courts, the
Internet, and Intellectual Property. House Comm.
on the Judiciary, 109th Cong., at 20 (2005)
(Statement of Marybeth Peters, Register of
Copyrights)
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have entered into voluntary license
agreements granting the labels the right
to create ringtones at specified
mutually–negotiated royalty rates.65
Copyright Owners assert that these
voluntary licenses provide further
support that ringtones are outside the
narrow scope of Section 115. They
conclude that there exists a vibrant and
growing market for ringtones, which
makes it unnecessary and inappropriate
to include ringtones within Section
115.66
According to RIAA, Copyright
Owners mischaracterize current
marketplace conditions and the
Register‘s prior testimony, which, in any
instance, are both irrelevant. RIAA
asserts that the Register‘s testimony was
in the context of an express legislative
invitation to explore revision of the
statute. The reform proposal presented
by the Register, if adopted by Congress,
would have repealed the statutory
license and omitted from a successor
licensing system the statutory treatment
of ‘‘ringtunes’’ and certain other types of
works. RIAA notes that the Register‘s
reform proposal is not law, but Section
115 is.67
RIAA disputes Copyright Owners‘
claims that the purpose of the statutory
license was to ensure a market where
none existed and that the ringtone
market is thriving. As to the former
point, RIAA asserts that Section 115 was
enacted to protect the market from a
‘‘great music monopoly,’’ not to create a
market.68 With regard to the latter point,
RIAA asserts that although the U.S. has
the world‘s largest music market, the
U.S. ringtone market represents only a
fraction of worldwide sales, with the
bulk of the market in Europe and Asia.
Moreover, aside from the EMI agreement
cited by Copyright Owners, there are no
other major ringtone licensing
agreements of importance. RIAA states
that with tens of thousands of music
publishers, the need to clear all these
rights through negotiation is a burden
on the market and it is not surprising
that the U.S. offerings lag behind other
parts of the world. RIAA concludes that
65 For example, Copyright Owners cite the
November 1, 2004 Sony BMG/EMI Music
Publishing Agreement that granted the former the
right to create ringtones embodying EMI
compositions
66 Copyright Owners Initial Brief at 4.
67 RIAA Reply Brief at 4, citing Music Licensing
Reform. Subcomm. on Intellectual Property, Senate
Comm. on the Judiciary, 109th Cong. (July 12, 2005)
(Statement of Marybeth Peters, Register of
Copyrights).
68 RIAA Reply Brief at 5, citing Melville B.
Nimmer & David Nimmer, Nimmer on Copyright
§ 8.04[A] (2004).
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some mastertone agreements are no
substitute for the Section 115 license.69
In Reply, Copyright Owners reiterate
that the market for ringtones is thriving
and no compulsory license is needed to
ensure its continued growth. The
suggestion by RIAA that, absent
compulsory licensing, music publishers
will ‘‘prevent the commercialization’’ of
ringtones is belied by the years of
voluntary licensing of compositions by
music publishers for such uses.70
Analysis. The general success, or lack
thereof, of the marketplace for ringtones
is not dispositive, or even necessarily
relevant, in this analysis. Commercial
negotiations involving the use of
copyrighted works cannot annul the
force and effect of existing law, unless
Congress explicitly so states. We in fact
note that, despite the existence of the
Section 115 license, the vast majority of
sound recordings are made pursuant to
direct licenses from music publishers or
the Harry Fox Agency rather than under
the provisions of the statute. These
commercial agreements, however, do
not negate the existence of the statutory
license. Moreover, reliance on the
statements made by the Register of
Copyrights is both inappropriate and
inapt. These statements were proposals
for revising the law, not interpretations
of the existing regulatory regime.
V.
Derivative Works
Section 115 and Derivative Works.
Section 101 of the Copyright Act defines
a derivative work as a ‘‘work based
upon one or more preexisting works,
such as a translation, musical
arrangement, dramatization,
fictionalization, motion picture version,
sound recording, art reproduction,
abridgement, condensation, or any other
form in which a work may be recast,
transformed, or adapted. A work
consisting of editorial revisions,
annotations, elaborations, or other
modifications, which as a whole,
represent an original work of
authorship, is a derivative work.’’71
Congress used one defined term,
‘‘derivative work,’’ to specify both that
derivative works are protectable under
Section 103 of the Copyright Act and
that the copyright owner has the
exclusive right to prepare derivative
works under Section 106(2) of the
Copyright Act.72 According to the Act‘s
69 Id.
at 6–7.
70 Copyright
Owners Reply Brief at 15–16, citing
Rudell and Rosini, (noting that U.S. ringtone sales
in 2005 was approximately $500 million).
71 17 U.S.C. § 101.
72 Section 103 states that ‘‘the copyright in a
compilation or derivative work extends only to the
material contributed by the author of such work, as
distinguished from the preexisting material
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legislative history, Section 115 exists to
permit artists and record companies to
create sound recordings, which are a
type of derivative work.73
Copyright Owners generally assert
that ringtones fall outside the ambit of
the statutory license because they are
derivative works. They argue that
ringtones exceed the scope of the
Section 115 license by infringing the
copyright owners‘ exclusive right to
prepare derivative works. They assert
that Section 115 subjects only the rights
to reproduce and distribute
phonorecords of works to the statutory
license, leaving derivative works
outside its scope. Copyright Owners
argue that ringtones fit squarely within
the derivative work definition because
they are based on pre–existing works,
and typically reduce a three–to–five
minute work to an abridged ten–to–
thirty second work.74
RIAA asserts that the legal tests for
protection of derivative works and
infringement of the derivative work
right are identical and, in any event,
require originality.75 It states that ‘‘[F]or
the derivative work right to be infringed,
the defendant must have created a
derivative work, and for the derivative
work to have been created, the Act
requires the contribution of expressive
content capable of standing on its own
as a copyrightable work.’’76 RIAA cites
a string of precedent to support its
position that derivative works must be
original to be afforded copyright
employed in the work, and does not imply any
exclusive right in the preexisting material.’’ 17
U.S.C. § 103(b). Section 106 states that ‘‘[s]ubject to
sections 107 through 122, the owner of copyright
under this title has the exclusive rights to do and
to authorize any of the following. . . (2) prepare
derivative works based upon the copyrighted work.
. .’’ 17 U.S.C. § 106(2).
73 See H. R. Rep. No. 94–1476, at 108–09 (1976)
(noting that a Section 115 license permits either the
creation of a new sound recording or a duplication
of an existing one with the consent of the sound
recording copyright owner).
74 Copyright Owners Initial Brief at 12–13.
Copyright Owners note that the Copyright Board of
Canada recently observed in a proceeding to set the
rates for ringtones that ‘‘mastertones are created by
taking an actual segment of a sound recording after
determining which number of seconds out of a
work will be most appropriate for the market.’’ Id.,
citing Copyright Board of Canada, Collective
Administration of Performing Rights and of
Communications Rights, Statement of Royalties to
be Collected by SOCAN for the Communication to
the Public by Telecommunication, In Canada, of
Musical or Dramatico-Musical Works, Tariff No. 24–
Ringtones (2003–2005) (Aug. 18, 2006) at 13. In
response, RIAA notes that this statement by the
Copyright Board confirms its supposition that the
selection of a mastertone from the underlying
musical work is a ‘‘trivial omission.’’ RIAA Reply
Brief at n. 10.
75 RIAA Initial Brief at 11, citing Feist Publ’ns,
Inc. v. Rural Tel. Serv. Co., 499 U.S. 340, 346 (1991)
(‘‘Originality is a constitutional requirement.’’).
76 Id. at 11–12, citing 2 Paul Goldstein, Copyright
§ 7.3 (3d ed. 2005).
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protection.77 RIAA states that for
mastertones, the trivial action of
copying a clip from an existing sound
recording does not stand on its own as
meriting copyright protection.78 RIAA
also asserts that there is no precedent in
copyright law for the proposition that
every partial reproduction of a work
constitutes a separate derivative work.
RIAA concludes that ringtones are
nothing more than partial copies that
lack sufficient originality to be protected
as derivative works or to infringe the
derivative works right.79 RIAA
concludes that because ringtones do not
fit under the definition of derivative
works in Section 101 of the Act, the
making of a ringtone cannot be excluded
under Section 115 on this basis.
Analysis. As an initial matter, we
agree with Copyright Owners‘ assertion
that Section 115, by its terms, concerns
only the rights to reproduce and
distribute phonorecords of works,
leaving derivative works outside its
confines. Thus, consideration of the
derivative work right is important only
to the extent that a ringtone which is
adjudged to be a derivative work cannot
be licensed under Section 115. To be
considered a derivative work, a ringtone
must exhibit a degree of originality
sufficient enough to be copyrightable.80
77 See id. at 12-14, 20, citing Woods v. Bourne Co.,
60 F.3d 978, 989 (2d Cir. 1995)(holding that a
musical work must have ‘‘substance added making
the piece to some extent a new work’’ and that only
the ‘‘addition of such new material would entitle
the creator to a copyright on the new material.’’);
Lee v. Deck the Walls, Inc., 925 F. Supp. 576 (N.D.
Ill 1996), aff’d on other grounds sub nom., Lee v.
A.R.T. Co., 125 F.3d 580 (7th Cir. 1997)(holding that
notecard art image deposited on tile and covered
with epoxy is not copyrightable because the work
does not contain any original artistic expression);
Peker v. Masters Collection, 96 F. Supp. 2d 216
(E.D.N.Y. 2000) (holding that an oil painting
reproduction, made by transfer of a copy of a
copyrighted painting from a poster to a canvas with
the addition of resin to create a brushed-on look of
the original was not a derivative work because there
was no originality that would be considered
copyrightable); Precious Moments, Inc. v. La
Infantil, Inc., 971 F. Supp. 66, 67 (D. Puerto Rico,
1997) (stating that originality is required for a
derivative work to be copyrightable).
78 Id. at 2.
79 Id. at 10, citing Nimmer on Copyright § 8.09[A]
(noting that no reported case finds the holder of a
reproduction license barred from making trivial
changes to a work even without a separate license
to make derivative works).
80 We recognize that in one sense, every ringtone
will be a derivative work, in that every sound
recording of music is a derivative work; the
underlying work is the musical composition itself.
See H. R. Rep. No. 94–1476, at 108–109 (1976) The
issue before us is not whether a ringtone is a
derivative work; by definition it is. Rather, the
question is whether a musical composition as
recorded in a ringtone infringes the derivative work
right in the original musical composition. When we
refer to ringtones as ‘‘derivative works’’ in this
Memorandum Opinion, we are referring not to the
sound recording, but to the musical composition
recorded in the ringtone. See also, n. 8, supra.
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With regard to the appropriate legal test
regarding copyrightability, we believe
that Feistis controlling precedent here.81
In Feist, the Supreme Court observed
that ‘‘as a constitutional matter,
copyright protects only those
constituent elements of a work that
possess more than a de minimis
quantum of creativity,’’ and that there
can be no copyright in work in which
‘‘the creative spark is utterly lacking or
so trivial as to be virtually
nonexistent.’’82 As illustrated below,
there are ringtones that may be
considered derivative works because
they exhibit a degree of originality and
creativity. However, there are many
other ringtones that would not be
considered derivative works because
they exhibit only trivial changes from
the underlying work. Those ringtones
would not be considered derivative
works and would be within the scope of
the statutory license.
Court Precedent. Copyright Owners
argue that caselaw compels a conclusion
that ringtones are derivative works.
They argue that ringtones satisfy any
creativity requirement for the
copyrightability of a derivative work.83
They additionally argue that the
selection process involved in the
creation of ringtones meets the
creativity standard for copyrightability
under settled law.84 Copyright Owners
also assert that the courts have routinely
held that shortened versions of a variety
81 Feist Publ’ns, Inc. v. Rural Tel. Serv. Co., 499
U.S. 340 (1991). Original, as the term is used in
copyright, means that: (1) the work was
independently created by the author (as opposed to
copied from other works); and (2) it possesses at
least some minimal degree of creativity. Id. at 345.
When we refer to ‘‘originality’’ in this
Memorandum Opinion, we are referring not to
independent creation, but to creativity.
82 Id. at 359, 363; see also Woods v. Bourne Co.,
841 F. Supp. 118, 122 (S.D.N.Y. 1994) (quoting Fred
Fisher, Inc. v. Dillingham, 298 F. 145, 148 (S.D.N.Y.
1924) (holding that a derivative work must be
‘‘substantially a new and original work, not a copy
of a piece already produced, with additions and
variations, which a writer of music with experience
and skill might readily make’’).
83 Copyright Owners Reply Brief at 8, citing Video
Pipeline, Inc. v Buena Vista Home Entm’t, Inc. 192
F. Supp. 2d 321 (D.N.J. 2002), aff’d on other
grounds, 342 F.3d 191 (3d Cir. 2003); Yurman
Design, Inc. v. PAJ, Inc., 262 F.3d 101, 109 (2d Cir.
2001) (stating that ‘‘Under the Constitution and by
statute, copyright validity depends upon
originality’’), citing Feist Publ’ns, Inc. v. Rural Tel.
Serv. Co., 499 U.S. 340, 345 (1991).
84 Id., citing U.S. Payphone, Inc. v. Executives
Unlimited of Durham, Inc., 18 U.S.P.Q. 2d 2049, at
*8 (4th Cir. 1991) (finding that a section of a
reference guidebook was a protectable compilation
because the author collapsed voluminous tariff
information into an easily usable guidebook); Caffey
v. Cook, 409 F. Supp. 2d 484, 497 (S.D.N.Y. 2006)
(finding a protectable compilation in the selection
and ordering, for a musical show, of thirty two
songs from a universe of possible musical
compositions based on the compiler’s sense of
musicality).
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of different copyrighted works
constitute derivative works under the
Copyright Act. They note, for example,
that courts have found that clips from
full–length copyrighted works, such as
movie trailers, constitute derivative
works.85
RIAA cites cases contrary to
Copyright Owners‘ position. For
example, it cites precedent holding that
the use of copyrighted music excerpts in
the background of a television show did
not infringe the derivative work right
because the inclusion of the music did
not create a new derivative work that
warrants copyright protection.86 It also
refers to another case where the district
court denied a claim that adding local
commercials to rental videos was an
infringement of the derivative work
right because there was no evidence that
‘‘the mere addition of a commercial to
the front of a videocassette recasts,
transforms, or adapts the motion picture
in what could represent an original
work of authorship.’’87 Relying on the
district court‘s determination in Agee
that copying an excerpt of a musical
work does not infringe the derivative
work right, RIAA argues that the
creation of a ringtone does not infringe
the exclusive right to prepare derivative
works of the underlying musical work.88
RIAA argues that the cases involving
the creation of unauthorized trailers
through editing and condensing of
motion pictures are inapt. According to
RIAA, such cases involve claims of
unauthorized reproduction, and that is
a sufficient basis on which to decide
85 Copyright Owners Initial Brief at 13, citing
Video Pipeline, Inc. v. Buena Vista Home Entm’t,
Inc., 192 F. Supp. 2d 321, 330 (D.N.J. 2002),aff’don
other grounds, 342 F.3d 191, 197 (3rd Cir. 2003);
John Lamb d/b/a Alpha Production v. Michael
Starks 3D TV Corp., 949 F. Supp. 753, 755–56 (N.D.
Cal. 1996)(finding that use of a portion of a full
length movie to create a trailer, without permission,
was infringing and not fair use).
86 See RIAA Initial Brief at 15, citing Agee v.
Paramount Commc’ns, Inc, 853 F. Supp. 778
(S.D.N.Y. 1994), aff’d in part rev’d in part on other
grounds, 59 F.3d 317 (2d Cir. 1995) (holding that
‘‘copying a sound recording for use in a broadcast
television program does not create a derivative
work which warrants protection under the
Copyright Act of 1976’’). The Second Circuit found
it unnecessary to reach the derivative works
question. See id. at 324 (stating that ‘‘Although the
interspersing and abridgement of a sound recording
may not, strictly speaking, involve sampling or
amount to the traditional creation of a derivative
work, such use of a recording appears to fall within
the language of section 114(b), perhaps constituting
a rearrangement or alteration in sequence. We need
not determine the extent to which the recording
was altered, however, because the finding that
Paramount created a derivative work is unnecessary
to a finding of infringement in light of Paramount’s
reproduction of Agee’s recording.’’).
87 See id. at 14, citing Paramount Pictures Corp.
v. Video Broad. Sys., Inc., 724 F. Supp. 808, 821 (D.
Kan. 1989).
88 Id. at 8, 15.
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them. Moreover, in the few instances
where those cases address the derivative
work right, they point in conflicting
directions depending on whether or not
the court follows Ninth Circuit
precedent.89 RIAA argues that the
Register should decline to follow the
Ninth Circuit‘s holding that the
derivative work right may be infringed
without a finding of originality. RIAA
explains that in the Ninth Circuit, all
one must show to prove infringement of
the derivative work right is substantial
similarity between the derivative work
and the underlying work and that,
under this reasoning, there is no legal
distinction between infringing the
reproduction right and infringing the
derivative work right.90 RIAA submits
that such an interpretation is wrong
because it is contrary to the plain
language of the statute and contrary to
the weight of authority.91 RIAA states
that, in any event, the trailer cases are
of marginal relevance here because they
involve a greater degree of editorial
judgment than copying a single clip for
distribution as a mastertone or other
typical commercial ringtone.
Copyright Owners assert that to the
extent there is a dispute among the
circuits as to whether creativity
sufficient for copyright protection is
required for a work to be a derivative
work for purposes of infringement, that
dispute is not appropriate for resolution
by the Register and is, in any event,
irrelevant to the Register‘s analysis here
since ringtones satisfy the test for
creativity in any circuit.92
89 Id. at 15, comparing Clean Flicks of Colo. v.
Soderbergh, 433 F. Supp. 2d 1236, 1242 (D. Colo.
2006) (holding that ‘‘family friendly’’ edited
versions of movies ‘‘are not derivative works and
do not violate § 106(2)’’) with Video Pipeline, Inc.
v. Buena Vista Home Entm’t, Inc., 192 F. Supp. 2d
321, 330 (D.N.J. 2002),aff’d on other grounds, 342
F.3d 191 (3d Cir. 2003).
90 RIAA cites Mirage Editions, Inc. v.
Albuquerque A.R.T. Co., 856 F. 2d 1341 (9th Cir.
1988) where the Ninth Circuit affirmed a district
court finding that mounting legally purchased
copies of copyrighted artworks on ceramic tiles
infringed the right to prepare derivative works. The
court found that appellant ‘‘made another version’’
of the artwork that amounted to the preparation of
a derivative work because it ‘‘ recast or transformed
the individual images by incorporating them into its
tile–preparing process.’’ This decision has been
followed in subsequent cases within the Ninth
Circuit. See, e.g., Micro Star v. Formgen, Inc., 154
F.3d 1107, 1112 (9th Cir. 1998); Sobhani v. Radical
Media, Inc., 257 F. Supp. 2d 1234 (C.D. Cal. 2003).
See id. at 16-17.
91 Id.at 16. In its Reply Brief, RIAA again argues
that mastertones and other typical commercial
ringtones are not derivative works. It states that the
cases cited by Copyright Owners all rely on Ninth
Circuit precedent, and given that it is the lone
Federal circuit in holding that there is a more
lenient test for infringement of derivative works,
that approach should be rejected. RIAA Reply Brief
at 11.
92 Copyright Owners Reply Brief at n. 13.
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Analysis. Given the wide range of
ringtones available in the marketplace,
and understanding that a derivative
work analysis is factually intensive, our
task here is not to provide a
comprehensive analysis of the caselaw.
However, we do need to address
whether a musical excerpt, in the form
of a ringtone, is a derivative work
because it is a central issue in this
proceeding. First, consideration of the
derivative work right issue is important
to the extent that a ringtone which is
adjudged to be a derivative work cannot
be licensed under Section 115. Second,
we agree with RIAA that the Ninth
Circuit‘s more lenient test for
infringement of derivative works, which
seemingly ignores the originality
requirement, appears to be in error as it
runs contrary to all other Circuit Court
precedent.93 Third, we agree with RIAA
that reliance on derivative works
precedent involving movie trailers, such
as Video Pipeline, Inc., is inapt because
the creating and editing process
involved in making those trailers
required much more originality than
simply shortening an existing musical
work to create a ringtone.94 Fourth,
93 We note that there is widespread disapproval
of the Ninth Circuit’s approach to derivative works.
See, e.g., Lee v. A.R.T, 125 F.3d 580, 582 (7th Cir.
1997) (noting that if the Ninth Circuit is ‘‘right
about what counts as a derivative work, then the
United States has established through the back door
an extraordinarily broad version of the authors’
moral rights.’’); Precious Moments, Inc. v. La
Infantil, Inc., 971 F. Supp. 66, 69 (D. Puerto Rico
1997) (agreeing with the Seventh Circuit that
Mirage and its progeny read the originality
requirement out of the definition of derivative
works and ‘‘open[s] the door for the most trivial
modifications to generate an infringing derivative
work.’’); Goldstein § 5.3 at 5:81–82; Nimmer on
Copyright § 3.03. Although Copyright Owners assert
that ‘‘to the extent that there is a dispute among the
circuits as to whether creativity sufficient for
copyright protection is required for a work to be a
derivative work for purposes of infringement, that
dispute is not appropriate for resolution by the
Register,’’ the positions taken by the parties on this
issue require the resolution of that issue. Having
concluded that many ringtones do not exhibit
sufficient creativity to qualify for copyright
protection as derivative works, it is necessary to
determine whether the derivative work right
nevertheless could be infringed by making and
distributing such ringtones.
94 There are marked differences between the
making of ringtones and the making of movie
trailers in the cited cases. For example, the trailers
at issue in Video Pipeline were 120 seconds in
length and included the display of the movie
studio’s trademark, title of the motion picture, and
two or more scenes from the film. See 342 F.3d at
195. In any event, the Third Circuit found that the
trailers at issue were essentially copies of the
original work that lacked ‘‘any significant
transformative quality’’ and any ‘‘creative
ingenuity.’’ Id. at 199–200. The trailer at issue in
John Lamb, another case cited by Copyright
Owners, was 2 minutes and 40 seconds in length
and included individual images and scenes, among
other things. Further, the original trailer was
transformed into a 3–D format for use with specially
engineered eyeglasses. See 949 F. Supp. at 755.
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Woods v. Bourne is guiding precedent
for determining the derivative work
right in musical compositions.95 Under
Woods, an excerpt of a musical work
made into a ringtone without original
embellishments likely would not be
considered a derivative work because
nothing of substance has been added
and the ringtone is merely a copy of a
work (albeit a portion) already
produced, without additions or
variations. Fifth, as for those
mastertones that contain new words in
the lyrics not found in the underlying
musical works, we draw no conclusions
based on precedent because they
involve factual issues and potentially
close questions that need not be
resolved here. A court of competent
jurisdiction would be the appropriate
forum to make the necessary
determinations.
Copyright Office Precedent. The
Copyright Office has made certain
pronouncements as to the registrability
of derivative works in sound recordings
and other works in various publications.
For example, Section 408.07 of
Compendium II of Copyright Office
Practices states that ‘‘An abridgement of
a musical work may be registrable
provided that there is a substantial
amount of selectivity, for example, more
than merely omitting a section from the
beginning or end.’’ Copyright Office
Circular No. 14 (2006), Copyright
Registration for Derivative Works, states
that ‘‘When the collecting of preexisting
material that makes up the compilation
is a purely mechanical task with no
element of editorial selection or when
only a few minor deletions constitute an
abridgment, copyright protection for the
compilation or abridgment as a new
version is not available.’’ Copyright
Office Circular No. 56 (2006), Copyright
Registrations for Sound Recordings,
states, in part that ‘‘[I]f only a few slight
variations or purely mechanical changes
(such as declicking or remastering) [of a
work] have been made, registration is
not possible.’’
RIAA argues that mastertones and
other typical commercial ringtones do
not stand on their own as separately
copyrightable works under the
Copyright Office‘s interpretations. RIAA
cites Section 408.07 of the Compendium
II of Copyright Office Practices as
support for its argument.96 RIAA argues
that a partial copy of a commercial
sound recording distributed as a
mastertone or a partial copy of a musical
work distributed as a monophonic or
polyphonic ringtone is not separately
95 See
n. 77, 82, supra.
II of Copyright Office Practices,
§ 408.07 (1984).
96 Compendium
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protectable as a derivative work under
Copyright Office standards.97 To the
extent that it may be desirable to make
technical adjustments to the commercial
sound recording to improve playability
on phones, RIAA asserts that process is
in the nature of remastering and would
not affect the underlying musical
work.98 As for RIAA‘s reliance on
Copyright Office precedent, Copyright
Owners refer to Copyright Office
Circular No. 14 which states that ‘‘a few
minor deletions’’ to a work will not
suffice for a work to be protectable as a
derivative work. Copyright Owners
respond that ringtones do not involve
the mere omission of portions of a work,
but involve the creative selection of
portions of a work and often more. They
assert that the process used to construct
a thirty second ringtone from a three–
to–five minute work involves the
‘‘substantial amount of selectivity’’
acknowledged by the Copyright Office
to suffice for the creation of a
protectable work.
Analysis. The Copyright Office
documents, noted above, are instructive.
We note that the Circulars are designed
to inform members of the public about
how to register works with the
Copyright Office offering guidelines for
instructional purposes. The
Compendium, generally used by the
Copyright Office staff, serves as an
internal manual detailing what works
are copyrightable, and therefore
registrable. Here, the cited materials are
based on, and to a large extent, mirror
judicial precedent on the subject of
derivative works. Essentially, making
‘‘minor deletions’’ or ‘‘slight variations’’
to an original work will not result in the
creation of a derivative work because
there is no originality involved in the
new work. Using the cited materials as
references, then, the Copyright Office
would refuse registration of a
mastertone that is merely an excerpt of
a full musical work because the new
work lacks the requisite originality.
Examples in the Record. Copyright
Owners state that creating ringtones
involves making alterations to the
underlying work that require skill,
judgment, and creativity. According to
Copyright Owners, all ringtones require
the exercise of creative judgment in
determining the points in the
composition where the ringtone should
begin and end so as to maximize appeal
to consumers. They state that the
decision as to what portion of a work to
use in the ringtone is not trivial; shorter
ringtones are sometimes designed to
‘‘loop’’ to achieve the appropriate length
97 RIAA
98 RIAA
Reply Brief at 13.
Initial Brief at 21.
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to function as a ringer, with the result
that a musical phrase is repeated in a
sequence unintended by the author of
the work. They add that other
mastertones involve the addition of new
lyrics, spoken–word interludes, and
other material designed to enhance
sales. Copyright Owners conclude that,
for a derivative work to be copyrightable
under the copyright laws, the ‘‘requisite
level of creativity is extremely low’’ and
the alterations of ringtones in the
manner described meet this test.99
RIAA disagrees and asserts that
ringtones are nothing more than partial
copies that lack sufficient originality to
be protected as derivative works or to
infringe the derivative works right. It
states that copying a clip to distribute as
a ringtone does not involve the addition
of any new material. RIAA argues that
because the definition of the term
‘‘derivative work’’ applies to both
protection and infringement, and
because the definition requires
originality in both contexts, copying a
single short clip from a sound recording
and/or musical work to distribute as a
mastertone or other ringtone does not
meet the requirements for copyright
protection as a derivative work or
infringement as a derivative work.100
RIAA has submitted, into the record, a
CD with relevant examples of
mastertones, that are simply partial
copies of the underlying musical work.
In their Reply Brief, Copyright
Owners reiterate that the creation of
ringtones involves substantial creativity
and that ringtones do not only feature
the hook of a particular musical work.
Moreover, they assert, there is no such
thing as a ‘‘typical commercial
ringtone,’’ as RIAA seems to suggest.
Rather, they vary in kind and length.
They note the following examples: (1)
the ringtone for Leonard Cohen‘s
‘‘Everybody Knows’’ recording
comprises nine seconds of the
approximately five and a half minute
full length work and the ringtone
commences seven seconds into the
song; (2) Britney Spears ‘‘ . . . Baby One
More Time’’ ringtone consists of a
fifteen–second snippet of the recording
that begins two and half minutes into
the three and a half minute song; and (3)
the mastertone for Jay Z‘s ‘‘Change
Clothes,’’ consists of excerpts of two
separate hooks repeated twice (even
though these hooks are separated in the
full–length song by other musical
content), and then these two snippets
are further repeated if the caller fails to
99 Copyright Owners Initial Brief at 14-15, citing
Yurman Design, Inc. v. PAJ, Inc., 262 F.3d 101, 109
(2d Cir. 2001) (quoting Feist, 499 U.S. at 345).
100 RIAA Initial Brief at 19-20.
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answer the phone. Copyright Owners
also note that some songs result in
multiple ringtones, each focusing on
different elements of the same
underlying composition. They state, for
example, that the Bubba Sparxx/Ying
Yang Twins hit, ‘‘Ms. New Booty,’’ has
spawned two ringtones–one featuring
the lyric ‘‘I found you’’and the other
emphasizing the lyric ‘‘get it right.’’101
They also assert that other ringtones
include new content not present in the
underlying work. Copyright Owners
note, for example, that the Pussycat
Dolls‘ mastertone derived from the best–
selling song ‘‘Don‘t Cha’’ features the
lyrics, ‘‘Don‘t cha wish your girlfriend
was hot like me. Don‘t cha wish your
girlfriend was a freak like me,’’ which
are part of, but not all of the lyrics of
the song. This ringtone, which is eleven
seconds, as compared to the four and a
half minute full length work, also
includes new material different from
those of the underlying work: ‘‘Come on
boy, don‘t cha wanna pick up? We‘re
ready for ya.’’ These additional words
are spoken, not sung, and are not
accompanied by music. Likewise,
Copyright Owners note that in
Beyonce‘s mastertone ‘‘Let Me Cater 2
You,’’ the ringtone contains a portion of
the song, with an extra line added at the
end: ‘‘What‘s up, this is Beyonce from
Destiny‘s Child and this call is for you.’’
Again, the additional words are spoken,
unaccompanied by music. Copyright
Owners have submitted a CD, included
in the record, that contains many more
examples of ringtones that they assert
support their case.
Analysis. The ringtone samples
provided by the parties are instructive.
The record evidence demonstrates that
not all ringtones are the same. While we
need not decide whether all of the
ringtones presented to us are within the
scope of Section 115, we observe that
some undoubtedly are not. For example,
the 16 second mastertone, Grind With
Me, by performing artist, Pretty Rickey,
was created solely for ringtone use and
the lyrics used therein are not found in
the 4:02 minute full length version of
the work. This ringtone is likely
copyrightable as a derivative work
because it is original and demonstrates
a ‘‘creative spark.’’ In any event, there
are likely to be many ringtones, such as
the mastertone that uses a portion of
Otis Redding‘s classic ‘‘Sittin‘ On the
Dock of the Bay,’’ that simply copy a
portion of the underlying musical work
and cannot be considered derivative
works because such excerpts do not
contain any originality and are created
with rote editing. There are also
101 Copyright
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ringtones that contain a portion of the
full length musical work and additional
spoken material such as the Pussycat
Dolls example, above. The
determination of whether such a
ringtone, or one that includes the
addition of some new lyrics, results in
a copyrightable derivative work is a
mixed question of fact and law that is
beyond the scope of this proceeding.
In sum, there is a broad spectrum of
ringtones, and whether one would be
considered a derivative work depends
upon the nature of the ringtone. At one
end of the spectrum are those ringtones
that are simple excerpts of larger
musical works. This type of ringtone is
not a derivative work. At the other end
of the spectrum are ringtones that
contain additional original authorship.
These would be considered derivative
works if there was a sufficient amount
of creative authorship in the new
material. In between are ringtones that
may include some new material (spoken
words or music) in addition to the
excerpt. Those ringtones cannot be
properly analyzed in a factual vacuum
and their status as derivative works
need not be determined in this
proceeding, but are more appropriately
determined on a case–by–case basis by
the courts.
VI. The ‘‘Arrangement Privilege’’
Section 115(a)(2) of the Copyright Act
states that the ‘‘compulsory license
includes the privilege of making a
musical arrangement of the work to the
extent necessary to conform it to the
style or manner of interpretation of the
performance involved, but the
arrangement shall not change the basic
melody or fundamental character of the
work, and shall not be subject to
protection as a derivative work under
this title, except with express consent of
the copyright owner.’’102 (Emphasis
added) According to the Act‘s legislative
history, the purpose of the limitations in
Section 115(a)(2) was to prevent the
musical composition from being
‘‘perverted, distorted, or travestied.’’103
102 17
U.S.C. § 115(a)(2).
R. Rep. 94–1476 at 62 (1976) (‘‘The second
clause of subsection (a) is intended to recognize the
practical need for a limited privilege to make
arrangements of music being used under a
compulsory license, but without allowing the music
to be perverted, distorted, or travestied. Clause (2)
permits arrangements of a work ‘‘to the extent
necessary to conform it to the style or manner of
interpretation of the performance involved,’’ so long
as it does not ‘‘change the basic melody or
fundamental character of the work.’’ The provision
also prohibits the compulsory licensee from
claiming an independent copyright in his
arrangement as a ‘‘derivative work’’ without the
express consent of the copyright owner.’’); see also,
Nimmer on Copyright 17 U.S.C. § 115(a)(2). 8.04[F]
(noting in reference to Section 115(a)(2) that ‘‘Such
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103 H.
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Arrangements. RIAA argues that
ringtones are authorized by the
arrangement privilege set forth in
Section 115. RIAA argues that even if
the Register were to determine that the
creation of mastertones or other
ringtones necessarily involves
preparation of a derivative work,
Congress specifically authorized the
creation of certain derivative works
under the express terms of the
Copyright Act. RIAA asserts that
creating arrangements by changing the
length of musical works has been an
accepted part of industry practice since
before creation of the mechanical
license. It states that shortening a
musical work is necessary to conform
the song to the style or manner of the
performance involved because ringtones
necessitate brevity.104
Copyright Owners take issue with
RIAA‘s stance. They state that RIAA‘s
argument rests on a false premise–that
changing the length of a musical work
necessarily results in an arrangement.
They assert that arrangements are
adaptations of whole works and involve
changes to the style and interpretation
of the underlying work. They conclude
that a portion of a musical work for
inclusion in a ringtone is not an
arrangement of the underlying work.105
Copyright Owners strongly assert that
a ringtone is not a musical arrangement
as that term is understood in the music
business. They state that it is well
settled in the music industry that
arrangements, intended to permit
alterations solely in interpretation and
style, are adaptions of entire works.106
They note that an arrangement, as
defined by the American Federation of
Musicians, is ‘‘the art of preparing and
adapting an already written composition
for presentation in other than its
original form. An arrangement may
include reharmonization, paraphrasing,
and/or development of a composition,
so that it fully represents the melodic,
harmonic, and rhythmic structure.’’107
They assert that, by definition, there
cannot be a ten–second arrangement of
a three minute composition and a
respect for the integrity of a musical composition
evinces Congressional regard for the moral rights of
composers [.]’’).
104 RIAA Initial Brief at 23-25.
105 Copyright Owners Reply Brief at 12.
106 Id. at 3.
107 Copyright Owners Initial Brief at 16, citing
https://www.answers.com/topic/arrangement. They
also cite the Oxford English Dictionary (an
arrangement is ‘‘[t]he adaptation of a composition
for voices or instrument for which it was not
originally written.’’) and the Cambridge Advanced
Learner’s Dictionary (an arrangement is ‘‘[a] piece
of music that has been changed so that it can be
played in a different way, especially by a different
instrument’’).
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ringtone is no more of an arrangement
of a song than the selection of four notes
out of all the others is an arrangement
of a song.108
RIAA asserts that the definitions of
‘‘arrangement’’ that Copyright Owners
provide are unconvincing. It states that
the only definition that even remotely
suggests that an arrangement must
always embody the full work and never
a partial copy of that work is the
definition from answers.com, but even
that definition is not particularly
instructive.109 RIAA also argues that
there is nothing in the Copyright Act, its
legislative history, or the common usage
of these terms to suggest that, by
employing the phrase ‘‘musical
arrangements’’ in either Section 101 or
Section 115(a)(2), Congress was
distinguishing between ‘‘musical
arrangements’’ as a class and musical
arrangements that happen to shorten
versions of the underlying work. RIAA
asserts that there are innumerable
arrangements of a particular work and a
shorter version of such a work is still
referred to as an arrangement.110
Analysis. For purposes of our
discussion here, ‘‘arrangement’’ pertains
to the musical aspect of the work, and
not to changes in lyrics. Even so,
defining the parameters of Section
115(a)(2) is difficult because there is no
precedent and there is no common
ground among the parties regarding the
appropriate definition of
‘‘arrangement’’for Section 115 purposes.
Here, the parties have used various
dictionaries and web sites to support
their definitional argument, but there is
no consensus on what sources are valid
and reliable. While Copyright Owners‘
definition is appropriate to use in this
context, we believe that the definition
found in the New Encyclopedia of Music
and Musicians (‘‘NEMM’’) is as reliable,
if not more comprehensive.111 NEMM
108 Id.
at 15–16.
Reply Brief at 15, and n. 11, citing
www.answers.com/topic/arrangement (stating that
an arrangement ‘‘fully represents the melodic,
harmonic, and rhythmic structure’’ of the work,’’
but also stating that an arrangement ‘‘may specify
or vary some or all of . . . [the] sequence, including
the order and number of repeats of sections such
as verses and choruses. . .introduction, coda,
modulations, and other variations.’’
110 Id. at 16.
111 We note that when examining musical works
for the purpose of copyright registration, the
Performing Arts Section of the Copyright Office
defines ‘‘arrangement’’ as ‘‘harmony added to an
existing melody, or a transcription, such as a band
arrangement of a piano piece.’’ Copyright Office
examiners also rely on the definition of
‘‘arrangement’’ in Section 408.01 of Compendium II
of Copyright Office Practices which states that: ‘‘A
musical arrangement is a work that results from the
addition of new harmony to a preexisting work. The
standard of originality for arrangements takes into
109 RIAA
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defines an arrangement as ‘‘The process
or result of readjusting a work for
performance by different artistic means
from that originally intended. Also, a
relatively close or literal rendering of
the substance and form of a work with
only those modifications demanded by
the limitations or peculiarities of the
medium in view.’’112 We can make three
general observations based on the
definitions and the law. First, the user‘s
right to make a melodic arrangement
should be limited so that the basic
character of the musical work is
preserved.113 Second, a mastertone that
merely shortens the full length work to
conform it to the physical limitations of
the cellphone does not affect the
musical work‘s arrangement. Finally, a
ringtone that makes minor changes to
lyrics of the underlying musical work
generally does not affect its
arrangement.114 There may be other
ringtones that are substantially different
from the underlying musical work, but
whether such changes impinge upon the
arrangement of the work is a factual
question, which goes beyond the scope
of this proceeding.
Copyright Owners assert that
ringtones are actually abridgements, not
arrangements, of a musical work, and
therefore they fall outside the Section
115 license.115 While Copyright Owners
do not fully state what constitutes an
abridgement for the purposes of Section
115(a)(2), RIAA takes issue with this
conclusion and cites a litany of
definitions, references, and examples to
support its case.116 In this context, and
without adequate explanation from the
Copyright Owners, we surmise that the
gist of their argument is that a ringtone
abridges a full length musical work, and
as such, should be considered a
derivative work. If that is the case, we
need not re–examine the matter as it is
consideration the fact that a melody carries with it
a certain amount of implied harmony.’’
Compendium II of Copyright Office Practices,
§ 408.07 (1984).
112 See Waldo Selden Pratt, The New
Encyclopedia of Music and Musicians, Macmillan
(1929).
113 See Preliminary Draft for Revised U.S.
Copyright Law and Discussion and Comments on
the Draft. House Comm. on the Judiciary, 88th
Cong., Copyright Revision Part 3, at 444 (1964).
114 See Shapiro, Bernstein& Co., Inc. v. Jerry Vogel
Music Co., Inc. (S.D.N.Y. 1947) (holding that a new
version of copyrighted song ‘‘Melancholy’’ under
the title ‘‘My Melancholy Baby’’ with an additional
chorus in march time, but using identical lyrics
except for a slight variation in the base of the
accompaniment, did not constitute a copyrightable
new work).
115 Copyright Owners Initial Brief at n. 6.
116 RIAA Reply Brief at 15. For example, referring
to Cambridge Advanced Learner’s Dictionary, RIAA
states that an abridgment is ‘‘to make a book, play
or piece of writing shorter by removing details and
unimportant information.’’
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analyzed and discussed in detail in the
derivative work section above. Our
conclusion here is bolstered by the fact
that the term abridgement does not
appear in Section 115(a)(2), but it does
appear in the definition of derivative
works in Section 101 of the Copyright
Act.
Fundamental Character of the Work.
Copyright Owners state that even
assuming, for argument‘s sake, that
ringtones qualify as musical
arrangements, Section 115 is
inapplicable because the basic melody
and fundamental character of the
underlying work has been changed.
They assert that ringtones delete large
portions of the underlying works
including much of the melody, verses,
bridges, codas, and instrumental
interludes. They conclude that the
reduction of a work to a short refrain
excludes all of the other elements that
make up the overall character of the
work.117
Copyright Owners assert that
ringtones change the character of the
underlying work in other ways as well.
They assert that ringtones transform
artistic works into utilitarian substitutes
for the ring of the telephone; the
character of a musical work
fundamentally changes when the
‘‘original artistic vision expressed by the
work in the form of a full–length song
is superseded by a new purpose of
serving as a thirty second mobile phone
ringer.’’ Copyright Owners argue that
the use of a musical work as a ringtone
departs from the integrity of the original
composition, ‘‘a result that Congress
properly avoided’’ by excluding such
uses from the Section 115 scheme.118
RIAA asserts that typical commercial
ringtones do not change the basic
melody of a musical work; to the
contrary, ringtones by their very nature
seek to accurately reproduce the basic
melody with little or no alteration.
RIAA asserts that the limitations in
Section 115(a)(2) to prevent changes to
the ‘‘basic melody and fundamental
character of the work’’ were added
specifically to address the objections of
the copyright owners that the
arrangement privilege would otherwise
allow ‘‘radical alterations’’ to the
‘‘material detriment of the work.’’119
RIAA states that in the case of
mastertones, the melody is exactly the
same as in the commercial sound
recording release and distributing a clip
does not radically alter, pervert, distort,
or travesty the musical work in
117 Copyright
Owners Initial Brief at 16–17.
at 17.
119 RIAA Reply Brief at 14, citing Goldstein,
§ 7.4.2, n. 7.
118 Id.
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contravention of Congressional intent.
RIAA asserts that since Copyright
Owners frequently license large parts of
their catalogs for use as ringtones, that
use cannot be said to be to the material
detriment of the work.120 RIAA
concludes that creating a partial copy of
the work does not constitute a radical
alteration, and if it did, mastertones
would not be commercially successful.
Analysis. Before discussing the
‘‘fundamental character’’ issue, we must
note that the arrangement privilege does
not represent the outer limit of what
other kinds of changes (apart from what
is conventionally understood as an
arrangement) may be made to a musical
work within the scope of the Section
115 statutory license. In this sense, an
analysis of the arrangement privilege as
it applies to mastertones is irrelevant
except to the extent that some of these
types of ringtones may actually tinker
with the style and interpretation of the
underlying work. Mastertones are taken
from commercially released sound
recordings which may involve
arrangements, but for purposes of this
proceeding, we assume that the
commercially released sound recording
was licensed (either by means of a
voluntary license or the statutory
license), and that the arrangement in the
sound recording was within the scope of
the license. In such cases, which we
will assume to be the norm, the use of
the same arrangement in the mastertone
would not be in contravention of the
limitations of Section 115(a)(2). Given
this conclusion, we need not
specifically address whether
mastertones change the fundamental
character of the work, but a statutory
analysis is still necessary to determine
the legal status of monophonic and
polyphonic ringtones under Section
115.
As stated above, Section 115(a)(2) of
the Copyright Act permits statutory
licensees to make a musical
arrangement of the work ‘‘to the extent
necessary to conform it to the style or
manner of interpretation of the
performance involved,’’ but the
arrangement shall not ‘‘change the basic
melody or fundamental character of the
work.’’121 The Act‘s legislative history
states that the provision was enacted to
prevent the music from being
‘‘perverted, distorted, or travestied.’’122
120 RIAA
Initial Brief at 26.
U.S.C. § 115(a)(2).
122 See H. R. Rep. No. 94-1476, at 109 (1976).
Congress did not define the terms ‘‘perverted,’’
‘‘distorted,’’ or ‘‘travestied.’’ However, the America
Heritage Dictionary defines ‘‘perverted’’ as
‘‘Deviating from what is considered right and
correct.’’ It defines ‘‘distorted’’ as ‘‘to give a false
or misleading account of.’’ And, it defines
121 17
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The language of the statute was meant
to avoid the desecration of the
underlying musical work.123 Under the
statute, it is reasonable to conclude that
a portion of a pre–existing musical work
truncated to ringtone length does not
change the basic melody and
fundamental character of the work.
Certainly, this conclusion applies to
mastertones, and it would almost
always apply to monophonic or
polyphonic ringtones that preserve the
basic melody of the underlying musical
work. As such, we cannot conclude that
the musical work customized for
ringtone purposes has been perverted,
distorted, or travestied, as those terms
are commonly defined, as no changes
have been made to the melody of the
original work.124 In sum, we do not
believe, as Copyright Owners argue, that
the reduction of a work to a short
excerpt fundamentally changes the
overall character of the work or impugns
the integrity of the work.
In the absence of a case directly
addressing the scope of Section
115(a)(2), it is useful to examine
precedent involving the derivative work
rights in a musical composition. For
example, in Woods v. Bourne, the
Second Circuit discussed the factors
upon which a derivative musical work
may be considered an original work for
copyrightability purposes:
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‘‘something of substance added making
the piece to some extent a new work
with the old song embedded in it but
from which the new has developed. It is
not merely a stylized version of the
original song where the major artist may
take liberties with the lyrics or the
tempo, the listener hearing basically the
original tune. It is, in short, the addition
of such new material as would entitle the
‘‘travestied’’ as ‘‘An exaggerated or grotesque
imitation, such as a parody of a literary work.’’ See
https://dictionary.reference.com for these
definitions.
123 See Preliminary Draft for Revised U.S.
Copyright Law and Discussion and Comments on
the Draft. House Comm. on the Judiciary, 88th
Cong., Copyright Law Revision Part 3, at 444 (1964)
(noting the concern of composers: ‘‘We have had
numerous instances where a record manufacturer
has taken a sacred or serious composition and
without authority changed it into a Rock and Roll
or jazz arrangement in such a manner as to
constitute a desecration. We have also had
instances of unauthorized adaptations which are
beyond the limits of reason and good taste; the
writing and recording of lyrics to instrumental
compositions; the making and recording of
burlesque versions and the recording of salacious
versions.’’)
124 The legislative history notes that the statutory
licensee should have some latitude, but not
complete freedom, to alter the character of the
work. See Further Discussions and Comments on
the Preliminary Draft for Revised U.S. Copyright
Law. House Comm. on the Judiciary, 88th Cong.,
Copyright Law Revision Part 4, at 430 (Comm. Print
1964).
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creator to a copyright on the new
material.’’125
Under Woods, a typical monophonic
or a polyphonic ringtone would be
considered a mere ‘‘stylized version’’ of
the original musical work with no
changes to the melody, but perhaps
some changes to the tempo. In such
cases, an electronic synthesizer may
generate a monophonic or polyphonic
adaptation of the underlying musical
work for play on a cellphone, and the
ringtone may have been conformed to fit
within the parameters of its intended
use. However, where the ringtone has
added non–trivial ‘‘new material,’’ such
that it would be considered a derivative
work, the Section 115 license may not
be available because the ringtone was
not changed simply to conform it for use
in a cellphone.126
VII. Private Use
Section 115 states that ‘‘a person may
obtain a compulsory license only if his
or her primary purpose in making
phonorecords is to distribute them to
the public for private use including by
means of a digital phonorecord
delivery.’’127 According to the Act‘s
legislative history, the ‘‘private use’’
limitation was added to Section 115 to
clarify that manufacturers of specialty
recordings for use in jukeboxes and
business music services could not rely
on the mechanical license in their use
of musical works.128
125 Woods, 60 F.3d at 991 (quoting Woods v.
Bourne Co., 841 F. Supp. 118, 121 (S.D.N.Y. 1994)).
In Woods, the District Court decided the novel issue
of whether any musical additions or variations to
the preexisting melody and lyrics of a song resulted
in a derivative work that was entitled to copyright
protection. In order to qualify as a derivative
musical work, the court found that ‘‘there must be
present more than mere cocktail pianist variations
of the piece that are standard fare in the music trade
by any competent musician. . . . [There must be]
something of substance added making the piece to
some extent a new work with the old song
embedded in it but from which the new has
developed. . . . It is, in short, the addition of such
new materials as would entitle the creator to a
copyright in the new material.’’ See Agee v.
Paramount Commc’ns, Inc, 853 F. Supp. 778, 788
(S.D.N.Y. 1994), aff’d in part, rev’d in part on other
grounds, 59 F.3d 17 (2d Cir. 1995);see also, Shapiro,
Bernstein & Co. v. Jerry Vogel Music Co., 73 F.
Supp. 165, 167 (S.D.N.Y. 1947) (finding changes in
the rhythm and accompaniment, without changes
in the tune or lyrics, were not protectable as a
derivative work).
126 See Gilliam v. American Broadcasting Comp.,
Inc., 583 F. 2d 14, 20–21 (2d Cir. 1976) (holding
that a licensee infringes a copyright where it
publishes the protected work after making
extensive, unauthorized changes which impair the
integrity of the original work).
127 17 U.S.C. § 115(a)(1).
128 See Supplementary Register’s Report on the
General Revision of the U.S. Copyright Law: 1965
Revision Bill, House Comm. on the Judiciary, 89th
Cong., Copyright Law Revision Part 6, at 55 (Comm.
Print 1965) (‘‘[T]he provision would not apply, for
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Copyright Owners assert that
ringtones fail to satisfy Section 115’s
requirement that the phonorecords be
distributed for private use. They argue
that the ‘‘private use’’ limitation
contemplated by Congress includes only
ordinary listening use for private
enjoyment of music. To bolster their
argument that a ringtone serves only
public functions, Copyright Owners
assert that a ringtone: (1) is no substitute
for enjoyment of the full length musical
work; (2) provides the notification
functions of a phone ring; and (3) is
marketed as a lifestyle accessory. They
conclude that ringtones provide mobile
phone users a means to publicly
identify and express themselves to their
friends, colleagues and the public at
large.129
RIAA asserts that ringtones are
distributed to individual consumers for
private use. It states Copyright Owners‘
arguments ignore common sense, the
relevant statutory language, and the
legislative history of the Copyright Act.
RIAA states that although ringtones do
provide users a means to identify and
express themselves, that is true for any
phonorecord. RIAA asserts that all kinds
of phonorecords distributed and sold to
private customers are sometimes used in
public, yet no one argues that such uses
make the Section 115 license
inapplicable. It argues that uses of CDs
in public places, for example, do not
make the Section 115 license
unavailable to distributors for the
simple reason that it is the primary
purpose of the distributor, not the use
by the consumer, that is relevant.
According to RIAA, the phrase ‘‘private
use’’ is not the opposite of ‘‘public
performance,’’ but means ‘‘personal’’ or
‘‘noncommercial use.’’ RIAA asserts that
ringtones satisfy the private use
requirement because the primary
example, to reproduction in a motion picture sound
track or recording primarily for use in broadcasts,
wired music transmissions, or jukeboxes.’’). See
also H. R. Rep. No. 94–1476, at 108 (1976) (‘‘The
second sentence of clause (1), which has been the
subject of some debate, provides that ‘a person may
obtain a compulsory license only if his or her
primary purpose in making phonorecords is to
distribute them to the public for private use.’’’ This
provision was criticized as being discriminatory
against background music systems, since it would
prevent a background music producer from making
recordings without the express consent of the
copyright owner; it was argued that this could put
the producer at a great competitive disadvantage
with performing rights societies, allow
discrimination, and destroy or prevent entry of
businesses. The committee concluded, however,
that the purpose of the compulsory license does not
extend to manufacturers of phonorecords that are
intended primarily for commercial use, including
not only broadcasters and jukebox operators but
also background music services.’’).
129 Copyright Owners Initial Brief at 17-19, citing
H.R. Rep. No. 90–83, at 68 (1967).
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purpose of the distributor is to
distribute them to individual consumers
for their own personal use and
enjoyment, on those consumers‘ cell
phones, in whatever manner the
consumer sees fit, not to distribute them
for commercial use such as public
broadcasting, in motion pictures,
business music services or jukeboxes.130
Analysis. We believe that Copyright
Owners‘ arguments are inconsistent
with the law and ignore common uses
of music by individuals. The controlling
language here is ‘‘for private use.’’ It is
undisputed that the term is directed at
individual consumers who use music
for personal enjoyment. However,
Copyright Owners seem to suggest that
once an individual takes the music out
of the home, the statutory provision
becomes null and void.131 This cannot
be what Congress intended. Here, we
note that traditional phonorecords are
used in public (e.g., in boom boxes in
public parks, in a car stereo while the
automobile is driving down the street,
etc.), but that does not disqualify them
from the statutory license by violating
their primary purpose of being for
private use. While it may be true that
some mobile phone users purchase
ringtones to identify themselves in
public, this use most likely would not
be considered a public use as Congress
intended that term to be understood in
the Section 115 context, and in any
event, there is no basis to conclude that
the primary purpose of the ringtone
distributor is to distribute the ringtone
for ‘‘public’’use. The legislative history
accompanying Section 115(a)(1) does
not contradict this conclusion. In fact, it
clarifies that ‘‘the purpose of the
compulsory license does not extend to
manufacturers of phonorecords that are
intended primarily for commercial use,
including not only broadcasters and
jukebox operators but also background
music services.’’132 Section 115 does
not, however, impose any limitations on
the use of a phonorecord once it is
purchased by the consumer. As such,
Section 115(a)(1) is not a bar to the
inclusion of ringtones under the
statutory license.
VIII. First Use
The Section 115 license is available
‘‘[w]hen phonorecords of a nondramatic
musical work have been distributed to
the public in the United States under
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130 RIAA
Reply Brief at 17.
131 See Copyright Owners Initial Brief at 19 (‘‘In
sum, far from being used for private musical
entertainment in one’s home, ringtones provide
mobile phone users a means to identify themselves
to their friends, colleagues and the public at
large.’’).
132 See n.128, supra.
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authority of the copyright owner.’’
According to the Act‘s legislative
history, once a musical work has been
recorded and ‘‘distributed to the
public,’’ any person may obtain a
compulsory license by complying with
the provisions of Section 115.133
RIAA argues that a ringtone would be
subject to statutory licensing after first
use even if it were not otherwise
covered by Section 115(a)(2). RIAA
explains that even if certain musical
works may be outside the scope of the
statute in the first instance, Section 115
nonetheless would apply to the new
musical work once that version was first
distributed under the authority of the
copyright owner. RIAA states that
assuming for the sake of argument that
a ringtone–length version of a musical
work is a derivative work outside the
scope of the Section 115 license, the
music publisher would have the right to
prevent distribution of that ringtone–
length work. However, once the
publisher allowed one record company
or ringtone distributor to distribute
phonorecords of that ringtone–length
work, the ordinary operation of Section
115 would then allow any person to
obtain a statutory license with respect to
the ‘‘new’’ringtone version in
question.134
Copyright Owners disagree that
ringtones are subject to Section 115 after
the public distribution by the copyright
owner. They state that RIAA‘s argument
is ‘‘premised on the inaccurate
assumption that Section 115 applies to
every digital transmission of a
copyrighted phonorecord.’’ They
reiterate that ringtones are not subject to
Section 115 because they are not
complete musical works as required by
Section 115, and in any event, the
license is narrow and does not apply to
works that are not distributed for private
use.135
Analysis. We find that RIAA‘s reading
of the statute is a reasonable one. The
issue arises only if a particular ringtone
qualifies as a derivative work due to the
presence of copyrightable derivative
work authorship in the ringtone. If, as
we expect will usually be the case, the
ringtone is not a derivative work, there
will be no reason to reach this issue; the
ringtone will be within the scope of the
Section 115 license for the reasons
stated above. However, if a particular
133 17 U.S.C.§ 115(a)(1). Mirroring the statutory
language, the provision’s legislative history states
that the Section 115 license is ‘‘available to anyone
as soon as ‘phonorecords of a nondramatic musical
work have been distributed to the public in the
United States under the authority of the copyright
owner.’’’ See H. R. Rep. No. 94 § 1476 (1976).
134 RIAA Initial Brief at 26–27.
135 Copyright Owners Reply Brief at 17–18.
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ringtone, released with the permission
of the copyright owner of the underlying
musical work, does constitute a
derivative work, then once that
derivative work has been distributed
under the authority of the copyright
owner, anyone else may, by complying
with the formal requirements of Section
115, obtain a compulsory license to
make and distribute copies of that
derivative work.
IX. Conditions and Limitations
As noted above, the Copyright Royalty
Board asked the Register to address the
legal conditions and/or limitations that
would apply to ringtones if such works
were found to DPDs under Section 115
of the Act.
RIAA asserts that the same conditions
and limitations that apply to other
phonorecords apply to ringtones. It
posits that first use of the song under
the authority of the copyright owner,
notice, and payment of royalties, would
be among the statutory conditions that
would apply to the licensing of
ringtones.136
Copyright Owners assert that there is
no need for any limitations or
conditions on the licensing of ringtones
under Section 115, as all ringtones are
excluded from the reach of the statute
as a matter of law. They note, however,
that if the Register were to conclude that
some ringtones are subject to statutory
licensing, the appropriate scope of such
licensing would involve factual issues.
Copyright Owners state that in this case,
the Copyright Royalty Boards‘ August
18, 2006 Order prohibited the
submission of factual material that is
required to make a reasoned
determination of conditions on the
licensing of ringtones within Section
115. They assert that the Copyright
Royalty Boards‘ decision not to permit
the submission of factual materials
makes it ‘‘impossible to delineate’’ any
informed conditions or limitations on
the statutory licensing of ringtones.137
Analysis. We believe that Section
115’s general requirements are
applicable to all types of ringtones
(monophonic, polyphonic, or
mastertone). This applies to mastertones
that are simple excerpts of the
underlying musical work, ringtones
(monophonic, polyphonic, and
mastertones) that are not adjudged to be
derivative works, and those ringtones
that do not change the basic melody or
fundamental character of the work. For
newly created ringtones that have not
been distributed to the public, and that
136 RIAA Reply Brief at 19, citing 17 U.S.C.
§ § 115(a)(1), 115(b), and 115(c)(2).
137 Copyright Owners Reply Brief at 20 and n. 7.
E:\FR\FM\01NON1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 211 / Wednesday, November 1, 2006 / Notices
fall outside the scope of the statute
because they are derivative works or for
any other reason outlined above, the
Section 115 provisions do not apply. A
commercial license is required to make
and distribute those types of ringtones.
There will, of course, be some instances
where the status of a ringtone
(monophonic, polyphonic, and
mastertones) for Section 115 purposes is
unclear. A judicial determination would
be required where such mixed question
of fact and law are present.
While we cannot delineate a litmus
test that will in every case determine
specifically whether a particular
ringtone is or is not within the scope of
the statutory license, the guidance
offered above is sufficient for purposes
of this proceeding. In general, a ringtone
will fall within the scope of the
compulsory license unless it has so
altered the musical composition as to
constitute a derivative work. Simply
excerpting a single portion of a licensed
sound recording of a musical
composition will not constitute the
making of a derivative work. It is clear
that many, but not all, ringtones will fall
within the scope of the Section 115
license. Therefore, it is appropriate for
the Copyright Royalty Judges to
determine royalties to be payable for the
making and distribution of ringtones
under the compulsory license.
Dated: October 16, 2006
Section
106(6) of the Copyright Act, title 17 of
the United States Code, gives the
copyright owner of a sound recording
the right to perform a sound recording
publicly by means of a digital audio
transmission, subject to certain
limitations. Among these limitations are
certain exemptions and a statutory
license which allows for the public
performance of sound recordings as part
of ‘‘eligible nonsubscription
transmissions’’ and digital
transmissions made by ‘‘new
subscription services.’’ 17 U.S.C. 114.
The Copyright Act, title 17 of the United
States Code, defines these terms as
follows:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
An ‘‘eligible nonsubscription
transmission’’ is a noninteractive digital
audio transmission which, as the name
implies, does not require a subscription
for receiving the transmission. The
transmission must also be made as a part
of a service that provides audio
programming consisting in whole or in
part of performances of sound recordings
the primary purpose of which is to
provide audio or entertainment
programming, but not to sell, advertise,
or promote particular goods or services.
See 17 U.S.C. 114(j)(6).
A ‘‘new subscription service’’ is ‘‘a
service that performs sound recordings
by means of noninteractive subscription
digital audio transmissions and that is
not a preexisting subscription or a
preexisting satellite digital audio radio
service.’’
Marybeth Peters,
Register of Copyrights.
[FR Doc. E6–18426 Filed 10–31–06; 8:45 am]
17 U.S.C. 114(j)(8).
BILLING CODE 1410–30–S
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
Copyright Office
[Docket No. 2006-6]
Notice of Intent to Audit
Copyright Office, Library of
Congress.
ACTION: Public notice.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with NOTICES
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The Copyright Office of the
Library of Congress is announcing
receipt of a notice of intent to audit
2005 statements of account concerning
the eligible nonsubscription and
subscription transmissions of sound
recordings made by Live365, Inc.
(‘‘Live365’’) under statutory licenses.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Tanya M. Sandros, Associate General
Counsel, Copyright GC/I&R, P.O. Box
70400, Southwest Station, Washington,
DC 20024-0977. Telephone: (202) 7078380. Telefax: (202) 252-3423.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:36 Oct 31, 2006
Jkt 211001
Moreover, these services may make
any necessary ephemeral reproductions
to facilitate the digital transmission of
the sound recording under a second
license set forth in section 112(e) of the
Copyright Act. Use of these licenses
requires that services make payments of
royalty fees to and file reports of sound
recording performances with
SoundExchange. SoundExchange is a
collecting rights entity that was
designated by the Librarian of Congress
to collect statements of account and
royalty fee payments from services and
distribute the royalty fees to copyright
owners and performers entitled to
receive such royalties under sections
112(e) and 114(g) following a
proceeding before a Copyright
Arbitration Royalty Panel (‘‘CARP’’)—
the entity responsible for setting rates
and terms for use of the section 112 and
section 114 licenses prior to the passage
of the Copyright Royalty and
Distribution Reform Act of 2004
(‘‘CRDRA’’), Pub. L. No. 108–419, 118
PO 00000
Frm 00081
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
64317
Stat. 2341 (2004). See 69 FR 5695
(February 6, 2004).
This Act, which the President signed
into law on November 30, 2004, and
which became effective on May 31,
2005, amends the Copyright Act, title 17
of the United States Code, by phasing
out the CARP system and replacing it
with three permanent Copyright Royalty
Judges (‘‘CRJs’’). Consequently, the CRJs
will carry out the functions heretofore
performed by the CARPs, including the
adjustment of rates and terms for certain
statutory licenses such as the section
114 and 112 licenses. However, section
6(b)(3) of the Act states in pertinent
part:
[t]he rates and terms in effect under
section 114(f)(2) or 112(e) . . . on
December 30, 2004, for new subscription
services [and] eligible nonsubscription
services . . . shall remain in effect until
the later of the first applicable effective
date for successor terms and rates . . . or
such later date as the parties may agree
or the Copyright Royalty Judges may
establish.
Successor rates and terms for these
licenses have not yet been established.
Accordingly, the terms of the section
114 and 112 licenses, as currently
constituted, are still in effect.
One of the current terms, set forth in
§ 262.6 of title 37 of the Code of Federal
Regulations, states that SoundExchange,
as the Designated Agent, may conduct a
single audit of a Licensee for the
purpose of verifying their royalty
payments. As a preliminary matter, the
Designated Agent is required to submit
a notice of its intent to audit a Licensee
with the Copyright Office and serve this
notice on the service to be audited. 37
CFR 262.6(c).
On December 23, 2005,
SoundExchange filed with the
Copyright Office a notice of intent to
audit Live365 for the years 2002, 2003,
and 2004. See 72 FR 624 (January 5,
2006). Subsequently, on October 5,
2006, SoundExchange filed a second
notice of intent to audit Live365,1
pursuant to § 262.6(c), notifying the
Copyright Office of its intent to expand
its current audit to cover 2005. Section
262.6(c) requires the Copyright Office to
publish a notice in the Federal Register
within thirty days of receipt of the filing
announcing the Designated Agent’s
intent to conduct an audit.
In accordance with this regulation,
the Office is publishing today’s notice to
fulfill this requirement with respect to
1 A copy of the new Notice of Intent to Audit
Live365, Inc. is posted on the Copyright Office Web
site at https://www.copyright.gov/carp/live365notice.2005.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\01NON1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 211 (Wednesday, November 1, 2006)]
[Notices]
[Pages 64303-64317]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E6-18426]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
Copyright Office
[Docket No. RF 2006-1]
Mechanical and Digital Phonorecord Delivery Rate Adjustment
Proceeding
AGENCY: Copyright Office, Library of Congress.
ACTION: Final Order.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Copyright Royalty Board, acting pursuant to statute,
referred two novel questions of law to the Register of Copyrights.
Specifically, the Copyright Royalty Board requested a decision by the
Register of Copyrights regarding whether ringtones are subject to the
statutory license for making and distributing phonorecords under the
Copyright Act, and if so, what legal conditions and/or limitations
would apply. The Register of Copyrights, in a timely fashion,
transmitted a Memorandum Opinion to the Copyright Royalty Board
stating, with certain caveats, that the statutory license applies to
ringtones.
DATES: Effective Date: October 16, 2006.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ben Golant, Senior Attorney, and Tanya
M. Sandros, Associate General Counsel, Copyright GC/I&R, P.O. Box
70400, Southwest Station, Washington, DC 20024. Telephone: (202) 707-
8380. Telefax: (202) 707-8366.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In the Copyright Royalty and Distribution
Reform Act of 2004, Congress amended Title 17 to replace the copyright
arbitration royalty panel with the Copyright Royalty Board (``Board'').
One of the functions of the new Board is to make determinations and
adjustments of reasonable terms and rates of royalty payments as
provided in sections 112(e), 114, 115, 116, 118, 119 and 1004 of the
Copyright Act. In any case in which a novel question of law concerning
an interpretation of a provision of the Copyright Act is presented in a
ratesetting proceeding, the Board has the authority to request a
decision of the Register of Copyrights (``Register''), in writing, to
resolve such questions. See 17 U.S.C. 802(f)(1)(B)(i). For this
purpose, a ``novel question of law'' is a question of law that has not
been determined in prior decisions, determinations, and rulings
described in Section 803(a) of the Copyright Act.
On August 1, 2006, the Recording Industry Association of America
(``RIAA'') requested that the Board refer a question to the Register of
Copyrights regarding the eligibility of ringtones (i.e., short digital
sound recording file distributed for use in a cellular telephone or
similar device) for statutory licensing under Section115 of the
Copyright Act. An opposition to the RIAA`s referral motion was
submitted, collectively, by the National Music Publishers Association,
Inc., the Songwriters Guild of America, and the Nashville Songwriters
Association International (``Copyright Owners''). After considering the
arguments of the parties, the Board agreed that the matters raised by
the RIAA motion did present novel questions of law and agreed to submit
the questions to the Register. Accordingly, on September 14, 2006, the
Board transmitted to the Register: (1) an Order, dated August 18, 2006,
referring two novel questions of law; and (2) the Initial and Reply
Briefs filed with the Board by RIAA and the Copyright Owners. The
Board`s transmittal triggered the 30-day decision period prescribed in
Section 802 of the Copyright Act. This statutory provision states that
the Register ``shall transmit his or her decision to the Copyright
Royalty Judges within 30 days after the Register of Copyrights receives
all of the briefs or comments of the participants.'' See17 U.S.C.
802(f)(1)(B)(i). On October 16, 2006, the Register transmitted a
Memorandum Opinion to the Board that answered the novel questions of
law. To provide the public with notice of the decision rendered by the
Register, the Memorandum Opinion is reproduced in its entirety, below.
Dated: October 26, 2006
Marybeth Peters,
Register of Copyrights.
Before the
U.S. Copyright Office
Library of Congress
Washington, D.C. 20559
Docket No. RF 2006-1
In the Matter of
Mechanical and Digital Phonorecord
Delivery Rate Adjustment Proceeding
MEMORANDUM OPINION
I. Introduction
On September 14, 2006, the Copyright Royalty Board (``Board''),
acting on a request by the Recording Industry Association of America,
Inc. (``RIAA''), and pursuant to 17 U.S.C. Sec. 802(f)(1)(B), referred
two novel questions of law\1\ to the Register of Copyrights
(``Register''). Specifically, the Board requested a decision by the
Register as to the following:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ A ``novel question of law'' is a question of law that has
not been determined in prior decisions, determinations, and rulings
described in Section 803(a) of the Copyright Act. See 17 U.S.C.
Sec. 802(f)(1)(B)(ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Does a ringtone, made available for use on a cellular
telephone or similar device, constitute delivery of a digital
phonorecord that is subject to statutory licensing under 17 U.S.C.
Sec. 115, irrespective of whether the ringtone is monophonic
(having only a single melodic line), polyphonic (having both melody
and harmony), or a mastertone (a digital sound recording or excerpt
thereof)?
2. If so, what are the legal conditions and/or limitations on
such statutory licensing?\2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ See Mechanical and Digital Phonorecord Delivery Rate
Adjustment Proceeding, Order Granting in Part the Request for
Referral of a Novel Question of Law, Docket No. 2006-3 CRB DPRA
(Aug. 18, 2006) (``Order'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In sum, and as stated more fully below, we believe that ringtones
(including monophonic and polyphonic ringtones, as well as mastertones)
qualify as digital phonorecord deliveries (``DPDs'') as defined in 17
U.S.C. Sec. 15. Apart from meeting the formal requirements of Section
115 (e.g., service of a notice of intention to obtain a compulsory
license under Section 115(b)(1), submission of statements of account
and royalty payments, etc.), whether a particular ringtone falls within
the scope of the statutory license will depend primarily upon whether
what is performed is simply the original musical work (or a portion
thereof), or a derivative work (i.e., a musical work based on the
original musical work but which is recast, transformed, or adapted in
such a way that it becomes an original work of authorship and would be
entitled to copyright protection as a derivative work).
Procedural Background. On August 1, 2006, the RIAA requested that
the Copyright Royalty Board refer a question to the Register of
Copyrights regarding the eligibility of a mastertone, a short digital
sound recording file distributed for use in a cellular telephone or
similar device, for statutory licensing under 17 U.S.C. Sec. 115.\3\
An opposition to the RIAA`s
[[Page 64304]]
referral motion was submitted, collectively, by the National Music
Publishers Association, Inc., the Songwriters Guild of America, and the
Nashville Songwriters Association International (``Copyright Owners'').
After considering the arguments of the parties, the Board agreed that
the matters raised by the RIAA motion did present novel questions of
law and agreed to submit the questions to the Register.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ The Copyright Royalty Board is currently conducting a
proceeding to determine the reasonable rates and terms for the
making and distribution of phonorecords under the Section 115
license. See Adjustments or Determination of Compulsory License
Rates for Making and Distributing Phonorecords, 71 Fed Reg 1454
(Jan. 9, 2006). The answers to the two questions referred to the
Register will help determine the scope of the ratesetting proceeding
before the Board.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Accordingly, on September 14, 2006, the Board transmitted to the
Register of Copyrights the following: (1) the Order, dated August 18,
2006, referring two novel questions of law; and (2) the Initial and
Reply Briefs filed with the Board by RIAA and the Copyright Owners. The
Board`s transmittal triggered the 30-day decision period prescribed in
Section 802(f)(1)(B) of the Copyright Act. This statutory provision
states that the Register of Copyrights ``shall transmit his or her
decision to the Copyright Royalty Judges within 30 days after the
Register of Copyrights receives all of the briefs or comments of the
participants.''\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ 17 U.S.C. Sec. 802(f)(1)(B).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition to reviewing the Initial Briefs and Reply Briefs filed
in this proceeding, the Office concluded that it would be helpful to
conduct oral argument relating to the novel questions of law.\5\ On
October 4, 2006, the Copyright Office convened a hearing and questioned
counsel on matters raised in the briefs filed by RIAA and Copyright
Owners.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ See In the Matter of Mechanical and Digital Phonorecord
Delivery Rate Adjustment Proceeding, Notice of Oral Argument, Docket
No. RF 2006-1 (Sept. 28, 2006).
\6\ We note that for demonstration purposes at the oral
argument, RIAA and Copyright Owners have created CDs containing many
examples of ringtones as well as full length versions of some of the
musical works from which the ringtones were based. Copyright Owners`
CD also contains ringtones downloaded from specific mobile phone
operators. These CDs are now part of the record in this proceeding
as is the oral testimony of the parties.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summary of Arguments. RIAA argues that ringtones are digital
phonorecord deliveries as that term is defined in the Copyright Act and
are subject to statutory licensing under the plain language of Section
115, without limitation. It argues that ringtones in general and
mastertones,\7\ in particular, contain no new original material, are
not protectable as derivative works, and therefore cannot infringe on
the derivative work rights of the Copyright Owners. Moreover, even if
they were derivative works, RIAA argues that Section 115(a)(2), the
arrangement privilege, expressly authorizes their creation. In any
event, RIAA argues that once the copyright owner of a musical work
distributes a new ringtone to the public, anyone can obtain a statutory
license to use the musical work in that ringtone. RIAA concludes that
the Register should find that ringtones are subject to statutory
licensing under Section 115 of the Copyright Act, and all of the
conditions under the provision should apply.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ These types of ringtones are described in more detail below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Copyright Owners assert that all ringtones are excluded from the
Section 115 statutory license. They argue that the statutory license
for making and distributing phonorecords of musical works is narrow in
scope and does not encompass ringtones. They argue that ringtones are
not covered by Section 115 because they involve only a portion of the
underlying composition, not the entire musical work. Copyright Owners
argue that ringtones are derivative works and thus fall outside the
express language of the statute. As for Section 115(a)(2), they argue
that ringtones cannot be considered ``arrangements'' as that term is
understood in the music industry, and in any event, ringtones change
the basic melody and fundamental character of the musical work.
Copyright Owners also argue that ringtones fail to satisfy Section
115's requirement that the phonorecords be distributed for private use.
Copyright Owners conclude that although variations exist among
ringtones, none of them fit within the Section 115 licensing scheme.
Summary of Decision. We find that ringtones (including monophonic
and polyphonic ringtones, as well as mastertones) are phonorecords and
the delivery of such by wire or wireless technology meets the
definition of DPD set forth in the Copyright Act. However, there are a
variety of different types of ringtones ranging from those that are
simple excerpts taken from a larger musical work to ones that include
additional material and may be considered original musical works in and
of themselves. Ringtones that are merely excerpts of a preexisting
sound recording fall squarely within the scope of the statutory
license, whereas those that contain additional material may actually be
considered original derivative works and therefore outside the scope of
the Section 115 license.\8\ Moreover, we decide that a ringtone is made
and distributed for private use even though some consumers may purchase
them for the purpose of identifying themselves in public. We also
conclude that if a newly created ringtone is considered a derivative
work, and the work has been first distributed with the authorization of
the copyright owner, then any person may use the statutory license to
make and distribute the musical work in the ringtone. For those
ringtones that are covered by Section 115 of the Copyright Act, all of
the rights, conditions, and requirements in the Act would apply. For
those ringtones that fall outside the scope of Section 115, the rights
at issue must be acquired through voluntary licenses. While the
Copyright Royalty Judges need not know which specific ringtones fall
within/outside the scope of the license for the purpose of setting
rates, and the parties have not asked the Register to undertake such a
granular analysis here, we nevertheless offer some guidance on the
legal matters raised in this proceeding.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ We note that Section 115 permits the creation of derivative
works, but this privilege under the statutory license is limited to
making musical arrangements necessary to conform it to the style or
manner of interpretation of the performance involved. 17 U.S.C.
Sec. 115(a)(2). For purposes of our discussion in this proceeding,
when we refer to derivative works not covered by Section 115, we
mean those types of works that exhibit a degree of ``originality''
as that term is defined in court precedent. The addition of original
material would not only take a ringtone outside the scope of the
privilege of making arrangements, it would also take the ringtone
outside the Section 115 license altogether.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Section 115 of the Copyright Act
Almost a century ago, Congress added to the Copyright Act the right
for copyright owners to make and distribute, or authorize others to
make and distribute, mechanical reproductions (known today as
phonorecords) of their musical compositions. Due to its concern about
potential monopolistic behavior, Congress also created a statutory
license, Section 115 of the Act, to allow anyone to make and distribute
a mechanical reproduction of a musical composition without the consent
of the copyright owner provided that the person adhered to the
provisions of the license, most notably paying a statutorily
established royalty to the copyright owner. Although originally enacted
to address the reproduction of musical compositions on perforated
player piano rolls, the statutory license has for most of the past
century been used primarily for the making and distribution of
phonorecords and, more recently, for the digital delivery of music
online.\9\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ Statement of Marybeth Peters, Register of Copyrights, Before
the Subcommittee on Intellectual Property: Music Licensing Reform,
U.S. House of Representatives, 109th Cong., 1st Sess. at 20 (June
21, 2005).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 64305]]
In 1995, Congress recognized that ``digital transmission of sound
recordings [was] likely to become a very important outlet for the
performance of recorded music.''\10\ Moreover, it realized that
``[t]hese new technologies also may lead to new systems for the
electronic distribution of phonorecords with the authorization of the
affected copyright owners.''\11\ For these reasons, Congress made
changes to Section 115 to meet the challenges of providing music in a
digital format when it enacted the Digital Performance Right in Sound
Recordings Act of 1995 (``DPRA'')\12\ which also granted copyright
owners of sound recordings an exclusive right to perform their works
publicly by means of a digital audio transmission subject to certain
limitations.\13\ Specifically, Congress wanted to reaffirm the
mechanical rights of songwriters and music publishers in the new world
of digital technology. The changes to Section 115 were also designed to
minimize the burden on transmission services by placing record
companies in the position to license not only their own rights, but
also, if they chose to do so, the rights of writers and music
publishers to authorize digital phonorecord delivery.\14\ It is the
DPRA amendments to Section 115 that are of particular interest here.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ S. Rep. No. 104-128, 104th Cong., 1st Sess. at 14 (1995).
\11\ Id.
\12\ Pub. L. No. 104-39, 109 Stat. 336 (1995).
\13\ See 17 U.S.C. Sec. 114.
\14\ S. Rep. No. 104-128, at 37 (1995).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
III. Ringtone Types
Before addressing the questions raised by the Copyright Royalty
Judges, we must first determine the scope of the subject matter in this
proceeding. According to RIAA, a ringtone is a digital file, generally
no more that 30 seconds in length, played by a cellular phone or other
mobile device to alert the user of an incoming call or message.\15\
RIAA states that, initially, mobile carriers and other ringtone vendors
distributed synthesized ringtones that embodied versions of musical
works, but not recorded performances by featured recording artists. It
states that these earlier forms of ringtones are commonly known as
``monophonic'' ringtones (having only a single melodic line) and
``polyphonic'' ringtones (having both melody and harmony). RIAA
explains that typical commercial monophonic and polyphonic ringtones
consist of a segment of the musical work representing its ``hook,'' or
most memorable portion of the melody, with little or no revision.\16\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ Cellular phones typically have the ability to accept
downloads of ringtones, usually directly over the cellular telephone
network. Over the last decade, a new consumer market has developed
for musical ringtones. According to RIAA, the vast majority of
ringtones (99 percent) now in the marketplace consist of excerpts
from sound recordings. Oral Argument Transcript at 7, 10.
\16\ RIAA Initial Brief at 3-4; see also Neil J. Rosini and
Michael I. Rudell, Ring Tone Revenues Foster Copyright Detente, 234
N.Y.L.J. 3, col. 1 (2005) (``Originally, musical ring tones were
only available in `monophonic' form: a simple series of tones-each a
single note-that might remind one of several bars from a favorite CD
as performed by a very simple computer. Technology then advanced to
the `polyphonic' level, which are like monophonic ring tones with
multiple notes played at the same time, creating harmonies. They
sound closer to that favorite CD, but without original
instrumentation or vocals.'')(Hereinafter ``Rosini and Rudell'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
RIAA states that advances in technology now allow mobile devices to
play digital copies of commercial sound recordings. As a result, mobile
phone manufacturers are incorporating the functionality of stand-alone
portable digital music players, thus permitting consumers to download
sound recordings via the Internet or a computer connected to the
Internet. RIAA states that, in addition to full song downloads of
commercial recordings to such phones, there is consumer demand for
downloads of shorter (partial-copy) excerpts of sound recordings for
use as ringtones. These ringtones are commonly referred to as
``mastertones.''\17\ RIAA asserts that mastertones are displacing
monophonic and polyphonic ringtones as the ringtone of choice amongst
consumers.\18\ RIAA acknowledges that record companies and ringtone
vendors must obtain licenses to reproduce and distribute the relevant
musical works in ringtones and that Section 115 exists to enable use of
musical works when licenses are not otherwise available.\19\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ RIAA explains that record companies hire contractors to
select hooks from popular sound recordings and then create ringtones
including these hooks. Oral Argument Transcript at 10.
\18\ See Rosini and Rudell (Mastertones ``not only sound like a
favorite CD but are that favorite CD.'').
\19\ RIAA Initial Brief at 4-5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Copyright Owners describe ringtones as ten-to-thirty-second
``snippets'' of full-length musical works that are created to serve as
ringers on cell phones and other mobile devices.\20\ Copyright Owners
alternatively describe a ringtone as a ten-to-thirty-second derivation
of a musical work, sometimes repeated in a ``looping'' sequence and
sometimes not.\21\ Copyright Owners assert that the creation of
ringtones, including mastertones, involves ``substantial'' creativity
and ``significant'' changes to the underlying work. They state, for
example, that making a ringtone requires creative determinations as to
which portions of the work should be selected to best capture the
``hook'' of the full length recording and also to be most appealing as
ringtones. They further state that many mastertones are designed to be
looped, repeating the selected portions of the song multiple times
until the phone or mobile device is answered.\22\ Some songs have
multiple hooks, each of which can be made into a separate ringtone.
Other ringtones, they assert, include new content not present in the
underlying work.\23\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ Copyright Owners Initial Brief at 1-2.
\21\ Id. at 9. We note that looping involves a portion of a
musical performance that is then sequenced in a repetitive manner.
\22\ RIAA states that ringtone producers do not intentionally
create looping sequences; instead, looping is the product of
cellphones that do not have adequate storage capacity (memory). Oral
Argument Transcript at 13-14.
\23\ Copyright Owners Reply Brief at 5, 7.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Analysis. While RIAA and the Copyright Owners may disagree as to
the amount of creativity it takes to create a ringtone, they do agree
that, in general, ringtones are a unique category of sound recordings
that are used to announce an incoming call. The most rudimentary
ringtone, in musical terms, is the monophonic ringtone that only
contains a musical work`s melody (or a portion of the melody). One
level up the musical hierarchy is the polyphonic ringtone that contains
a work`s melody and harmony (or a portion thereof). The most musically
complex ringtones are mastertones. A mastertone is a portion of a pre-
existing full length musical work that may play sequentially or is
looped in a sequence. A mastertone could also contain a portion of a
musical work combined with a message from the recording artist designed
specifically for the ringtone user. It is important to note that there
are also non-musical ringtones that are becoming increasingly popular
with consumers.\24\ As discussed below, different types of ringtones
may be treated differently for Section 115 purposes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ See Rosini and Rudell (``[C]onsumers aren`t settling merely
for musical ringtones and ringbacks. Audio clips from films and
television programs; comic routines from Comedy Central; pithy
observations by Donald Trump; and announcement of baseball plays are
also available as ring tones.''); see also https://
cyberextazy.wordpress.com/2006/09/01/ringtones-in-mtvs-video-music-
awards/, Ringtones in MTV`s Video Music Awards(Sept. 1, 2006)
(stating that ringtones are evolving into watchtones, which are
ringtones combined with video clips).
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[[Page 64306]]
IV. The Applicability of Section 115 to Ringtones
Statutory Language. Section 115 of the Copyright Act provides a
``compulsory license to make and distribute phonorecords'' of any
musical work previously recorded once a phonorecord of a nondramatic
musical work has been ``distributed to the public in the United States
under authority of the copyright owner.''\25\ Such a license ``includes
the right of the compulsory licensee to distribute or authorize the
distribution of a phonorecord of a nondramatic musical work by means of
a digital transmission which constitutes a digital phonorecord
delivery.''\26\ The term ``digital phonorecord delivery'' or ``DPD'' is
defined, in part, as ``each individual delivery of a phonorecord by
digital transmission of a sound recording which results in a
specifically identifiable reproduction by or for any transmission
recipient of a phonorecord of that sound recording.''\27\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ 17 U.S.C. Sec. 115(a)(1).
\26\ 17 U.S.C. Sec. 115(c)(3)(A).
\27\ 17 U.S.C. Sec. 115(d). The legislative history
accompanying this provision states, inter alia, that: (1) the phrase
``specifically identifiable reproduction'' should be understood to
mean a reproduction specifically identifiable to the transmission
service; and (2) a transmission by a noninteractive subscription
transmission service that transmits in real time a continuous
program of music selections chosen by the transmitting entity, for
which the consumer pays a monthly fee would generally not be
considered a DPD.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Congress created the statutory mechanical license, as part of the
Copyright Act of 1909, to prevent monopolistic control over musical
works while ensuring that music publishers and songwriters receive an
appropriate royalty.\28\ Congress revisited the issue of statutory
licensing in 1976 and 1995 and has reaffirmed these same purposes.\29\
Congress added the DPD provisions to Section 115, as part of the DPRA
of 1995, with support of the music publishers, noting: ``The intention
in extending the mechanical compulsory license to digital phonorecord
deliveries is to maintain and reaffirm the mechanical rights of
songwriters and music publishers as new technologies permit
phonorecords to be delivered by wire or over the airwaves rather than
by the traditional making and distribution of records, cassettes, and
CDs.''\30\ The question presented here is whether ringtones qualify as
digital phonorecord deliveries within the scope of Section 115.\31\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ SeeH. R. Rep. No. 60-2222, at 7 (1909) (``The main object
to be desired in expanding copyright protection accorded to music
has been to give to the composer an adequate return for the value of
his composition, and it has been a serious and difficult task to
combine the protection of the composer with the protection of the
public, and to so frame an act that it would accomplish the double
purpose of securing to the composer an adequate return for all use
made of his composition and at the same time prevent the formation
of oppressive monopolies, which might be founded upon the very
rights granted to the composer for the purpose of protecting his
interests.)''
\29\ See H. R. Rep. No. 94-1476, at 107 (1976) (``[A] compulsory
licensing system is still warranted as a condition for the rights of
reproducing and distributing phonorecords of copyrighted music.'').
\30\ See S. Rep. No. 104-128, at 37 (1995).
\31\ We note that the Harry Fox Agency, Inc., a subsidiary of
the National Music Publishers Association and the leading musical
work licensing agency, released a notice in 2004 informing all
licensees of its stated position that Section 115 does not cover
ringtones or mastertones. See Mario F. Gonzales, Are Musical
Compositions Subject to Compulsory Licensing for Ringtones?, 12 UCLA
Ent. L. Rev. 11, 11-12 (2004). RIAA asserts that its dispute with
the Harry Fox Agency over the interpretation of Section 115 remains
unresolved and ``has cast a pall of legal uncertainty over the
ringtone market.'' RIAA Initial Brief at 6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
RIAA argues that, under the plain language of the Copyright Act, a
distribution of a ringtone is a DPD subject to statutory licensing
under the Copyright Act. RIAA asserts that a ringtone results from the
fixation of a series of musical, spoken, or other sounds and therefore
meets the definition of a ``sound recording'' in Section 101 of the
Copyright Act; its fixation in a material object is a ``phonorecord.''
According to RIAA, it is a phonorecord of the relevant musical work as
well. In the case of a mastertone, the sound recording is a clip of the
commercially distributed recording. In the case of monophonic and
polyphonic ringtones, the fixed sounds are rendered by a synthesizer in
the telephone and so do not represent ambient sound in a recording
studio.\32\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ Id. at 6-7.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
RIAA asserts that downloads of ringtones are DPDs because, when a
ringtone is downloaded, there is a digital transmission of the sound
recording that results in a specifically identifiable reproduction for
the transmission recipient. RIAA argues that the statutory license
under Section 115 includes the right of the licensee to distribute
ringtones just as it includes the right of the licensee to make and
authorize other kinds of downloads.\33\ RIAA asserts that statutory
licensing of ringtones is consistent with Congressional intent, as they
are just the type of new technology contemplated by Congress to be
included within the scope of the DPRA.\34\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ Id. at 8.
\34\ Id. at 21, 23.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Copyright Owners do not argue that ringtones are not DPDs, stating
instead that since ringtones are not covered by Section 115, there is
no need to address the question.\35\ Rather, Copyright Owners argue
that the statutory license for making and distributing phonorecords or
musical works is narrow in scope and does not encompass uses such as
ringtones. They assert that the inclusion of ringtones within the
statutory license would contravene Congress` intent that Section 115 be
a narrowly construed exception to certain exclusive rights of the
musical work copyright owner. Copyright Owners state that, as a
``limited exception'' to certain exclusive rights granted to copyright
owners, courts consistently have held that the statutory license ``be
construed narrowly, lest the exception destroy, rather than prove, the
rule.''\36\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ Oral Argument Transcript at 55.
\36\ Copyright Owners Initial Brief at 5, citing Fame Publishing
Co. v. Alabama Custom Tape, Inc., 507 F. 2d 667, 670 (5th Cir.
1975)(noting that the compulsory license provision of the 1909
Copyright Act is a limited exception to the copyright holder`s
exclusive right to decide who shall make use of his composition).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
With regard to the DPRA of 1995, Copyright Owners assert that
Congress` clarification that Section 115 covered not only ``brick and
mortar'' sales did not extend the license to cover any and all digital
uses. They state that the existing limitations on the scope of the
license did not change and that use of a work prior to publication, the
creation of derivative works, and the synchronization of a musical
work, are uses that remain outside of the license, whether in digital
or physical form.\37\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ Copyright Owners Initial Brief at 7-8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Copyright Owners assert that RIAA`s interpretation of Section 115
would ``potentially open the door'' to licensing of snippets of musical
works used to enhance all sorts of other consumer products and devices,
such as musical car alarms or doorbells. They state that the licensing
of musical works for functional uses in consumer products is not what
Congress intended when it enacted Section 115.\38\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ Copyright Owners Reply Brief at 14-15.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
RIAA, in its Reply, asserts that the statutory mechanical license
has been a fixture of U.S. copyright law for nearly a century and
argues that it should be construed in accordance with its terms. RIAA
contests Copyright Owners` view that Section 115 should be construed
narrowly, noting that the legislative history accompanying the 1976
Copyright Act states: ``The fundamental question of whether to retain
the compulsory license or do away with it altogether was a major issue
during earlier stages of the program for general revision of the
copyright law. At the hearings it was apparent that the argument on
this point had shifted, and the real issue was not whether to retain
[[Page 64307]]
the compulsory license but how much the royalty rate under it should be
. .[gteqt].[gteqt]. The Committee`s conclusion on this point remains
the same as in 1967: `that a compulsory license system is still
warranted as a condition for the rights of reproducing and distributing
phonorecords of copyrighted music.`''\39\ RIAA adds that Congress did
not narrow the license through adoption of the DPRA in 1995, but rather
stated that it was ``extending the mechanical compulsory license to
digital phonorecord deliveries'' and that its purpose was to ``maintain
and reaffirm'' that the Section 115 license would apply to ``new
technologies.''\40\ RIAA concludes that although some details of the
Section 115 license have changed over the years, nothing in these
enactments or the legislative history thereof suggests that Congress
intended a narrow reading of the statute.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\39\ RIAA Reply Brief at 3, citing H.R. Rep. No. 94-1476, at 107
(1976).
\40\ Id. at 4, citing S.Rep. No. 104-128, at 37 (1995).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Analysis. We find that ringtones meet the definition of DPDs. The
issue presented is one of pure statutory construction and there is no
actual dispute on this point.\41\ Based on the language of the statute,
ringtones easily meet the requisite definitions under the Copyright Act
to be included in the Section 115 licensing scheme. First, we hold that
a ringtone meets the definition of ``sound recording'' under Section
101 of the Act as a work that results from ``the fixation of a series
of musical, spoken, or other sounds,''\42\ and that the sound recording
is fixed in the form of a ``phonorecord,'' defined in the statute as a
``material object in which sounds are fixed by any method now known or
later developed.''\43\ The phonorecord here is the actual sound
recording file stored as a ``download'' on either the cell phone`s hard
drive or on a cell phone`s removable memory storage disk.\44\ When
downloaded through the Internet or by wireless transmission, a ringtone
is part of a ``digital phonorecord delivery'' and a digital
transmission of a sound recording which results in a ``specifically
identifiable reproduction'' by or for any transmission recipient of a
phonorecord of that sound recording.\45\ We also believe that our
statutory analysis comports with Congressional intent. Ringtones are
delivered by means of the type of ``new technologies'' Congress
intended to be included when it enacted the DPRA in 1995.\46\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\41\ Id. at 2, citing Doyle v. Huntress, Inc., 419 F.3d 3, 7-8
(1st Cir. 2005) (``A question of statutory construction presents a
purely legal question.''); Blackman v. District of Columbia, 2006 WL
2034355, *6 (DC Cir. 2006) (statutory construction begins with ``the
language itself, the specific context in which that language is
used, and the broader context of the statute as a whole[.]'').
\42\ 17 U.S.C. Sec. 101 (```Sound recordings' are works that
result from the fixation of a series of musical, spoken, or other
sounds, but not including the sounds accompanying a motion picture
or other audiovisual work, regardless of the nature of the material
objects, such as disks, tapes, or other phonorecords, in which they
are embodied.'').
\43\ 17 U.S.C. Sec. 101 (```Phonorecords` are material objects
in which sounds, other than those accompanying a motion picture or
other audiovisual work, are fixed by any method now known or later
developed, and from which the sounds can be perceived, reproduced,
or otherwise communicated, either directly or with the aid of a
machine or device. The term `phonorecords` includes the material
object in which the sounds are first fixed.'').
\44\ See S. Rep. No. 104-128, at 39 (1995) (stating that storage
of data in a ``computer memory'' is ``technically the making of a
phonorecord.'').
\45\ 17 U.S.C. Sec. 115(d).
\46\ See S. Rep. No. 104-128, at 37 (1995)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We disagree with Copyright Owners that Congress did not intend for
ringtones to be the kind of use of musical works contemplated for
inclusion under the Section 115 license.\47\ While we adhere to the
general proposition that statutory licenses are to be construed
narrowly,\48\ we find that Section 115, as amended by the DPRA,
purposefully broadened the scope of the statutory license to cover
DPDs, and ringtones appear to fit comfortably within the definition of
DPDs. On this note, we recognize that Copyright Owners have cited Fame
Publishing Co. v. Alabama Custom Tape, Inc., 507 F. 2d at 670, to
support their narrow construction argument. However, we find this
citation is inapt because the case arose out of a dispute concerning
statutory language found in the 1909 Act that is not present in the
current version of Section 115. In any event, the legislative history
of the Copyright Act of 1909 states that from its inception, this
compulsory license was intended to include all ``mechanical
reproductions'' and that one of its purposes was ``to secure to the
composer an adequate return for all use made of his
composition[.]''\49\ (emphasis added). While the concept of the
cellular phone ringtone undoubtedly would have astonished the members
of the 1909 Congress, the license they devised was broad enough to
include ringtones. Whether our interpretation ``opens the door'' to
licensing of snippets of musical works to be used in car alarms or
doorbells is a question that is outside the scope of this proceeding.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\47\ We are not saying that Congress specifically contemplated
ringtones and their inclusion in the Section 115 license. Rather,
ringtones generally fall into the class of ``new technologies'' that
Congress concluded should be included within the expanded statutory
license.
\48\ See Public Performance of Sound Recordings: Definition of a
Service, Docket No. RM 2000-B, 65 FR 77,292, 77,297 (Dec. 11, 2000)
(noting that the Copyright Office has historically construed
limitations on copyright narrowly, especially those constrained by a
compulsory license.).
\49\ See H. R. Rep. No. 60-2222, at 7 (1909).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Works or Portions of Works. According to Copyright Owners, Section
115 is expressly limited to the making and distributing of phonorecords
of ``works,'' not portions of works such as ringtones. Copyright Owners
argue that because a ringtone is not a reproduction of the entire
musical work, it is not subject to the statutory license. They argue
that Section 115 throughout its provisions makes clear that a ``work,''
and not a ``portion'' of a work, is its subject. Copyright Owners state
that this result was not an accident of drafting nor is it an
unintended source of statutory ambiguity. They state that Congress had
no difficulty using the term ``portions'' where in fact that concept
was intended, such as in Sections 108(h)(1) and 110(2) of the Copyright
Act.\50\ Copyright Owners assert that this interpretation is confirmed
by Section 115's legislative history which mentions ``cover records''
as well as cassettes and CDs.\51\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\50\ Section 108(h)(1) states in part ``a library or archives. .
.may reproduce, distribute, display, or perform in facsimile or
digital form a copy or phonorecord of such work, or portions
thereof, for purposes of preservation, scholarship, or research.''
Section 110(2) refers to ``the performance of a nondramatic literary
or musical work or reasonable and limited portions of any other
work, or display of a work in an amount comparable to that which is
typically displayed in the course of a live classroom session, by or
in the course of a transmission.''
\51\ Copyright Owners Initial Brief at 9-11, citing
Supplementary Register`s Report on the General Revision of the U.S.
Copyright Law: 1965 Revision Bill, House Comm. on the Judiciary,
89th Cong., Copyright Law Revision Part 6, at 54 (Comm. Print 1965)
(discussing ``cover'' records); H.R. Rep. No. 90-83, at 67 (1967)
(referring to ``disks and audio tapes''); S. Rep. No. 104-128, at 37
(1995) (``extending the mechanical compulsory licenses. . .as new
technologies permit phonorecord to be delivered by wire or over
airwaves rather than by traditional making and distributing of
record, cassettes and CDs'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Copyright Owners remark that it is obvious that the Section 115
license applies only to physical or digital phonorecords of complete
works since industry practices have developed on the basis of this
interpretation of Section 115. They state, for example, that partial
uses of compositions, such as medleys and samples, are licensed in
market transactions. They further state that legal commentators have
recognized that the Section 115 license does not apply to digital
sampling and that it would have to be modified in order to include
sampling within its scope.\52\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\52\ Id. at 11, citing Jennifer R.R. Mueller, Note: All Mixed
Up: Bridgeport Music v. Dimension Films and De Minimis Digital
Sampling, 81 IND. L.J. 435, 461 (Winter 2006).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 64308]]
RIAA asserts that Section 115 applies to whole musical works as
well as portions of musical works, and that any other reading would be
inconsistent with other provisions of the Copyright Act.\53\ RIAA
states that if the Copyright Owners are correct that the Copyright Act
distinguishes between ``works'' and ``portions of works,'' then
reproduction and distribution of ringtones would be permissible without
a license as the provisions under Section 106 granting the exclusive
rights to reproduction and distribution only refer to ``works,'' not
``portions of works.'' RIAA remarks that the Copyright Owners do not
intend that interpretation nor is it a correct one. RIAA adds that
Copyright Owners` approach to what constitutes a ``work'' would make
other phrases in the statute superfluous. It notes, for example, that
one of the factors used in determining whether a use of a work is a
fair use under Section 107(3) is the ``amount and substantiality of the
portion used in relation to the copyrighted work as a whole.'' The
phrase ``as a whole'' would be superfluous if a ``work'' in the Act
must always be the whole work and not a portion thereof.\54\ RIAA
asserts that although unstated, Copyright Owners apparently are relying
on the canon of statutory construction expressio unius est exclusio
alterius, which provides a general inference that omissions in
statutory text are intentional.\55\ RIAA notes, however, that this
maxim ``requires great caution in its application'' and should be
disregarded where ``its application would thwart the legislative intent
made apparent by the entire act.''\56\ It states that such caution
should be exercised here because, unlike most of the relevant language
in Section 115, the references to ``portions'' of works that Copyright
Owners cite did not appear in the 1976 Act and were only added years
later. RIAA asserts that there is no indication that either amendment
was intended to affect the interpretation of the provisions of the
Copyright Act enacted more that twenty years before. RIAA concludes
that two isolated references in the Copyright Act to ``portions of
works'' cannot imply that the hundreds of unadorned references to
``works'' apply only to works in their entirety.\57\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\53\ RIAA Reply Brief at 7.
\54\ Id. at 9, citing 17 U.S.C. Sec. 107(3)
\55\ Id. at 8, citing 2A Sutherland, Statutes and Statutory
Construction, Sec. 47:25 (Norman Singer ed., 6th ed. 2005).
\56\ Id.
\57\ Id. at 7, 9.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
RIAA notes that Copyright Owners` argument that ringtones are
analogous to sampling is equally misplaced. It states that ringtones
are excerpts that are taken from musical works and distributed as such;
samples, however, are short excerpts that are blended into what are
clearly new creative works. RIAA asserts that the fact that the latter
are licensed apart from Section 115 does not imply that the former
should be.\58\
Analysis. The Section 115 license is not limited to the
reproduction and distribution of phonorecords of the entire musical
work, and an excerpt may qualify for the statutory license if all other
requirements are met. We believe that the Copyright Act`s language and
purpose are broad and that ``portions of works'' should be treated the
same as any other type of work under Section 115. This provision of the
Act does not expressly exclude ``portions of works'' from its scope and
we cannot assume that such treatment was intended in the absence of
clear statutory language to that effect.\59\ Contrary to Copyright
Owners` assertion, we cannot find support for such a limited and narrow
reading of the Act in the legislative history they cite.\60\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\58\ Id. at n.8.
\59\ We agree with RIAA that Section 115 makes no distinction
between downloads of song excerpts and full songs delivered by
online music services such as Apple`s iTunes Music Store and Verizon
Wireless` V Cast Music Store. See RIAA Initial Brief at 1.
\60\ See n. 51, supra
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Moreover, we believe that Copyright Owners` citations to Sections
108 and 110 are inapt as these provisions were not enacted
contemporaneously with Section 115 and cannot be read to provide any
guidance as to Congressional intent or the purpose of the statutory
license. We note, in particular, that their interpretation of Section
110(2) defies legislative intent as well as common sense.\61\ Under
Copyright Owners` interpretation, educators using the distance
education exemption could transmit limited portions of works other than
nondramatic literary or musical works, but if they transmit a
performance of a nondramatic literary or musical work, they would have
to transmit the entire work as a transmission of a portion of the work
would not be permitted. Congress certainly did not intend this result.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\61\ See 17 U.S.C. Sec. 110(2) (discussing works ``produced or
marketed primarily for performance or display as part of mediated
instructional activities transmitted via digital networks . . .'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We also find that Copyright Owners` reading of the Copyright Act,
if adopted, would render certain provisions of the statute superfluous.
For example, well-settled interpretation of and practice under Section
118 of the Act would be undermined if Copyright Owners` interpretation
were correct. Under this provision, licensing agreements and related
fees negotiated between noncommercial broadcasting entities and
copyright owners of published nondramatic musical works are subject to
ratesetting by the Copyright Royalty Board.\62\ While Section 118
expressly refers to ``works,'' it has been understood to include
portions of works as well. For example, under 37 CFR Sec. 253.7(b)(3),
which implements the rates set for the Section 118 statutory license,
``a `Concert Feature` shall be deemed to be the nondramatic
presentation in a program of all or part of a symphony, concerto, or
other serious work originally written for concert performance or the
nondramatic presentation in a program of portions of a serious work
written for opera performances.''\63\(emphasis added). If we were to
accept Copyright Owners` argument that the Act covers only full musical
works, and not portions of musical works, then the Board could never
set such rates pursuant to Section 253.7. This result, we believe, was
not intended by Congress.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\62\ See 17 U.S.C. Sec. 118. Section 118(d) gives public
broadcasters permission to engage in certain ``activities with
respect to published nondramatic musical works and published
pictorial, graphic, and sculptural works . . .'' Under Section
118(d)(1), one of the activities is ``the performance or display of
a work.'' 17 U.S.C. Sec. 118(d)(1).
\63\ See37 CFR Sec. 253.7(b)(3).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We also believe that Copyright Owners analogy to sampling is inapt.
Sampling generally refers to the appropriation of sounds from an
existing sound recording for transformative use along with other sounds
in a new work. A mastertone, in contrast, is taken from a single work,
in the form of an excerpt.
Marketplace Developments. According to Copyright Owners, the
statutory license was instituted to ensure a market where none existed,
but there is an active market for freely negotiated licenses already in
place. They assert that the Register of Copyrights has stated that
ringtones are a subject more appropriately left to market forces than
government regulation and that ``there is no need for Government to
legislate what the parties can negotiate themselves.''\64\ They state
that Copyright Owners and record labels, recognizing that ringtones are
not DPDs subject to the statutory license,
[[Page 64309]]
have entered into voluntary license agreements granting the labels the
right to create ringtones at specified mutually-negotiated royalty
rates.\65\ Copyright Owners assert that these voluntary licenses
provide further support that ringtones are outside the narrow scope of
Section 115. They conclude that there exists a vibrant and growing
market for ringtones, which makes it unnecessary and inappropriate to
include ringtones within Section 115.\66\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\64\ Copyright Owners Initial Brief at 8, citing Copyright
Office Views on Music Licensing Reform. Hearings Before the Subcomm.
on Courts, the Internet, and Intellectual Property. House Comm. on
the Judiciary, 109th Cong., at 20 (2005) (Statement of Marybeth
Peters, Register of Copyrights)
\65\ For example, Copyright Owners cite the November 1, 2004
Sony BMG/EMI Music Publishing Agreement that granted the former the
right to create ringtones embodying EMI compositions
\66\ Copyright Owners Initial Brief at 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
According to RIAA, Copyright Owners mischaracterize current
marketplace conditions and the Register`s prior testimony, which, in
any instance, are both irrelevant. RIAA asserts that the Register`s
testimony was in the context of an express legislative invitation to
explore revision of the statute. The reform proposal presented by the
Register, if adopted by Congress, would have repealed the statutory
license and omitted from a successor licensing system the statutory
treatment of ``ringtunes'' and certain other types of works. RIAA notes
that the Register`s reform proposal is not law, but Section 115 is.\67\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\67\ RIAA Reply Brief at 4, citing Music Licensing Reform.
Subcomm. on Intellectual Property, Senate Comm. on the Judiciary,
109th Cong. (July 12, 2005) (Statement of Marybeth Peters, Register
of Copyrights).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
RIAA disputes Copyright Owners` claims that the purpose of the
statutory license was to ensure a market where none existed and that
the ringtone market is thriving. As to the former point, RIAA asserts
that Section 115 was enacted to protect the market from a ``great music
monopoly,'' not to create a market.\68\ With regard to the latter
point, RIAA asserts that although the U.S. has the world`s largest
music market, the U.S. ringtone market represents only a fraction of
worldwide sales, with the bulk of the market in Europe and Asia.
Moreover, aside from the EMI agreement cited by Copyright Owners, there
are no other major ringtone licensing agreements of importance. RIAA
states that with tens of thousands of music publishers, the need to
clear all these rights through negotiation is a burden on the market
and it is not surprising that the U.S. offerings lag behind other parts
of the world. RIAA concludes that some mastertone agreements are no
substitute for the Section 115 license.\69\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\68\ RIAA Reply Brief at 5, citing Melville B. Nimmer & David
Nimmer, Nimmer on Copyright Sec. 8.04[A] (2004).
\69\ Id. at 6-7.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In Reply, Copyright Owners reiterate that the market for ringtones
is thriving and no compulsory license is needed to ensure its continued
growth. The suggestion by RIAA that, absent compulsory licensing, music
publishers will ``prevent the commercialization'' of ringtones is
belied by the years of voluntary licensing of compositions by music
publishers for such uses.\70\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\70\ Copyright Owners Reply Brief at 15-16, citing Rudell and
Rosini, (noting that U.S. ringtone sales in 2005 was approximately
$500 million).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Analysis. The general success, or lack thereof, of the marketplace
for ringtones is not dispositive, or even necessarily relevant, in this
analysis. Commercial negotiations involving the use of copyrighted
works cannot annul the force and effect of existing law, unless
Congress explicitly so states. We in fact note that, despite the
existence of the Section 115 license, the vast majority of sound
recordings are made pursuant to direct licenses from music publishers
or the Harry Fox Agency rather than under the provisions of the
statute. These commercial agreements, however, do not negate the
existence of the statutory license. Moreover, reliance on the
statements made by the Register of Copyrights is both inappropriate and
inapt. These statements were proposals for revising the law, not
interpretations of the existing regulatory regime.
V. Derivative Works
Section 115 and Derivative Works. Section 101 of the Copyright Act
defines a derivative work as a ``work based upon one or more
preexisting works, such as a translation, musical arrangement,
dramatization, fictionalization, motion picture version, sound
recording, art reproduction, abridgement, condensation, or any other
form in which a work may be recast, transformed, or adapted. A work
consisting of editorial revisions, annotations, elaborations, or other
modifications, which as a whole, represent an original work of
authorship, is a derivative work.''\71\ Congress used one defined term,
``derivative work,'' to specify both that derivative works are
protectable under Section 103 of the Copyright Act and that the
copyright owner has the exclusive right to prepare derivative works
under Section 106(2) of the Copyright Act.\72\ According to the Act`s
legislative history, Section 115 exists to permit artists and record
companies to create sound recordings, which are a type of derivative
work.\73\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\71\ 17 U.S.C. Sec. 101.
\72\ Section 103 states that ``the copyright in a compilation or
derivative work extends only to the material contributed by the
author of such work, as distinguished from the preexisting material
employed in the work, and does not imply any exclusive right in the
preexisting material.'' 17 U.S.C. Sec. 103(b). Section 106 states
that ``[s]ubject to sections 107 through 122, the owner of copyright
under this title has the exclusive rights to do and to authorize any
of the following. . . (2) prepare derivative works based upon the
copyrighted work. . .'' 17 U.S.C. Sec. 106(2).
\73\ See H. R. Rep. No. 94-1476, at 108-09 (1976) (noting that a
Section 115 license permits either the creation of a new sound
recording or a duplication of an existing one with the consent of
the sound recording copyright owner).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Copyright Owners generally assert that ringtones fall outside the
ambit of the statutory license because they are derivative works. They
argue that ringtones exceed the scope of the Section 115 license by
infringing the copyright owners` exclusive right to prepare derivative
works. They assert that Section 115 subjects only the rights to
reproduce and distribute phonorecords of works to the statutory
license, leaving derivative works outside its scope. Copyright Owners
argue that ringtones fit squarely within the derivative work definition
because they are based on pre-existing works, and typically reduce a
three-to-five minute work to an abridged ten-to-thirty second work.\74\
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\74\ Copyright Owners Initial Brief at 12-13. Copyright Owners
note that the Copyright Board of Canada recently observed in a
proceeding to set the rates for ringtones that ``mastertones are
created by taking an actual segment of a sound recording after
determining which number of seconds out of a work will be most
appropriate for the market.'' Id., citing Copyright Board of Canada,
Collective Administration of Performing Rights and of Communications
Rights, Statement of Royalties to be Collected by SOCAN for the
Communication to the Public by Telecommunication, In Canada, of
Musical or Dramatico-Musical Works, Tariff No. 24-Ringtones (2003-
2005) (Aug. 18, 2006) at 13. In response, RIAA notes that this
statement by the Copyright Board confirms its supposition that the
selection of a mastertone from the underlying musical work is a
``trivial omission.'' RIAA Reply Brief at n. 10.
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RIAA asserts that the legal tests for protection of derivative
works and infringement of the derivative work right are identical and,
in any event, require originality.\75\ It states that ``[F]or the
derivative work right to be infringed, the defendant must have created
a derivative work, and for the derivative work to have been created,
the Act requires the contribution of expressive content capable of
standing on its own as a copyrightable work.''\76\ RIAA cites a string
of precedent to support its position that derivative works must be
original to be afforded copyright
[[Page 64310]]
protection.\77\ RIAA states that for mastertones, the trivial action of
copying a clip from an existing sound recording does not stand on its
own as meriting copyright protection.\78\ RIAA also asserts that there
is no precedent in copyright law for the proposition that every partial
reproduction of a work constitutes a separate derivative work. RIAA
concludes that ringtones are nothing more than partial copies that lack
sufficient originality to be protected as derivative works or to
infringe the derivative works right.\79\ RIAA concludes that because
ringtones do not fit under the definition of derivative works in
Section 101 of the Act, the making of a ringtone cannot be excluded
under Section 115 on this basis.
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\75\ RIAA Initial Brief at 11, citing Feist Publ'ns, Inc. v.
Rural Tel. Serv. Co., 499 U.S. 340, 346 (1991) (``Originality is a
constitutional requirement.'').
\76\ Id. at 11-12, citing 2 Paul Goldstein, Copyright Sec. 7.3
(3d ed. 2005).
\77\ See id. at 12-14, 20, citing Woods v. Bourne Co., 60 F.3d
978, 989 (2d Cir. 1995)(holding that a musical work must have
``substance added making the piece to some extent a new work'' and
that only the ``addition of such new material would entitle the
creator to a copyright on the new material.''); Lee v. Deck the
Walls, Inc., 925 F. Supp. 576 (N.D. Ill 1996), aff'd on other
grounds sub nom., Lee v. A.R.T. Co., 125 F.3d 580 (7th Cir.
1997)(holding that notecard art image deposited on tile and covered
with epoxy is not copyrightable because the work does not contain
any original artistic expression); Peker v. Masters Collection, 96
F. Supp. 2d 216 (E.D.N.Y. 2000) (holding that an oil painting
reproduction, made by transfer of a copy of a copyrighted painting
from a poster to a canvas with the addition of resin to create a
brushed-on look of the original was not a derivative work because
there was no originality that would be considered copyrightable);
Precious Moments, Inc. v. La Infantil, Inc., 971 F. Supp. 66, 67 (D.
Puerto Rico, 1997) (stating that originality is required for a
derivative work to be copyrightabl