Verification of Statements of Account Submitted by Cable Operators and Satellite Carriers, 55696-55712 [2014-21944]
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 180 / Wednesday, September 17, 2014 / Proposed Rules
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
AGENCY:
Jacqueline C. Charlesworth, General
Counsel and Associate Register of
Copyrights, by email at jcharlesworth@
loc.gov, or by telephone at 202–707–
8350; Erik Bertin, Assistant General
Counsel, by email at ebertin@loc.gov, or
by telephone at 202–707–8350; or Sy
Damle, Special Advisor to the General
Counsel, by email at sdam@loc.gov, or
by telephone at 202–707–8350.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
On May 9, 2013 the U.S.
Copyright Office issued a notice of
proposed rulemaking and request for
comments concerning a new regulation
that will allow copyright owners to
audit the statements of account and
royalty fees that cable operators and
satellite carriers deposit with the Office
for secondary transmissions of broadcast
programming made pursuant to
statutory licenses. The Office has
revised the proposed regulation to
address certain logistical concerns and
based on further input that it has
received from copyright owners, cable
operators, satellite carriers, and
accounting professionals. The Office
seeks comments on the revised proposal
before it is adopted as a final rule.
DATES: Comments must be made in
writing and must be received in the U.S.
Copyright Office no later than October
17, 2014.
ADDRESSES: The U.S. Copyright Office
strongly prefers that comments be
submitted electronically. A comment
page containing a comment submission
form is posted on the Office’s Web site
at https://copyright.gov/docs/soaaudit/
soa_audit.html. The Web site interface
requires submitters to complete a form
specifying a name and organization, as
applicable, and to upload comments as
an attachment. To meet accessibility
standards, all comments must be
uploaded in a single file in either
Portable Document Format (PDF) that
contains searchable, accessible text (not
an image); Word format (DOC or DOCX);
WordPerfect format (WPD); Rich Text
Format (RTF); or ASCII text file (not a
scanned document). The maximum file
size for comments is six megabytes
(MB). The name of the commenter and
organization should appear on both the
form and on the comment itself. All
comments will be posted publicly on
the Office’s Web site exactly as they are
received, along with names and
organizations. If electronic submission
of comments is not feasible, please
contact the Office at 202–707–8350 for
special instructions.
I. Background
Sections 111 and 119 of the Copyright
Act (the ‘‘Act’’), Title 17 of the United
States Code, allow cable operators and
satellite carriers to retransmit
programming that broadcast stations
transmit on over-the-air broadcast
signals. To use these statutory licenses,
cable operators and satellite carriers are
required to file statements of account
(‘‘SOAs’’) and deposit royalty fees with
the U.S. Copyright Office (‘‘Office’’) on
a semi-annual basis. The Office invests
these royalties in United States Treasury
securities pending distribution of the
funds to copyright owners that are
entitled to receive a share of the
royalties.
The Satellite Television Extension
and Localism Act of 2010 (‘‘STELA’’),
Public Law 111–175, amended the Act
by directing the Register of Copyrights
to issue regulations to allow copyright
owners to audit the SOAs and royalty
fees that cable operators and satellite
carriers file with the Office. Section
119(b)(2) of the Act directs the Register
to ‘‘issue regulations to permit
interested parties to verify and audit the
statements of account and royalty fees
submitted by satellite carriers under this
subsection.’’ 17 U.S.C. 119(b)(2).
Similarly, section 111(d)(6) directs the
Register to ‘‘issue regulations to provide
for the confidential verification by
copyright owners whose works were
embodied in the secondary
transmissions of primary transmissions
pursuant to [section 111] of the
information reported on the semiannual
statements of account filed under this
subsection for accounting periods
beginning on or after January 1, 2010, in
order that the auditor designated under
subparagraph [111(d)(6)(A)] is able to
confirm the correctness of the
calculations and royalty payments
reported therein.’’ 17 U.S.C. 111(d)(6).
The Office began working on its
initial draft for this procedure in 2011.
The initial draft was based on similar
audit regulations that the Office
developed for parties that make
ephemeral recordings or transmit digital
sound recordings under 17 U.S.C.
sections 112(e) and 114(f), respectively,
U.S. Copyright Office
37 CFR Part 201
[Docket No. 2012–5]
Verification of Statements of Account
Submitted by Cable Operators and
Satellite Carriers
U.S. Copyright Office, Library
of Congress.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
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SUMMARY:
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or manufacture, import, and distribute
digital audio recording devices under 17
U.S.C. chapter 10.
On January 31, 2012 the Office
received a Petition for Rulemaking,
which was filed by a group of copyright
owners.1 The copyright owners urged
the Office to adopt regulations that
would allow them to audit the SOAs
filed by cable operators and satellite
carriers, and they provided the Office
with proposed language for each
regulation. See Petition at 1–4.
On June 14, 2012, the Office issued a
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking that set
forth its initial proposal for the audit
procedure (the ‘‘First Proposed Rule’’).
See 77 FR 35643 (June 14, 2012). The
Office received extensive comments
from groups representing copyright
owners,2 cable operators,3 and
individual companies that retransmit
broadcast programming under sections
111 or 119 of the Act, namely, AT&T,
Inc., DIRECTV, LLC, and DISH Network
L.L.C.4
In lieu of reply comments, DIRECTV,
the NCTA, and a group representing
certain copyright owners 5 submitted a
joint proposal for revising the First
Proposed Rule. This group referred to
themselves collectively as the ‘‘Joint
Stakeholders,’’ and they urged the
Office to incorporate their suggestions
1 This group included the Program Suppliers
(commercial entertainment programming), Joint
Sports Claimants (professional and college sports
programming), National Association of Broadcasters
(‘‘NAB’’) (commercial television programming),
Commercial Television Claimants (local
commercial television programming), Broadcaster
Claimants Group (U.S. commercial television
stations), American Society of Composers, Authors
and Publishers (‘‘ASCAP’’) (musical works included
in television programming), Broadcast Music, Inc.
(‘‘BMI’’) (same), Public Television Claimants
(noncommercial television programming), Public
Broadcasting Service (‘‘PBS’’) (same), National
Public Radio (‘‘NPR’’) (noncommercial radio
programming), Canadian Claimants (Canadian
television programming), and Devotional Claimants
(religious television programming).
2 This group included the Program Suppliers,
Joint Sports Claimants, Commercial Television
Claimants, Broadcaster Claimants Group, ASCAP,
BMI, SESAC, Inc., Public Television Claimants,
Canadian Claimants, NPR, and Devotional
Claimants. The NAB and PBS did not submit
comments in response to the First Proposed Rule.
3 The National Cable & Telecommunications
Association (‘‘NCTA’’) and the American Cable
Association (‘‘ACA’’) filed comments on the First
Proposed Rule on behalf of cable operators.
4 Citations to the comments and reply comments
submitted in response to the First Proposed Rule
are abbreviated ‘‘[Name of Party] First Comment’’
and ‘‘[Name of Party] First Reply.’’
5 The copyright owners that joined the NCTA and
DIRECTV in submitting the Joint Stakeholders’ First
Submission include the Program Suppliers, Joint
Sports Claimants, ASCAP, BMI, SESAC, Public
Television Claimants, Canadian Claimants Group,
Devotional Claimants, and NPR. The Commercial
Television Claimants, the Broadcaster Claimants
Group, the NAB, and PBS did not join their fellow
copyright owners in submitting this proposal.
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‘‘as promptly as possible after receiving
any further public comment.’’ JS First
Submission at 1.6 The Office also
received reply comments from AT&T.
AT&T explained that it was aware of the
Joint Stakeholders’ negotiations and the
‘‘potential areas of agreement’’ among
the parties, but stated that it did not
have a sufficient amount of time for
‘‘meaningful engagement’’ with the
group. AT&T First Reply at 1. Therefore,
AT&T urged the Office to publish the
Joint Stakeholders’ proposal ‘‘for further
comment by other interested parties
who were not parties to the agreement.’’
Id.
The Office carefully studied the Joint
Stakeholders’ proposal and the other
comments and reply comments
submitted in response to the First
Proposed Rule. The Joint Stakeholders’
proposal addressed many of the
concerns that the parties raised in their
initial comments. The Office therefore
incorporated most of the Joint
Stakeholders’ suggestions into a revised
proposed regulation (the ‘‘Second
Proposed Rule’’).
On May 9, 2013, the Office published
the Second Proposed Rule in the
Federal Register and invited AT&T,
DISH, the ACA, the Broadcaster
Claimants Group, the Commercial
Television Claimants, and other
interested parties to comment on the
proposed regulation. The Office also
invited reply comments from the Joint
Stakeholders and other interested
parties. See 78 FR 27137, 27138 (May 9,
2013). The Office received comments
from AT&T and the ACA, and it
received reply comments from the ACA,
the NCTA, and a group representing the
copyright owners (‘‘Copyright Owners’’)
that negotiated the Joint Stakeholders’
Proposal with the NCTA and DIRECTV.7
The parties raised a number of complex
issues, including issues of first
impression that were not addressed in
the comments or reply comments
submitted in response to the First
Proposed Rule.
On December 26, 2013, the Office
issued an interim rule that addresses a
procedural issue that was not contested
6 Citations to the proposals submitted by the Joint
Stakeholders ae abbreviated ‘‘JS First Submission’’
and ‘‘JS Second Submission.’’
7 Citations to the comments and reply comments
submitted in response to the Second Proposed Rule
are abbreviated ‘‘[Name of Party] Second Comment’’
and ‘‘[Name of Party] Second Reply.’’ For example,
citations to the Copyright Owners’ reply comments
are abbreviated ‘‘CO Second Reply.’’ This group
includes all the copyright owners listed in footnote
five, but as mentioned in that footnote, the
Commercial Television Claimants, the Broadcaster
Claimants Group, the NAB, and PBS did not join
their fellow copyright owners in submitting the
Joint Stakeholders’ First Submission.
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by the parties (the ‘‘Interim Rule’’).
Specifically, the Interim Rule allows
copyright owners to identify any SOAs
from accounting periods beginning on
or after January 1, 2010 that they intend
to audit. At the same time, it provides
licensees with advance notice of the
SOAs that will be subject to audit when
the final rule goes into effect. See 78 FR
28257 (Dec. 26, 2013).
After analyzing the latest round of
comments, the Office identified a
number of issues that were not
addressed in the First or Second
Proposed Rules or in the comments
submitted in response to those
proposals. Because the Office believed
these issues might be narrowed through
group discussion, it decided to convene
a public roundtable before issuing
another notice of proposed rulemaking.
See 79 FR 31992 (June 3, 2014). During
the roundtable the Office received
valuable input from parties that
previously submitted comments in this
proceeding, including the Motion
Picture Association of America
(‘‘MPAA’’), the Commissioner of
Baseball, the NCTA, the ACA, and
DIRECTV. The Office also received
guidance from Crunch Digital, a
company that conducts audits on behalf
of content owners and licensees in the
music industry.
The issues discussed at the
roundtable are summarized in the
Office’s Federal Register notice dated
June 3, 2014 (the ‘‘Roundtable Notice’’).
The most significant concern was the
potential for backlogs to develop as a
result of the limit on the number of
SOAs that could be audited at any one
time under the existing proposal.8 The
Office also expressed concern about the
accounting standards that should be
applied during the audit, the limitation
on ex parte communications between
the auditor and the copyright owners,
the amount of time allocated for
consultations between the auditor and
the licensee, and the procedure for
allocating the costs of the audit between
the copyright owners and the licensee.
See 79 FR at 31994–95.
Following the roundtable, the Joint
Stakeholders consulted with each other
8 Under the Second Proposed Rule a satellite
carrier or a particular cable system would be subject
to no more than one audit per calendar year and
each audit would involve no more than two SOAs
filed by that licensee. For multiple system operators
(‘‘MSOs’’), the audit would be limited to a sample
of no more than ten percent of the MSO’s systems,
and the audit of each system would involve no
more than two SOAs filed by each system. The
Second Proposed Rule also provided that if a single
audit required multiple years to complete, the
licensee would not be subject to any other audits
during those years. See 78 FR at 27143; 79 FR at
31993.
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regarding three of these issues, namely:
(i) Requiring an initial consultation
between the auditor and a
representative of the licensee and the
participating copyright owners prior to
the commencement of an audit; (ii) the
accounting standard that should govern
the audit; and (iii) the procedure for
allocating the cost of an audit between
the participating copyright owners and
the licensee. On July 31, 2014, the Joint
Stakeholders informed the Office that
they had reached a consensus on two of
these issues and they offered specific
recommendations for modifying certain
aspects of the proposed rule.9 JS Second
Submission at 1–2.
After reviewing the comments and
reply comments submitted in response
to the Second Proposed Rule, the input
provided during the roundtable, and the
Joint Stakeholders’ Second Submission,
the Office made several changes to the
proposed rule (the ‘‘Third Proposed
Rule’’).10 The Office invites public
comment from copyright owners, cable
operators, satellite carriers, accounting
professionals, and other interested
parties concerning the proposed
modifications that are discussed below
in sections II, III.A, III.B, VI.A, VI.B,
VII.A, VII.B, and VIII.C.11
II. Audit Notice, Timetable, and
Transitional Provisions
A. Initial Audits
Under the Second Proposed Rule, a
copyright owner could initiate an audit
by filing a written notice with the Office
that identified the statutory licensee, the
SOAs, and the accounting periods that
would be subject to the audit. The
Office would publish a notice in the
Federal Register announcing the receipt
of the notice of intent to audit, and
within thirty days thereafter, any other
copyright owner that wished to
participate in the audit would be
required to notify both the copyright
owner that filed the notice and the
licensee that would be subject to the
audit. Copyright owners that failed to
comply with this requirement would
not be permitted to participate in the
audit process and would not be
9 The parties that submitted these
recommendations are identified in footnote five.
10 For the convenience of the parties, the Office
created a document that illustrates the differences
between the Second Proposed Rule (as it was
modified by the Interim Rule) and the Third
Proposed Rule. This document is available on the
Office’s Web site at https://copyright.gov/docs/
soaaudit/soa_audit.html.
11 The Office has reached a final decision
concerning the topics discussed in sections III.C,
III.D, IV, V, VII.C, VIII.A, VIII.B, or IX. Therefore,
the Office does not invite further comment on these
topics.
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permitted to audit the same SOAs in a
subsequent proceeding.
The Third Proposed Rule modifies
this portion of the audit procedure in
several respects. It provides that the
notice should include the copyright
owner’s name, address, telephone
number, and email address (but need
not include a fax number). To facilitate
the submission of notices, the Third
Proposed Rule provides that notices
should be addressed to the ‘‘U.S.
Copyright Office, Office of the General
Counsel,’’ and specifies the mailing
address for time-sensitive materials
where notices should be sent. It also
establishes similar—but separate—
procedures for submitting a notice of
intent to conduct an initial audit and a
notice of intent to conduct an expanded
audit.12
Under the Third Proposed Rule a
notice of intent to conduct an initial
audit must be received in the Office
between December 1st and December
31st. The Office will publish a notice in
the Federal Register announcing the
receipt of that notice between January
1st and January 31st of the next calendar
year. By contrast, a notice of intent to
conduct an expanded audit may be filed
at any point during the calendar year,
provided that the notice is received
within three years after the last day of
the year in which any statement to be
reviewed was filed with the Office.
When the Office receives a notice of
intent to conduct an expanded audit, it
will publish a notice in the Federal
Register within thirty days thereafter
announcing the receipt of the notice. As
the Office noted in its Federal Register
document dated May 9, 2013, this step
is intended to give copyright owners
that did not join the initial audit an
opportunity to participate in the
expanded audit. See 78 FR at 27143.
The Office decided to modify the
timing of the receipt and publication of
the initial notice to prevent the
development of backlogs in pending
audits. This concern stemmed from the
fact that—under the Second Proposed
Rule—a licensee could be subject to
only one audit during a calendar year,
but there was no assurance that any
given audit would be started and
finished within a single calendar year.
See 79 FR at 31993. Indeed, the Second
Proposed Rule made clear that if a
single audit spanned multiple years, the
12 As discussed in sections II.B and VII, the Third
Proposed Rule limits the number of SOAs and the
number of cable systems that may be included in
an initial audit, but if the auditor discovers an
underpayment that exceeds a certain threshold, the
copyright owners may expand the scope of the
initial audit to include other SOAs and other cable
systems that have not been audited before.
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licensee would not be subject to any
other audits during those years. See 78
FR at 27153.
At the roundtable, several participants
suggested that the Office’s concerns
were unwarranted, because they
expected audits to be completed within
relatively short periods of time. The
MPAA explained that it has audited
SOAs on an informal basis for many
years. According to the MPAA, before
an audit begins, copyright owners often
have a sense of what the problems may
be based on the information already
provided in the licensee’s SOAs, and
thus will be able to give the auditor a
sense of what he or she should focus on
from the outset. The MPAA stated that
the most difficult part of the audit
process is identifying the stations and
signals carried by the provider. Under
the proposed rule, the licensee would be
required to provide this information at
the outset. Therefore, the MPAA is of
the view that the audit as a whole
would be expected to proceed smoothly.
The MPAA predicted that an audit
involving a small cable system could be
completed within a few weeks, while an
audit of a large cable system might
require three months. In response to the
Office’s concerns that some licensees
may not be diligent in responding to the
auditor’s requests for information, the
MPAA indicated that in its experience
this was not a problem. According to the
MPAA, copyright owners and licensees
traditionally have been cooperative
during the audit process, with disputes
typically resolved through settlement
and voluntary adoption of corrective
practices.
While the Office appreciates the
MPAA’s experience, it is concerned that
the level of cooperation experienced by
the MPAA during these voluntary
informal audits might not be universal.
Indeed, as the NCTA observed in its
written comments, ‘‘no one can predict
at this point how smoothly the audit
process will be for the cable and
satellite industries.’’ NCTA Second
Reply at 6.
As discussed in section IV.C, the
Third Proposed Rule will allow
licensees to suspend the audit for
several months during each year. The
Office is concerned that the audit
process may be delayed even further if
the licensee fails to respond to the
auditor’s requests in a timely manner.
The Office believes that this is a real
possibility given that—under the Joint
Stakeholders’ first proposal and the
Second Proposed Rule—prolonging an
audit into the next calendar year would
preclude the copyright owners from
commencing another audit involving
that same licensee, thus creating an
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incentive for delay. See JS First
Submission at 9–10; 78 FR at 27143; 79
FR at 31993. The roundtable revealed
that, apart from the MPAA, none of the
cable or satellite industry
representatives in attendance has had
any meaningful experience with audits
involving SOAs. At the same time, the
Office is aware that royalty audits of
other types of content licensees may
well take longer than a year to complete.
The Third Proposed Rule addresses
this concern by establishing a schedule
that is intended to ensure that the initial
audit will be completed within a single
calendar year. Specifically, it will
require the copyright owners to file a
notice of intent to conduct an initial
audit during the month of December in
the year before the audit is to begin, will
require the Office to publish a notice in
the Federal Register during January of
the following year, and will require the
auditor to deliver his or her final report
to the participating copyright owners by
November 1st of that same year.13
This approach provides advantages
over the Second Proposed Rule, which
would have allowed the copyright
owners to commence an initial audit at
any time during the year. For instance,
the Third Proposed Rule will
substantially alleviate administrative
burdens on the Office related to initial
audits since notices will arrive in the
Office within a set period of time, which
in turn will allow the Office to publish
them in the Federal Register as a group
instead of publishing them on a
piecemeal basis. In addition, this
approach will improve certainty for
both the copyright owners and statutory
licensees. Copyright owners will be able
to better coordinate their collective
auditing activities, since notices of
intent to conduct an initial audit will be
submitted to the Office and published in
the Federal Register at the same time
each year. Likewise, a routine schedule
for the submission and publication of
notices will allow licensees to organize
their affairs, because each December
they will know whether they will be
subject to an initial audit in the
following calendar year.
In order to comply with the time
limits set forth in section 111(d)(6)(E) of
the Act, the copyright owners must file
a notice of intent to audit a particular
SOA within three years after the last day
13 Under the Third Proposed Rule, a statutory
licensee will be subject to no more than one initial
audit per calendar year, and an initial audit
involving a particular satellite carrier or a particular
cable system will be limited to no more than two
of the SOAs filed by that licensee. But, as discussed
in section VII.B, these limits will not apply to an
expanded audit, which could be conducted
concurrently with an initial audit involving the
same licensee.
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of the year in which the SOA was filed
with the Office (regardless of whether
they intend to conduct an initial audit
or an expanded audit). The Third
Proposed Rule recognizes that in any
given year the copyright owners may
file a notice of intent to conduct an
initial audit involving any two of the
SOAs that the licensee filed with the
Office during that year or the three
previous 14 calendar years. Once the
Office receives a notice of intent to
conduct an initial audit involving two
SOAs filed by a particular satellite
carrier or a particular cable system, the
Office will not accept a notice of intent
to conduct an initial audit involving
that same carrier or that same system
until the following calendar year.
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B. Expanded Audits
Under the Third Proposed Rule, if the
auditor discovers a net aggregate
underpayment 15 of five percent or more
during an initial audit of a satellite
carrier or a single cable system, the
copyright owners may expand the scope
of the audit to include previous 16 SOAs
filed by that licensee. If the auditor
makes such a finding during an initial
audit involving a sample of cable
systems that are owned by a multiple
system operator (‘‘MSO’’), the copyright
owners may expand the scope of that
audit to include previous SOAs filed by
those cable systems, and in the
following calendar year, the copyright
owners may conduct an initial audit
involving a larger sample of the cable
systems owned by that MSO.
During an expanded audit the
copyright owners would be able to audit
any of the previous statements filed by
the licensee, as long as they file a notice
of intent to audit those statements
within three years after the last day of
the year in which those statements were
filed with the Office. 17 U.S.C.
111(d)(6)(E). Although a notice of intent
to conduct an initial audit must be filed
in December and although the initial
audit must be completed by November
1st of the following year, these
requirements will not apply to
expanded audits. Under the Third
14 In this context, the word ‘‘previous’’ means an
SOA filed prior to the date that the copyright
owners filed a notice of intent to audit with the
Office.
15 The Second Proposed Rule defined ‘‘net
aggregate underpayment’’ as the aggregate amount
of underpayments found by the auditor less the
aggregate amount of any overpayments found by the
auditor, as measured against the total amount of
royalties reflected on the Statements of Account
examined by the auditor. See 78 FR at 27150. The
same definition also appears in the Third Proposed
Rule.
16 In this context, the word ‘‘previous’’ means
SOAs filed before the SOAs that were reviewed
during the initial audit. See 78 FR at 27143.
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Proposed Rule a notice of intent to
conduct an expanded audit may be filed
during any month, and the auditor does
not need to deliver his or her final
report by November 1st of any given
year.
C. Notices Filed Under the Interim Rule
Assuming the Third Proposed Rule is
adopted as a final rule, it will supersede
the Interim Rule in its entirety. Until
then, copyright owners may use the
Interim Rule to preserve their right to
audit any SOA that was filed with the
Office for accounting periods 2010–2
through 2014–1,17 so long as the notice
is received in a timely manner.18
If a copyright owner does file a notice
of intent to audit before the Third
Proposed Rule goes into effect, then, as
stated in the Interim Rule, the Office
will publish that notice in the Federal
Register within thirty days after it is
received in the Office. See 37 CFR
201.16(c)(1). In such cases, the Third
Proposed Rule provides that the audit
shall be conducted using the procedures
set forth in the proposed rule, except
that regardless of the timing of the
notice and its publication pursuant to
the Interim Rule, the copyright owners
must provide the licensee with a list of
proposed auditors by March 16, 2015,
and the auditor must deliver his or her
final report to the copyright owners and
the licensee by November 1, 2015.
III. Commencement of the Audit
A. Designation of the Auditor
The Second Proposed Rule provided
that the copyright owners must deliver
a list of three independent and qualified
auditors to the licensee, along with
information that is reasonably sufficient
for the licensee to evaluate the
independence and qualifications of each
individual. Within five business days
thereafter, the licensee would be
required to select one of these
individuals to conduct the audit. See 78
FR at 27139–40. None of the parties
objected to this aspect of the Second
Proposed Rule.
The Interim Rule allows a copyright
owner to preserve the right to audit a
particular SOA so long as it files a
notice of intent within three years after
the last day of the year in which that
statement was filed. 37 CFR
201.16(c)(1). However, the Interim Rule
17 The deadline for filing a notice of intent to
audit a statement for the 2010–1 accounting period
expired on December 31, 2013, and as discussed in
the Federal Register document dated June 14, 2012,
statements covering accounting periods that began
before January 1, 2010 are not subject to audit under
this procedure. See 77 FR at 35645.
18 To date, the Office has not received any notices
filed pursuant to the Interim Rule.
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does not specify a precise deadline by
which a copyright owner must
commence the actual audit. As the
Office observed in the Roundtable
Notice, copyright owners may feel
obligated to file notices of intent to
audit on a routine basis in order to
preserve the option of auditing a
particular statement, even if they do not
expect to proceed with the audit in the
foreseeable future. 79 FR 31993. In such
cases, the licensee might be required to
maintain records related to SOAs for
many years before an audit got
underway, which would create
administrative burdens and increase the
risk that records would be lost or
damaged in the interim.
The Third Proposed Rule addresses
this concern by establishing a deadline
for commencing the audit. Specifically,
it provides that the participating
copyright owners must deliver the list of
prospective auditors to the licensee
within forty-five days after the date that
the Office publishes a notice in the
Federal Register announcing the receipt
of the notice of intent to audit. Once the
licensee has made its selection, the
Third Proposed Rule provides that the
licensee must notify the participating
copyright owners and the participating
copyright owners must retain the
auditor that the licensee selected. It also
provides that if the copyright owners
fail to deliver a list of prospective
auditors to the licensee within the time
allowed or fail to retain the auditor that
the licensee selected, the SOAs
identified in the notice of intent to audit
shall not be subject to audit.
B. Initial Consultation With the Auditor
At the roundtable, the audit firm
Crunch Digital explained that it
typically schedules a ‘‘kick-off call’’ at
the start of each of its audits. During this
call, the auditor and the party that is
subject to the audit identify the types of
books and records that the auditor
intends to examine and the parties set
a mutually agreeable schedule for the
production of those items. In addition,
each party designates a contact person
who will be responsible for receiving
and responding to communications
regarding the audit. Crunch Digital
explained that this improves the
efficiency of the examination process,
thus reducing the overall cost of the
audit. The Joint Stakeholders made a
similar recommendation in their Second
Submission and the Office has
incorporated that suggestion into the
proposed rule. JS Second Submission at
1. Specifically, the Third Proposed Rule
provides that the auditor shall meet
with designated representatives of the
licensee and the participating copyright
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owners (either in person or by
telephone) within ten days after he or
she has been selected. During the
consultation, the parties are to review
the scope of the audit, the methodology
that the auditor will use during his or
her review, and the schedule for
conducting and completing the audit.
The objective of this consultation is to
establish the schedule and procedures
for the production and review of
information so that the audit will be
completed in a timely fashion.
C. Limitation on Ex Parte
Communications
The Second Proposed Rule contained
a provision that banned ex parte
communications between the auditor
and the participating copyright owners,
except in certain narrow circumstances.
For example, the auditor may
communicate directly with the
copyright owners if he or she has a
reasonable basis to suspect fraud, and if
the auditor reasonably believes that
involving the licensee in the
communication would prejudice the
investigation of that fraud. In the
Roundtable Notice the Office questioned
whether this restriction is necessary and
whether it might create inefficiencies.
See 79 FR at 31994. At the roundtable
the NCTA explained that this provision
will promote transparency in the audit
process. Specifically, the NCTA opined
that it will ensure that copyright owners
do not exercise undue influence over
the auditor’s deliberations, and that
licensees are made aware of potential
issues at the same time as the copyright
owners, thus helping to eliminate the
possibility of unfair surprise when the
auditor delivers the initial draft of his or
her report. Crunch Digital noted that
this could be accomplished in most
cases simply by copying the licensee on
email communications between the
auditor and the copyright owners or
their representatives. The Office found
the foregoing observations persuasive.
Therefore, the Office has retained the
prohibition against ex parte
communications in the Third Proposed
Rule.
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D. Certified List of Broadcast Signals
1. Comments
The Second Proposed Rule provided
that the licensee must deliver a
document to the auditor and the
copyright owners containing a certified
list of the broadcast signals
retransmitted during each accounting
period that is subject to the audit,
including the call sign for each
broadcast signal and each multicast
signal. In addition, cable operators must
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identify the classification of each signal
on a community-by-community basis
pursuant to sections 201.17(e)(9)(iv)–(v)
and 201.17(h) of the regulations. See 78
FR at 27141.
The Office added this requirement to
the Second Proposed Rule at the request
of the Joint Stakeholders. As the Office
noted in the Federal Register document
dated May 9, 2013, licensees are
supposed to report this information in
their SOAs and the person signing each
SOA must certify that this information
is true, correct, and complete. The
Office sought comment on whether
there is any benefit in requiring
licensees to provide information that
should be apparent from the face of an
SOA. See 78 FR at 27141.
AT&T stated that ‘‘there is no need to
include this ‘make-work’ step in the
audit process,’’ because ‘‘it does not
provide the auditor or the copyright
owners with any information that is not
readily available from the SOA.’’ AT&T
Second Comment at 3. The ACA stated
that ‘‘whatever benefit is derived, it is
far outweighed by the administrative
and financial burdens of compiling and
submitting this information, especially
for smaller cable operators.’’ ACA
Second Comment at 3.
The Copyright Owners responded that
this provision ‘‘provides tangible
benefits that will promote the efficiency
and effectiveness’’ of the audit
procedure. CO Second Reply at 10. They
noted that licensees that use Form SA
1–2, or the previous version of Form
SA–3, are not required to identify
‘‘different channel line-ups linked to
different subscriber groups.’’ Id. at 7.
Therefore, ‘‘it is impossible to link
communities with reported local
stations’’ when reviewing these types of
SOAs. Id. at 8.
Licensees that use the current version
of Form SA–3 are supposed to identify
the communities they serve, along with
the relevant channel line-ups and
subscriber groups. The Copyright
Owners acknowledged that this
information ‘‘might be sufficient to
match communities and stations for
systems having one or two subscriber
groups and one or two separate channel
line-ups.’’ Id. at 8. But identifying the
signals that are retransmitted in each
community can be ‘‘difficult, if not
impossible’’ for larger cable systems
‘‘that cover large geographic areas’’ with
‘‘multiple channel line-ups and
numerous subscriber groups.’’ Id. at 7,
10. For example, the Copyright Owners
noted that Comcast of Southeast PA LLC
recently reported 589 communities, 30
channel line-ups with 7 to 49 stations
each, and 46 subscriber groups, while
Time Warner Northeast LLC recently
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reported 257 communities, 17 channel
line-ups with 9 to 21 stations each, and
51 subscriber groups. Id. at 8. The
Copyright Owners contended that it
would be ‘‘cumbersome and costly’’ for
the auditor to identify the distant and
local signals that are retransmitted in
each community, given the complexity
of information reported in these types of
SOAs. Id. at 10. By contrast, they
contended that it would be easy for the
licensee to compile this information,
because ‘‘the cable system is more likely
to know what stations that it carries in
each community.’’ Id. at 10.
Requiring the licensee to provide this
information at the beginning of the audit
was ‘‘an important component of the
Joint [Stakeholders’] Proposal’’ from the
Copyright Owners’ point of view.19 Id.
at 7. The Joint Stakeholders agreed that
the auditor should verify the
information reported on the SOAs in
order to confirm the correctness of the
calculations and royalty payments
reported therein, but the auditor should
not determine whether a cable operator
properly classified the broadcast signals
reported on its SOAs, or whether a
satellite carrier properly determined if
any subscriber or group of subscribers is
eligible to receive any broadcast signals
under the Act.20 See 78 FR at 27151.
In their reply comments, the
Copyright Owners explained that they
agreed to narrow the scope of the
auditor’s inquiry on the condition that
the licensee produces a certified list of
broadcast signals that were
retransmitted during the accounting
period that is subject to the audit. CO
Reply at 7–8. They contended that the
auditor needs this information to
confirm the correctness of the
calculations and royalty payments
reported in the licensee’s SOAs. Id. at 7,
9. They also contended that the certified
list will avoid the need for ‘‘costly, timeconsuming litigation’’ over signal
classification issues. Id. at 9–10. The
Copyright Owners explained that the
list will help them determine whether
the licensee correctly classified the
carriage of each signal. If they disagree
with the licensee’s classification, the
Copyright Owners will be able to raise
their concerns during the audit, which
in turn will give the licensee an
opportunity to amend its SOAs if it
agrees that a mistake has been made. Id.
at 9.
19 As noted in section I, the Joint Stakeholders’
proposal was submitted by the NCTA, DIRECTV,
and the Copyright Owners identified in footnote
five.
20 The Office included this suggested revision in
both the Second Proposed Rule and the Third
Proposed Rule. See 78 FR at 27151.
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2. Discussion
The Office has noted AT&T’s and the
ACA’s concerns, but has concluded that
the Copyright Owners have the better
argument. Requiring the licensee to
identify the broadcast signals that the
licensee retransmitted and the
communities that the licensee served
provides the auditor with information
he or she needs to interpret an SOA and
to verify the calculations and royalty
payments reported therein. It is also a
fair trade-off for excluding the
classification of signals as local/distant
or permitted/non-permitted from the
scope of the auditor’s inquiry.
The Copyright Owners correctly noted
that the previous version of Form SA–
3 did not require licensees to report
specific channel line-ups for each
subscriber group. The current version of
Form SA–3 instructs the licensee to
identify each community served by the
cable system and each television station
carried by the cable system during the
accounting period.21 In the Office’s
experience, this information is clearly
stated in the SOA in some cases, but in
other cases it is not. When the
information is deficient, the Office may
write the licensee to request a
clarification.22
Requiring the licensee to provide this
information at the outset of the audit
should not impose an undue burden on
the licensee. The licensee should be
familiar with the stations that it carries
and the communities that it serves and
thus should be able to prepare a list of
stations and communities without
difficulty. Moreover, the Third Proposed
Rule provides that the licensee must
retain any records needed to confirm the
correctness of the calculations and
royalty payments reported in its SOAs
for at least three and a half years after
the last day of the year that the SOA is
filed with the Office, and if an SOA has
been audited under this procedure,
must continue to maintain those records
until three years after the auditor
delivers his or her final report. By
definition, this would include records
that identify the stations that the
licensee carries and the communities it
serves. Thus, even if the required
information is not apparent from the
face of the SOA, the licensee should be
21 The Office issued the current version of Form
SA–3 in April 2011. It may be used to prepare SOAs
for accounting periods beginning on or after January
1, 2011.
22 The fact that the Office does not communicate
with the licensee does not necessarily mean that an
SOA is clear or correct. The Office generally accepts
the licensee’s representations unless they are
contradicted by information provided elsewhere in
the SOA or in the Office’s records or by information
that is known to the Licensing Division.
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able to compile a list of stations and
communities from its own records.
The Office made one minor change to
the Third Proposed Rule to make it
consistent with the rules governing
statements of account. Rather than
employing the somewhat vague term
‘‘certified list,’’ the Third Proposed Rule
clarifies that the list of broadcast signals
must be signed by a duly authorized
agent of the licensee, and that person
must confirm that the facts contained in
the document are true, complete, and
correct to the best of his or her
knowledge, information, and belief. See
37 CFR 201.11(e)(9)(iii)(E),
201.17(e)(14)(iii)(E).
IV. Scope of the Audit
A. Accounting Standard
The Second Proposed Rule provided
that audits must be conducted
‘‘according to generally accepted
auditing standards.’’ 78 FR at 27151. In
the Roundtable Notice, the Office
questioned whether this is the
appropriate standard, noting that
guidance from the American Institute of
Certified Public Accountants (‘‘AICPA’’)
indicates that ‘‘generally accepted
auditing standards’’ are those used by
accountants to audit corporate financial
statements. See 79 FR at 31994. At the
roundtable and in their Second
Submission, the Joint Stakeholders were
unable to reach agreement on what
standard, if any, should be specified in
lieu of ‘‘generally accepted auditing
standards.’’ For its part, Crunch Digital
confirmed at the roundtable that
‘‘generally accepted auditing standards’’
are not directly relevant to the type of
audit contemplated by this rule. It also
suggested that it is generally
unnecessary to specify in advance the
standard that will be applied during the
audit, and that the auditor’s approach
can be considered by the parties during
the initial consultation.
Given the lack of consensus on this
issue, and that none of the parties could
explain why any particular auditing
standard should apply to these
proceedings, the Office believes it is
unnecessary to specify the professional
standard to be employed under the rule.
Instead, the Office believes that it is
appropriate to rely on the auditors
themselves to adopt an appropriate
audit methodology based on their
professional judgment, and to review
that methodology with the participating
copyright owners and the licensee
during the initial consultation described
in section III.B.
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B. Subscriber Information
1. Comments
Under the Second Proposed Rule the
statutory licensee would be required to
provide reasonable access to its books,
records, or any other information that
the auditor needs to conduct the audit.
It also provided that the licensee should
produce any other information that the
auditor reasonably requests. See 78 FR
at 27141–42.
AT&T asserted that a cable operator
should not be required to produce
information regarding individual
subscribers, because this would impose
an undue burden on the licensee. AT&T
Second Comment at 4. Instead, AT&T
argued that the licensee should be
allowed to provide ‘‘reports that include
the number of subscribers, the amount
of revenue and the numbers of
subscribers and revenues applicable to
specific service offerings at the system
level.’’ Id.
The Copyright Owners contended that
AT&T is seeking ‘‘a special set of
accounting standards’’ for cable
operators. CO Second Reply at 6. In
their view, ‘‘[a]uditors should be free to
request whatever information they need
to fulfill their responsibility,’’ and they
stated that ‘‘ill-defined subscriber and
revenue ‘information in the form of
reports’ ’’ would not provide the
participating copyright owners with the
level of certainty that an audit should
provide. Id. at 6–7.
2. Discussion
The Office believes that it would be
inappropriate to place categorical limits
on the type of information that the
auditor may request during an audit
procedure. On the contrary, the auditor
should be allowed to request any
information he or she reasonably needs
to conduct an audit. The Office is in no
position to determine whether the
auditor does or does not need
individual subscriber information to
satisfy applicable professional
standards, and the Copyright Owners
correctly note that the Office lacks the
expertise that would be required to craft
particularized exceptions to the
information that reasonably could be
called for in an audit.
The Office has considered AT&T’s
comments, but has concluded that the
proposed rule adequately addresses
AT&T’s concerns. The Third Proposed
Rule limits the number of SOAs and the
number of cable systems that may be
included in an initial audit or an
expanded audit, which in turn limits
the amount of information that the
auditor may request. It provides that the
auditor should be given ‘‘reasonable
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access’’ to the licensee’s books, records,
and any other information that the
auditor needs to conduct an audit
(emphasis added). It provides that the
licensee is only required to produce
information that the auditor ‘‘reasonably
requests’’ (emphasis added). It also
provides that the audit must be
conducted during regular business
hours at a location designated by the
licensee, that consideration should be
‘‘given to minimizing the costs and
burdens associated with the audit,’’ and,
if the parties agree, that the audit may
be conducted in whole or in part by
means of electronic communication.
As the Office stated in the Federal
Register document dated May 9, 2013,
cable operators receive a substantial
benefit from the statutory licensing
system, insofar as it provides a
mechanism for licensing broadcast
content without having to negotiate
with the individual owners of that
content. During the legislative process
that led to the enactment of STELA, the
Congressional Budget Office estimated
that the cost of responding to an audit
would be minimal, because the auditor
would verify information that the
licensee already collected and
maintained as a condition for using the
statutory license. See H.R. Rep. No.
111–319, at 20 (2009). While the cost of
producing information needed to verify
the calculations and royalty payments
reported in an SOA may be a new
obligation, it is a reasonable cost of
doing business under the statutory
licensing system. See 78 FR at 27148.
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C. Suspension of the Audit
1. Comments
The Second Proposed Rule provided
that statutory licensees could suspend
an audit for up to thirty days before the
semi-annual deadlines for filing an
SOA, although licensees could not
exercise this option after the auditor
issues the initial draft of his or her
report. See 78 FR at 27141. The NCTA
strongly disagreed with this aspect of
the Second Proposed Rule. NCTA
Second Reply at 6. It contended that a
licensee should be allowed to suspend
an audit for up to sixty days before the
filing deadlines, because ‘‘the same
individuals that will be involved in
responding to an audit . . . typically
will be responsible for preparing new
statements of account for that licensee.’’
Id. at 5. AT&T expressed similar
concerns in its comments on the First
Proposed Rule, explaining that the staff
members who would be responsible for
responding to an audit would be the
same individuals who are responsible
for preparing AT&T’s SOAs. AT&T First
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Comment at 1. AT&T explained that
preparing these SOAs ‘‘essentially
occupies the full time of the staff from
two weeks before the close of each semiannual period through the due date for
the [SOA], two months after the close of
the period.’’ Id.
2. Discussion
The Office believes it would be
unduly restrictive to prevent the auditor
from working for up to four months out
of the year, given the limit on the
number of audits that may be conducted
each year. However, the Office
recognizes that the same individuals
may be responsible for preparing the
licensee’s SOAs, responding to the
auditor’s requests for information, and
reviewing the conclusions set forth in
the auditor’s report, and that it is
difficult to predict how much time or
effort this may require.
The Third Proposed Rule balances
these interests by allowing the licensee
to suspend its participation in the audit
for up to sixty days before the semiannual deadlines for filing an SOA
(regardless of whether the licensee is
subject to an initial audit or an
expanded audit, and regardless of
whether the auditor has issued the
initial draft of his or her report).
However, there are two exceptions to
this rule. If the participating copyright
owners provide the licensee with a list
of prospective auditors, then, as
discussed in section III.A, the licensee
will be required to select one of those
individuals within five business days
thereafter, even if the licensee has
suspended its participation in the audit.
Likewise, the licensee will be required
to provide the participating copyright
owners with the list of broadcast signals
discussed in section III.D, and a
representative of the licensee will be
required to participate in the initial
consultation discussed in section III.B.
These pre-examination activities should
not impose an undue burden on the
licensee. Moreover, under the proposed
schedule for conducting an initial audit
involving a cable operator, these
preliminary activities may need to take
place at the same time that the licensee
is preparing its statement of account for
the second accounting period of the
previous year.23 If the licensee could
postpone these initial activities until
after the filing of its SOA, it could
prevent the auditor from completing his
or her review in a timely manner.
23 Cable companies must file SOAs covering the
second half of the preceding calendar year by
March 1st. 37 CFR 201.17(c)(1). Satellite companies
must file SOAs for this period by January 30th. 37
CFR 201.11(c)(1)).
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While the Third Proposed rule allows
the licensee to suspend its participation
in the audit, it does not prevent the
auditor from continuing to work on the
audit during the suspension. For
example, the auditor could review
information he or she has received from
the licensee and formulate requests for
additional information, but the licensee
would not be required to respond to
those follow-up requests until the
suspension ended. Since the SOA
deadlines are known in advance, the
parties are strongly encouraged to
discuss these issues during the initial
consultation that is contemplated under
the Third Proposed Rule. If the licensee
intends to suspend its obligations under
this provision, the auditor should
schedule the delivery of critical
information that might otherwise
threaten the audit deadline well in
advance of the suspension period.
V. Draft Audit Report and Final Audit
Reports
A. Thirty Day Consultation Period
The Second Proposed Rule provided
that the auditor should prepare a
written report setting forth his or her
initial conclusions and should deliver
the initial findings to the licensee (but
not the copyright owners). It provided
that the auditor should then consult
with the licensee for a period of thirty
days, and if the auditor agreed that there
were errors in the report, the auditor
should correct those errors before
delivering a final report to the
participating copyright owners. If the
auditor and the licensee were unable to
resolve their differences, then under the
Second Proposed Rule, the licensee
could prepare a written rebuttal within
fourteen days after the thirty-day
consultation period, which would be
attached as an exhibit to the final report.
In the Roundtable Notice, the Office
asked the parties to consider whether
the auditor and the licensee should be
given more flexibility with respect to
the consultation phase of the audit. In
particular, the Office wanted to know
whether the licensee should be given an
opportunity to review the auditor’s
initial findings before the consultation
period begins, whether a thirty-day
consultation period would be a
sufficient amount of time to resolve
potential differences between the
auditor and the licensee, whether the
auditor should provide the licensee
with a revised version of the report at
the end of the consultation period (i.e.,
before the licensee submits its written
rebuttal), whether the licensee should
be given more than fourteen days to
prepare a rebuttal, or whether the
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auditor should be given more than five
days to prepare the final report after
receiving the licensee’s rebuttal. See 79
FR at 31994.
At the roundtable, the NCTA stated
that thirty days is a sufficient amount of
time for the consultation period and that
licensees do not need to receive an
initial draft of the auditor’s report in
advance of the consultation period or an
updated draft at the conclusion of that
period. In the NCTA’s view, adding any
additional time to the calendar would
merely delay the audit process. The
NCTA stated that the written rebuttal
will focus solely on the issues that the
auditor and the licensee were unable to
resolve during the consultation period
(if any), and that fourteen days is a
sufficient amount of time to prepare that
response. If the licensee cannot
convince the auditor to change his or
her conclusions during the consultation
period, then, in the NCTA’s view, it is
unlikely that the auditor will be
persuaded by anything that the licensee
says in its rebuttal and unlikely that the
auditor will make any changes or
revisions to the final version of that
report before it is delivered to the
participating copyright owners. The
NCTA suggested that the rebuttal
essentially would be a ‘‘minority report’’
and the act of attaching the rebuttal to
the final report would be a ministerial
task without any immediate practical
significance. Thus, the auditor should
not need any additional time to review
the rebuttal or prepare the final report
for the participating copyright owners.
In adjusting the proposed rule, the
Office has largely relied upon the
NCTA’s understanding of how the
consultation process would operate.
Under the Third Proposed Rule, the
auditor will deliver an initial draft of his
or her report to the licensee (but, absent
a suspicion of fraud, not to the
participating copyright owners). The
delivery of the initial draft will mark the
beginning of the thirty-day consultation
period. If, after consulting with the
licensee, the auditor agrees that there
are errors in the initial draft, the auditor
is required to correct those errors. The
auditor will then prepare a written
report setting forth his or her ultimate
conclusions, and on the last day of the
consultation period will deliver the
final version of that report to the
licensee (but not to the participating
copyright owners, again absent a
suspicion of fraud).
Although the Office accepted most of
the NCTA’s suggestions, the Office
believes it would be helpful if the
auditor provides the licensee with the
final version of the audit report at the
end of the consultation period. This will
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create a clear record of any changes that
the auditor made based on his or her
discussions with the licensee, and if the
licensee decides to prepare a written
rebuttal, it will make it easier for the
licensee to identify and respond to any
issues that remain in dispute.
Upon receiving the final version of
the report, the licensee may provide a
written rebuttal within fourteen days
after the conclusion of the thirty-day
consultation period, but is not required
to do so. Consistent with the NCTA’s
recommendation, the auditor will
simply attach any rebuttal received from
the licensee to the final version of his
or her report, which together will
constitute the final report. The auditor
will not otherwise address the issues
raised in the rebuttal; the rebuttal will
serve merely to capture the ultimate
areas of disagreement between the
auditor and the licensee for the benefit
of the participating copyright owners—
since they may not be privy to the issues
discussed during the consultation
period—and to memorialize the
licensee’s position in the event that the
licensee and the participating copyright
owners revisit these issues in follow-on
negotiations or litigation.
Within five business days after the
written rebuttal has been delivered to
the auditor or, if no rebuttal is provided,
after the fourteen-day deadline for
providing a rebuttal has passed, the
auditor will deliver a complete copy of
the final report to the participating
copyright owners, with a copy to the
licensee. As discussed in section II, the
Third Proposed Rule further provides
that the final report must be delivered
by November 1st of the year in which
the notice of intent to audit was
published in the Federal Register
(except that, as noted above, this
requirement would not apply in the case
of an expanded audit).
B. Suspicion of Fraud
1. Comments
As discussed in section V.A, the
Second Proposed Rule provided that the
auditor must deliver the initial draft of
his or her report to the licensee (but not
the participating copyright owners) at
the beginning of the consultation
period. However, the Second Proposed
Rule provided that the auditor could
also send the initial draft to the
participating copyright owners if the
auditor reasonably suspected that the
licensee had committed fraud. In such
a case, the Second Proposed Rule
provided that the auditor could send the
licensee an abridged version of the
initial draft containing all of the
auditor’s initial findings except for the
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auditor’s suspicion of fraud. Consistent
with certain other regulatory audit
provisions,24 the Office wanted to
address the possibility that if an auditor
discloses his or her suspicions to a
licensee, the licensee may be tempted to
conceal or destroy incriminating
evidence before copyright owners are
able to take action. See 78 FR at 27145.
The NCTA objected to this approach.
It contended (incorrectly) that there is
‘‘no precedent in the Office’s other audit
rules’’ for withholding a suspicion of
fraud from the licensee. NCTA Second
Reply at 3. The NCTA predicted that the
auditor ‘‘likely will lack formal legal
training’’ and contended that ‘‘the
Office’s rules or precedent’’ do not
provide ‘‘any guidance as to what types
of actions might be considered ‘fraud’ in
this context.’’ Id. at 3. Instead, the
NCTA stated that the auditor should be
allowed to discuss his or her suspicions
with the copyright owners ‘‘while still
giving licensees an opportunity to
respond to those allegations prior to the
issuance of a final report.’’ Id. at 3.
2. Discussion
As referenced above, the fraud
exception set forth in the Second
Proposed Rule was based, in part, on
similar regulations that the Office has
adopted in the past. See 37 CFR 261.6(f),
261.7(f), 262.6(f), 262.7(f). However, the
NCTA is correct that the statutory
provisions governing cable audits
expressly state that the Register ‘‘shall
issue regulations’’ that ‘‘shall . . .
require’’ the ‘‘auditor to review [his or
her] conclusions’’ with the licensee and
‘‘shall . . . provide an opportunity to
remedy any disputed facts or
conclusions.’’ 17 U.S.C. 111(d)(6)(C)(i),
(iii).
After weighing the NCTA’s concerns,
the Office has concluded that the
licensee should be given an opportunity
to review and respond to the auditor’s
entire report, even in cases where the
auditor suspects fraud. As noted in
Section IX, licensees will be required to
retain any records needed to confirm the
correctness of the calculations and
royalty payments reported in their SOAs
for three and a half years after the last
day of the year in which the SOA is
filed with the Office, and if an SOA is
audited under this procedure, to
continue to maintain those records until
three years after the auditor delivers his
or her final report to the copyright
owners. The risk that the licensee may
conceal or destroy incriminating
evidence should be minimized if the
24 See 37 CFR 261.6(f), 261.7(f), 262.6(f), 262.7(f)
(SOAs for ephemeral recordings and digital
performance of sound recordings).
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auditor preserves copies of that
evidence before disclosing his or her
suspicions to the licensee. If the auditor
has a reasonable basis for suspecting
fraud during the initial phase of the
audit (i.e., before the auditor prepares
the initial draft of his or her report and
before the consultation period begins),
then, as discussed in section III.C, the
auditor may communicate privately
with the participating copyright owners,
provided that the auditor reasonably
believes that involving the licensee in
the communication could prejudice
further investigation of the fraud. As an
additional protective measure, the Third
Proposed Rule provides that the auditor
may share the initial draft of his or her
report with both the participating
copyright owners and the licensee
during the consultation period in cases
where the auditor suspects fraud.
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VI. Corrections, Supplemental Royalty
Payments, and Refunds
Congress directed the Office to
‘‘establish a mechanism for the
[licensee] to remedy any errors
identified in the auditor’s report and to
cure any underpayment identified.’’ 17
U.S.C. 111(d)(6)C)(ii). If the information
in an SOA is incorrect or incomplete, if
the calculation of the royalty fee is
incorrect, or if the licensee has failed to
deposit the correct amount of royalties,
the Second Proposed Rule provided that
the licensee may correct those errors by
following the procedures set forth in 37
CFR 201.11(h)(1) or 201.17(m)(3). See 78
FR at 27145.
The Third Proposed Rule modifies
this aspect of the audit procedure in
three respects. First, it clarifies that the
licensee may cure an underpayment by
depositing additional royalties with the
Office, but may not deliver those
payments directly to the participating
copyright owners or their
representatives. Second, it provides that
the licensee may cure deficiencies
identified in the auditor’s report only if
the licensee represents that it has
reimbursed the participating copyright
owners for its share of the audit costs if
reimbursement is owed. Third, it allows
the licensee to request a refund from the
Office if the auditor discovers an
overpayment on any of the SOAs at
issue in the audit.
A. Supplemental Royalty Payments
Must Be Deposited With the Office
The statute clearly indicates that
copyright owners should be given a
single opportunity to audit a particular
SOA, and that the auditor should review
that statement on behalf of all copyright
owners, regardless of whether they
participate in the audit or not. See 77 FR
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at 35647. The statute also indicates that
any copyright owner should be allowed
to claim an appropriate share of
additional royalty fees that result from
the audit, even if that copyright owner
did not join the audit or pay for the
auditor’s services. Id. at 35649.
Consistent with these principles, the
Third Proposed Rule provides that a
licensee may cure the underpayments
identified in the auditor’s final report
only by depositing the additional
royalties due under the statutory license
with the Office. Paying additional
royalties directly to the participating
copyright owners pursuant to a
negotiated settlement agreement would
not satisfy this requirement, because
that would unfairly prevent nonparticipating copyright owners from
claiming an appropriate share of those
payments. In the interests of
transparency, the Third Proposed Rule
provides that a representative of the
participating copyright owners is to
promptly notify the Office if the auditor
discovered an underpayment or
overpayment on any of the statements
that were reviewed during the audit
(although the copyright owners do not
need to disclose the specific amounts).
This will create a public record for the
benefit of copyright owners that did not
participate in the audit process, and will
inform the Office that supplemental
royalty payments, amended statements,
and/or refund requests may be
forthcoming from the licensee.
B. Reimbursement of Costs
The Office previously determined that
it has the authority to include a costshifting provision in the regulation, and
the Second Proposed Rule expressly
provided that the licensee ‘‘shall pay’’
for a portion of the audit costs if the
auditor discovers a net aggregate
underpayment that exceeds certain
thresholds. See 78 FR at 27152. But as
the ACA noted at the roundtable, some
licensees may refuse to reimburse the
participating copyright owners if they
believe that the auditor’s conclusions
are unjustified. And as discussed in
section VIII.C.2, Congress did not create
a specific cause of action for licensees
that fail to reimburse the copyright
owners for their share of the audit costs.
The Third Proposed Rule addresses
this issue by providing that a licensee
may exercise its right to address
deficiencies identified in an auditor’s
report only if the licensee confirms that
it has reimbursed the participating
copyright owners for any audit costs
that the licensee is required to pay. In
other words, the Office will not accept
an amended SOA seeking to cure
deficiencies discovered in an audit
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unless the licensee confirms in writing
that it has reimbursed the participating
copyright owners for its share of the
audit costs or that it has no obligation
to do so under the cost-shifting or costsplitting rule.
The Second Proposed Rule provided
that an amended SOA and/or additional
royalty payments must be received
within sixty days after the delivery of
the final report to the participating
copyright owners and the licensee, or
within ninety days in the case of an
audit involving an MSO.25 In their
Second Submission, the Joint
Stakeholders stated that the licensee
should reimburse the participating
copyright owners for its share of the
audit costs (if any) within thirty days
after these deadlines. The Office agrees
that the licensee should be given a
precise deadline for reimbursing the
participating copyright owners, but
because a licensee’s ability to cure its
SOAs may be contingent upon paying
its share of the audit costs, the Third
Proposed Rule provides that the
deadline for reimbursing the
participating copyright owners and the
deadline for filing an amended SOA
and/or depositing additional royalties
will be the same.
C. Refunds
If the auditor discovers an
overpayment on a particular SOA, the
statutory licensee may request a refund
by following the procedures set forth in
sections 201.17(m) or 201.11(h) of the
Office’s existing regulations. The
Second Proposed Rule provided that the
refund request must be received in the
Office within thirty days after the
auditor delivers his or her final report
to the licensee. The NCTA suggested
that a licensee should be given sixty
days to submit a refund request. NCTA
Second Reply at 5. The Office has
accepted the NCTA’s suggestion,
because it would be consistent with the
sixty-day deadline for submitting
supplementary royalty payments under
the Third Proposed Rule, and consistent
with the sixty-day deadline for
requesting refunds under section
201.17(m) of the Office’s existing
regulations. In addition, the Third
Proposed Rule corrects certain
numbering errors in section 201.17(m)
that were inadvertently created when
the Office added a new paragraph to
that section of the regulations. See 78
FR 1755 (Jan. 11, 2013).
VII. Expanded Audits
Under the Second Proposed Rule,
copyright owners would be allowed to
25 None
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of the parties objected to these deadlines.
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conduct an initial audit of no more than
two SOAs in a proceeding involving a
satellite carrier or a single cable system.
In a proceeding involving an MSO,
copyright owners would be allowed to
audit no more than ten percent of the
Form 2 and Form 3 systems owned by
that MSO. See 78 FR at 27143. To
protect the interests of copyright
owners, the Second Proposed Rule also
created an exception to these rules. If
the auditor discovered a net aggregate
underpayment in his or her review of a
satellite carrier or a single cable system,
the copyright owners would be allowed
to audit previous SOAs filed by that
cable system or satellite carrier, so long
as they filed a notice of intent to audit
those statements in a timely manner.
Likewise, if the auditor discovered a net
aggregate underpayment in his or her
review of an MSO, the copyright owners
would be allowed to audit previous
statements filed by each of the systems
subject to the initial audit, and in the
following calendar year they would also
be allowed to audit a larger sample of
the cable systems owned by that MSO.
See id. The Third Proposed Rule
modifies this portion of the audit
procedure in several respects.
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
A. Procedure for Conducting an
Expanded Audit
As discussed in section II, the Third
Proposed Rule provides that the
copyright owners must file a notice of
intent to conduct an expanded audit,
the notice must specify the statements
that will be included in the expanded
audit, and the notice must be received
within three years after the last day of
the year in which those statements were
filed. It further provides that the
expanded audit should be conducted
using the same procedures that applied
to the initial audit, although there are
two exceptions to this rule. First, a
notice of intent to conduct an expanded
audit may be filed during any month of
the year, as long as the copyright owners
comply with the time limits set forth in
section 111(d)(6)(E) of the Act; and
second, the auditor does not need to
deliver his or her final report by
November 1st of the year in which the
notice was published in the Federal
Register.
B. An Expanded Audit May Be
Conducted Concurrently With an Initial
Audit
Under the Third Proposed Rule, an
expanded audit of a single cable system,
multiple cable systems owned by the
same MSO, or a satellite carrier may be
conducted concurrently with another
audit involving that same licensee.
Since the initial audit may not be
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completed until late in the year and
since the expanded audit may involve
multiple SOAs and/or multiple cable
systems, it seems unlikely—if not
impossible—that the auditor would be
able to complete the initial audit and
the expanded audit within the same
calendar year.
If the auditor discovers an
underpayment of five percent or more
during an initial audit, the Office
believes that the copyright owners
should be allowed to review previous
statements filed by that licensee and to
promptly initiate a new audit of the
licensee’s more recent statements.
Likewise, if the auditor discovers an
underpayment in the case of an MSO,
then, as contemplated by the Second
Proposed Rule, the copyright owners
should be allowed to audit a larger
sample of the MSO’s cable systems in
the following calendar year, even if an
expanded audit remains pending.
Copyright owners are entitled to know
if the same problems appear in the
licensee’s earlier or later filings, or more
broadly throughout an MSO’s systems.
If the expanded audit displaced the
copyright owners’ ability to initiate a
new audit, it could impede the
copyright owners’ ability to audit the
licensee’s more recent filings,
particularly because an expanded audit
may be noticed at any time and has no
deadline for completion. It would seem
unwarranted to constrain the copyright
`
owners’ ongoing audit right vis-a-vis a
particular licensee where that licensee
has been found to have underpaid
royalty fees in the past.
C. The Initial Audit and the Expanded
Audit May Be Conducted by the Same
Auditor
The Third Proposed Rule provides
that the expanded audit may be
conducted by the same auditor that
conducted the initial audit of that
licensee. The NCTA contended that the
Second Proposed Rule created a
procedure for selecting an auditor for an
expanded audit involving a satellite
carrier or a single cable system, but
‘‘[t]here is no provision made for the
selection of an auditor for an expanded
MSO audit.’’ NCTA Second Reply at 7.
That is incorrect. The Second Proposed
Rule provided that if the auditor
discovered a net aggregate
underpayment on the statements at
issue in an audit involving an MSO,
‘‘[t]he number of Statements of Account
of a particular cable system subject to
audit in a calendar year may be
expanded in accordance with paragraph
(k)(3) of this section’’ (emphasis added).
78 FR at 27153. In other words, the
procedure for selecting an auditor for an
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expanded audit involving a cable
operator that owns multiple cable
systems would be the same as the
procedure for an expanded audit
involving a cable operator that owns a
single cable system.
To eliminate further confusion, the
Third Proposed Rule clarifies that if the
auditor discovers a net aggregate
underpayment on the statements at
issue in an initial audit involving an
MSO, the cable systems that were
included within that initial audit may
be subject to an expanded audit. It also
clarifies that the MSO may be subject to
an initial audit involving a larger
sample of its cable systems in the
following calendar year, provided that
the copyright owners file a notice of
intent to audit those systems in a timely
manner (i.e., in the month of December
of the year in which the auditor
delivered the final report that triggered
the option of auditing a larger sample).
The NCTA also contended that
copyright owners should not be allowed
to unilaterally use the same auditor in
two consecutive expanded audits
involving an MSO.26 NCTA Second
Reply at 8. Instead, the MSO should
select the auditor ‘‘from a slate of names
supplied by the [copyright] owners that
could include the same auditor that
conducted the initial audit.’’ Id. at 7.
As noted in section III.A, the Second
Proposed Rule provided that the
licensee could select the auditor from a
list of names provided by the copyright
owners. Because an expanded audit is
simply an extension of the initial audit,
it is appropriate and efficient for the
same individual to conduct the audit
from start to finish. Under the Second
Proposed Rule, the same auditor who
conducted the initial audit could
conduct the expanded audit, provided
that the copyright owners supply the
licensee with information sufficient to
show that there has been no material
change in the auditor’s independence
and qualifications. If the auditor is no
longer qualified or independent, or if
the copyright owners prefer to use a
different individual, a new auditor
could be selected using the procedure
discussed in section III.A.
In its comments, the NCTA
recognized that there are benefits to
using the same auditor to conduct an
initial audit and an expanded audit. The
auditor will be familiar with the
licensee’s accounting systems and
26 The Joint Stakeholders made a similar
suggestion in their First Submission. The NCTA
correctly notes that the Office did not include this
suggestion in the Second Proposed Rule because it
‘‘fail[ed] to see the justification for this limitation.’’
See 78 FR 27143 n.19; NCTA Second Reply at
7–8.
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methodologies, which should improve
the efficiency of the expanded audit and
reduce the potential burden on the
licensee. The NCTA contended that
these benefits should be balanced
against the ‘‘benefits of giving the [MSO]
a new opportunity to have a say in the
selection of the auditor.’’ Id. at 8.
However, the NCTA failed to explain
what these purported benefits might be,
why they should be bestowed upon
MSOs (but denied to satellite carriers or
cable operators that own a single cable
system), or why they outweigh the
benefits of using the same individual to
conduct the initial audit and the
expanded audit.
VIII. Cost of the Audit Procedure
A. Allocation of Costs
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
1. Comments
Building off a proposal made by the
Joint Stakeholders, the Second Proposed
Rule provided that the participating
copyright owners would be required to
pay the auditor for his or her services
if the auditor discovered an
overpayment on the SOAs at issue in
the audit, or if the auditor discovered a
net aggregate underpayment of ten
percent or less of the amount reported
on those statements. If the auditor
discovered a net aggregate
underpayment of more than ten percent
on the SOAs at issue in the audit, the
statutory licensee would be required to
reimburse the copyright owners for
those costs.
In addition, the Second Proposed
Rule included a provision for splitting
these fees in certain circumstances. If
the auditor concluded in his or her final
report that there was a net aggregate
underpayment of more than ten percent,
the cost of the audit would be split
evenly between the copyright owners
and the licensee if the licensee prepared
a written rebuttal explaining the basis
for its good faith belief that the net
aggregate underpayment was between
five percent and ten percent of the
amount reported on the SOAs.27 See 78
FR at 27152.
In all cases, there would be an overall
limit on the costs that the licensee
would be expected to pay. Specifically,
the licensee would not be required to
pay for any costs that exceeded the
amount of the net aggregate
underpayment that the auditor
identified in his or her final report. See
78 FR at 27148.
27 If the licensee failed to provide a written
rebuttal in this situation, then as discussed in the
preceding paragraph, the licensee would be
required to reimburse the copyright owners for the
cost of the audit procedure.
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In comments received in response to
the Second Proposed Rule, the ACA
asked the Office to go a step further by
making it clear that if the auditor
discovers a net aggregate underpayment
of ten percent or more the licensee
should not have to pay for any portion
of the audit costs if the licensee
prepares a written rebuttal stating that
the underpayment was five percent or
less and explaining the basis for its
belief. ACA Second Comment at 4.
In the Roundtable Notice, the Office
questioned whether the costs should be
split between the parties based merely
on the views expressed in the licensee’s
rebuttal. As the NCTA indicated during
the roundtable, it is unlikely that the
auditor will change his or her mind
based on anything said in the rebuttal.
If that is the case, it is unclear why a
licensee’s objections should gain
renewed significance for the purpose of
allocating costs, when those objections
presumably were considered and
rejected by the auditor during the
consultation period. See 79 FR at 31995.
Following the roundtable, the Joint
Stakeholders provided a substitute
recommendation in their Second
Submission. Under that proposal, the
copyright owners would bear the costs
of the audit if the auditor concluded in
the final report that there was an
overpayment or a net aggregate
underpayment of five percent or less,
and that the licensee would bear the
costs if the auditor concluded that there
was a net aggregate underpayment of ten
percent or more. In cases falling in
between, where the auditor found a net
aggregate payment of more than five
percent but less than ten percent, the
audit costs would be split evenly
between the licensee on the one hand
and the participating copyright owners
on the other.
2. Discussion
The Office concurs with the costshifting and cost-splitting proposals set
forth in the Joint Stakeholders’ Second
Submission. The Office does not accept
the ACA’s proposal, which would allow
a licensee to avoid paying any portion
of the audit costs simply by offering its
views as to why an underpayment was
five percent or less (even if the auditor
determined that the underpayment was
ten percent or more). ACA Second
Comment at 4. As the Office noted in its
Roundtable Notice, it is unclear why the
licensee’s rebuttal should be given
greater weight than the auditor’s
conclusions, particularly given the
NCTA’s observation that the auditor
would not be expected to make any
changes to the final report based on the
views expressed in the rebuttal.
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The ACA contended that the
proposed rule ‘‘may impose an unfair
burden on small cable operators’’ by
requiring them to pay for the cost of the
audit ‘‘if the auditor finds a net
aggregate underpayment of less than
five percent.’’ Id. at 3. But as discussed
above, the licensee would not be
required to pay for any portion of the
audit costs in this situation. The ACA
does not contend that it would be
unfairly burdensome for small cable
operators to pay for the cost of an audit
when the underpayment exceeds ten
percent. Indeed, the ACA acknowledged
that small cable operators will largely be
protected by the provision stating that
licensees will not be required to pay for
any costs that exceed the amount of the
underpayment that the auditor
identifies in his or her final report. Id.
at 2. The Office’s existing regulations
provide additional limitations for small
cable operators that use Form SA 1–2.
There is an upper limit on the gross
receipts that may be reported on this
form, which limits the amount of any
underpayment that could be discovered
during the course of an audit, which in
turn limits the amount of any costshifting or cost-splitting that could be
required. See 37 CFR 201.17(d)(2)(i). As
the MPAA observed at the roundtable,
it seems unlikely that copyright owners
will be inclined to audit small cable
operators, because even if the auditor
discovers an underpayment, the cost of
conducting the audit may exceed any
amount that could conceivably be
recovered from the licensee.
B. Monthly Invoices
1. Comments
The Second Proposed Rule provided
that the copyright owners should
deliver an itemized statement to the
licensee at the conclusion of the audit
specifying the total cost of the audit
procedure. See 78 FR at 27149. The
Joint Stakeholders disagreed with this
aspect of the Second Proposed Rule. In
both their first and second proposals,
they suggested that the auditor should
be required to provide the licensee with
itemized invoices during the course of
the audit and that these invoices should
be delivered by the fifteenth of each
month. 78 FR at 27149; JS Second
Submission at 2. The NCTA explained
that this would minimize surprises for
the licensee, and noted that monthly
statements are a common feature of
audits involving private sector program
carriage agreements. NCTA Second
Reply at 6–7.
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2. Discussion
After further analysis, the Office has
included the Joint Stakeholders’
suggestion in the Third Proposed Rule.
The House Committee stated that the
Office ‘‘may consider . . . audit
provisions in private agreements to
which cable operators or content owners
may be parties.’’ H.R. Rep. No. 111–319
at 9 (2009). A monthly reporting
requirement would promote
transparency by requiring the auditor to
disclose the ongoing cost of the audit
procedure. And this would provide
copyright owners and licensees with
advance notice in the event that the
auditor discovers an underpayment that
triggers the cost-shifting or cost-splitting
mechanisms discussed in section VIII.A
above.
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C. Enforcement of Cost-Shifting
Provision
1. Comments
Under the Second Proposed Rule, if
the auditor discovered a net aggregate
underpayment that triggered the
licensee’s obligation to pay all or part of
the cost of the audit, the licensee would
be required to make such a
reimbursement within a specified
period of time. If the licensee disagreed
with the auditor’s conclusions,
however, the rule provided the licensee
with a mechanism for recouping those
costs from the participating copyright
owners, so long as a court issued a final
judgment finding that the net aggregate
underpayment was ten percent or less.
See 78 FR at 27149. In proposing that
provision, the Office assumed that the
licensee might seek a declaratory
judgment of non-infringement, and as
part of that proceeding, obtain a
judgment from a court evaluating the
correctness of the conclusions set forth
in the audit report. Id.
In response to the Second Proposed
Rule, AT&T objected to any provision
that would affirmatively obligate
licensees to pay the costs of the audit.28
It stated that ‘‘the enforcement
mechanism built into the statutory
license’’ allows copyright owners to
seek ‘‘recourse through the courts if they
believe that the licensee has failed to
fulfill its obligations under the statute
and the rules.’’ AT&T Second Comment
at 2. AT&T contended that the Second
Proposed Rule stands this ‘‘fundamental
28 AT&T also contended that the Office does not
have the authority to include a cost-shifting
provision in this audit regulation. AT&T Second
Comment at 1–2. AT&T made the same argument
in the initial phase of this rulemaking. AT&T First
Comment at 5–8. The Office addressed that
argument in its Federal Register document dated
May 9, 2013, concluding that it does have such
authority. See 78 FR at 27146–48.
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premise’’ on its head, because it ‘‘shifts
the enforcement obligation from the
copyright owners to the licensee’’ to
seek reimbursement of costs. Id. at 2. It
also contended that this would be ‘‘an
unwieldy and potentially costly
process,’’ because ‘‘the licensee would
be forced to seek reimbursement from
numerous sources’’ if the copyright
owners divide the payment among
themselves. Id. at 2.
The ACA expressed the same view in
its reply comments. It contended that it
would be ‘‘burdensome and unfair’’ to
expect small cable operators to pay for
the audit and then take legal action to
recover those costs from the copyright
owners. The ACA explained that small
cable operators have fewer financial and
legal resources than the copyright
owners, and stated that the cost of
bringing a declaratory judgment action
may exceed the amount that the licensee
could expect to recover. ACA Second
Reply at 2–4.
The Copyright Owners noted that
AT&T made a similar argument during
an earlier phase of this rulemaking,29
and that AT&T’s latest argument is
simply a variation on the same theme.
CO Second Reply at 2–3. They also
stated that the licensee ‘‘will have no
trouble’’ identifying the relevant
copyright owners if there is a dispute
between the parties. Id. at 5. They noted
that the copyright owners will be
required to identify themselves at the
beginning of the audit by filing a notice
with the Office. In the event that the
court rules in the licensee’s favor, they
stated that the copyright owners will
‘‘likely’’ be subject to an order directing
them to reimburse the licensee. Id. at 5.
The Office expressed several concerns
about this provision in the Roundtable
Notice and during the roundtable
discussion. See 79 FR at 31995. In
particular, the Office questioned
whether the parties expect to engage in
the sort of litigation contemplated by
the Second Proposed Rule, the
gravamen of which would seemingly be
an infringement action or a declaratory
judgment action for non-infringement;
whether the court would review the
auditor’s report to determine the exact
amount of underpayment in any such
litigation; and whether the issue of audit
costs might be better understood as a
potential element of actual damages in
such an infringement suit. The Office
expressed reservations about its
authority to essentially dictate the
issues that a federal district court would
be required to address in a suit initiated
29 The Office addressed this argument in its
Federal Register document dated May 9, 2013. See
78 FR at 27149.
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55707
after the completion of the audit. In
addition, the Office questioned whether
the rule should affirmatively require the
licensee to pay for the audit costs.
In their Second Submission, the Joint
Stakeholders reiterated their belief that
the proposed rule should provide a
method for licensees to recover the costs
of the audit from the participating
copyright owners in a judicial
proceeding. Specifically, they urged the
Office to include the following
provision in the proposed rule:
In the event the statutory licensee disputes
the amount of the net aggregate
underpayment identified by the auditor, and
an action is brought in a court of competent
jurisdiction to determine the royalties due for
the period(s) covered by the auditor’s final
report, there shall be a final true-up of the
amount of the auditor’s costs borne by either
party based on the final outcome of that
action relative to the cost responsibilities set
forth herein.
JS Second Submission at 2.
2. Discussion
As AT&T and the ACA correctly
observed, under the Second Proposed
Rule, the licensee would have had an
absolute obligation to reimburse the
copyright owners for the cost of the
audit, even if the licensee disagreed
with the auditors’ conclusions and
declined to submit any additional
royalty payments to the Office. AT&T
Second Comment at 2; ACA Second
Reply at 2–3. The Third Proposed Rule
modifies the Second Proposed Rule so
that licensees are required to pay the
costs of the audit if they wish to cure
a deficiency, as explained in section
VI.B above. This revised approach has
several advantages. Although the
Second Proposed Rule directed the
licensee to pay for the audit costs, it
provided no obvious mechanism for the
Office or any other party to enforce that
mandate. Tying the payment of audit
costs to the cure provisions, by contrast,
will give the licensee an incentive to
make these payments. If the licensee
disagrees with the auditor’s conclusion
regarding the royalty underpayment, the
licensee may choose not to deposit
additional royalties with the Office or
pay the attendant audit costs. In the case
where a licensee opts not to cure, the
licensee will run the risk of being
subject to an infringement action, or in
the alternative, could bring its own
action against one or more of the
copyright owners seeking a declaratory
judgment of non-infringement.
The Office believes it is unnecessary
for the rule to require a ‘‘true-up’’ of the
auditor’s costs after the close of any
follow-on litigation, as the Joint
Commenters urged in their Second
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Submission. To begin with, it is unclear
what the term ‘‘true-up’’ is intended to
mean or how the Joint Stakeholders
propose to enforce this regulatory
obligation. Moreover, the Joint
Stakeholders’ proposal raises issues that
can and should be resolved by a court
in the exercise of its remedial discretion
as part of the contemplated judicial
proceeding. In this regard, the Office
notes that the audit costs might be
characterized as an element of actual
damages incurred by the copyright
owners, or as an element of the relief to
be awarded in a declaratory judgment
action. See 28 U.S.C. 2202 (authorizing
courts to grant ‘‘[f]urther necessary or
proper relief based on a declaratory
judgment or decree . . . against any
adverse party whose rights have been
determined by such judgment’’).
provided in the Third Proposed Rule.
This will ensure that the licensee does
not discard its records before the threeyear statute of limitations may expire.
Moreover, the burden of retaining such
records should be minimal. Many
licensees collect, report, and maintain
their records in electronic form, which
should limit the cost of complying with
the proposed rule. The Third Proposed
Rule limits the number of SOAs that
may be included in each audit, which
in turn limits the number of records that
must be retained when the auditor
issues his or her final report.
Furthermore, the licensee is only
required to keep records that are
‘‘necessary to confirm the correctness of
the calculations and royalty payments
reported’’ in those SOAs.
List of Subjects in 37 CFR Part 201
IX. Retention of Records
Copyright, General Provisions.
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A. Comments
Proposed Regulations
The Second Proposed Rule provided
that a statutory licensee should retain
any records needed to confirm the
correctness of the calculations and
royalty payments reported in an SOA or
amended SOA for three and a half years
after the last day of the year that the
SOA or amendment was filed with the
Office, or in the event that an SOA or
amended SOA was the subject of an
audit, for three years after the auditor
delivered his or her final report to the
parties. As the Office explained in its
earlier Federal Register document dated
June 14, 2012, it is important to ensure
that licensees ‘‘retain their records until
the deadline for auditing [an SOA] has
passed.’’ 77 FR at 35647. The Office is
also concerned that copyright owners
have the benefit of the three-year statute
of limitations provided in the Act when
an audit takes place. See 17 U.S.C.
507(b).
The NCTA contended that the Second
Proposed Rule contemplates ‘‘a very
lengthy, and burdensome, record
retention period’’ following the
completion of the audit and that it
‘‘imposes a significant burden’’ on small
cable operators as well as MSOs that file
multiple SOAs in each accounting
period. NCTA Second Reply at 4. The
NCTA instead suggested that a licensee
be required to retain the required
records for no more than one year after
the auditor issues his or her final report.
In consideration of the foregoing, the
U.S. Copyright Office proposes to
amend part 201 of 37 CFR, Chapter II,
as follows:
B. Discussion
The Office has considered the NCTA’s
concerns but has concluded that a
licensee should be required to retain
relevant records during the pendency of
an audit and for three years after the
auditor issues his or her final report, as
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PART 201—GENERAL PROVISIONS
1. Amend the authority citation for
part 201 to read as follows:
■
Authority: 17 U.S.C. 702.
Section 201.10 also issued under 17 U.S.C.
304.
Section 201.16 also issued under 17 U.S.C.
111(d)(6) and 17 U.S.C. 119(b)(2).
■
2. Revise § 201.16 to read as follows:
§ 201.16 Verification of a Statement of
Account and royalty fee payments for
secondary transmissions made by cable
systems and satellite carriers.
(a) General. This section prescribes
procedures pertaining to the verification
of a Statement of Account and royalty
fees filed with the Copyright Office
pursuant to sections 111(d)(1) or
119(b)(1) of title 17 of the United States
Code.
(b) Definitions. As used in this
section:
(1) The term cable system has the
meaning set forth in § 201.17(b)(2).
(2) Copyright owner means any person
or entity that owns the copyright in a
work embodied in a secondary
transmission made by a statutory
licensee that filed a Statement of
Account with the Copyright Office for
an accounting period beginning on or
after January 1, 2010, or a designated
agent or representative of such person or
entity.
(3) Multiple system operator or MSO
means an entity that owns, controls, or
operates more than one cable system.
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(4) Net aggregate underpayment
means the aggregate amount of
underpayments found by the auditor
less the aggregate amount of any
overpayments found by the auditor, as
measured against the total amount of
royalties reflected on the Statements of
Account examined by the auditor.
(5) Participating copyright owner
means a copyright owner that filed a
notice of intent to audit a Statement of
Account pursuant to paragraph (c)(1) or
(2) of this section and any other
copyright owner that has given notice of
its intent to participate in such audit
pursuant to paragraph (c)(3) of this
section.
(6) The term satellite carrier has the
meaning set forth in 17 U.S.C. 119(d)(6).
(7) The term secondary transmission
has the meaning set forth in 17 U.S.C.
111(f)(2).
(8) Statement of Account or Statement
means a semiannual Statement of
Account filed with the Copyright Office
under 17 U.S.C. 111(d)(1) or 119(b)(1) or
an amended Statement of Account filed
with the Office pursuant to §§ 201.11(h)
or 201.17(m).
(9) Statutory licensee or licensee
means a cable system or satellite carrier
that filed a Statement of Account with
the Office under 17 U.S.C. 111(d)(1) or
119(b)(1).
(c) Notice of intent to audit. (1) Any
copyright owner that intends to audit a
Statement of Account for an accounting
period beginning on or after January 1,
2010 must provide written notice to the
Register of Copyrights no later than
three years after the last day of the year
in which the Statement was filed with
the Office. The notice must be received
in the Office between December 1st and
December 31st, and a copy of the notice
must be provided to the statutory
licensee on the same day that it is filed
with the Office. Between January 1st
and January 31st of the next calendar
year the Office will publish a notice in
the Federal Register announcing the
receipt of the notice of intent to audit.
A notice of intent to audit may be filed
by an individual copyright owner or a
designated agent that represents a group
or multiple groups of copyright owners.
The notice shall include a statement
indicating that it is a ‘‘notice of intent
to audit’’ and it shall contain the
following information:
(i) It shall identify the licensee that
filed the Statement(s) with the Office,
and the Statement(s) and accounting
period(s) that will be subject to the
audit.
(ii) It shall identify the party that filed
the notice, including its name, address,
telephone number, and email address,
and it shall include a statement that the
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party owns, or represents one or more
copyright owners that own, a work that
was embodied in a secondary
transmission made by the statutory
licensee during one or more of the
accounting period(s) specified in the
statement(s) that will be subject to the
audit.
(2) Notwithstanding the schedule set
forth in paragraph (c)(1) of this section,
any copyright owner that intends to
audit a Statement of Account pursuant
to an expanded audit under paragraph
(n) of this section may provide written
notice to the Register of Copyrights
during any month, but no later than
three years after the last day of the year
in which the Statement was filed with
the Office. A copy of the notice must be
provided to the licensee on the same
day that the notice is filed with the
Office. Within thirty days after the
notice has been received, the Office will
publish a notice in the Federal Register
announcing the receipt of the notice of
intent to conduct an expanded audit. A
notice given pursuant to this paragraph
may be provided by an individual
copyright owner or a designated agent
that represents a group or multiple
groups of copyright owners. The notice
shall include a statement indicating that
it is a ‘‘notice of intent to conduct an
expanded audit’’ and it shall contain the
information specified in paragraphs
(c)(1)(i) and (ii) of this section.
(3) Within thirty days after a notice is
published in the Federal Register
pursuant to paragraphs (c)(1) or (2) of
this section, any other copyright owner
that owns a work that was embodied in
a secondary transmission made by that
statutory licensee during an accounting
period covered by the Statement(s) of
Account referenced in the Federal
Register notice and that wishes to
participate in the audit of such
Statement(s) must provide written
notice of such participation to the
licensee and to the party that filed the
notice of intent to audit. A notice given
pursuant to this paragraph may be
provided by an individual copyright
owner or a designated agent that
represents a group or multiple groups of
copyright owners, and shall include the
information specified in paragraphs
(c)(1)(i) and (ii) of this section.
(4) Notices submitted under
paragraphs (c)(1) through (3) of this
section should be addressed to the ‘‘U.S.
Copyright Office, Office of the General
Counsel’’ and should be sent to the
address for time-sensitive requests set
forth in § 201.1(c)(1).
(5) Once the Office has received a
notice of intent to audit a Statement of
Account under paragraphs (c)(1) or (2)
of this section, a notice of intent to audit
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that same Statement will not be
accepted for publication in the Federal
Register.
(6) Once the Office has received a
notice of intent to audit two Statements
of Account filed by a particular satellite
carrier or a particular cable system, a
notice of intent to audit that same
carrier or that same system under
paragraph (c)(1) of this section will not
be accepted for publication in the
Federal Register until the following
calendar year.
(7) If the Office has received or
receives a notice of intent to audit prior
to the effective date of this section, the
Office will publish a notice in the
Federal Register within thirty days
thereafter announcing the receipt of the
notice of intent to audit. In such a case,
the audit shall be conducted using the
procedures set forth in paragraphs (d)
through (l) of this section, with the
following exceptions:
(i) The participating copyright owners
shall provide the statutory licensee with
a list of three independent and qualified
auditors pursuant to paragraph (d)(1) by
March 16, 2015.
(ii) The auditor shall deliver his or her
final report to the participating
copyright owners and the licensee
pursuant to paragraph (i)(3) of this
section by November 1, 2015.
(d) Selection of the auditor. (1) Within
forty-five days after a notice is
published in the Federal Register
pursuant to paragraph (c)(1) of this
section, the participating copyright
owners shall provide the statutory
licensee with a list of three independent
and qualified auditors, along with
information reasonably sufficient for the
licensee to evaluate the proposed
auditors’ independence and
qualifications, including:
(i) The auditor’s curriculum vitae and
a list of audits that the auditor has
conducted pursuant to 17 U.S.C.
111(d)(6) or 119(b)(2);
(ii) A list and, subject to any
confidentiality or other legal
restrictions, a brief description of any
other work the auditor has performed
for any of the participating copyright
owners during the prior two calendar
years;
(iii) A list identifying the participating
copyright owners for whom the
auditor’s firm has been engaged during
the prior two calendar years; and,
(iv) A copy of the engagement letter
that would govern the auditor’s
performance of the audit and that
provides for the auditor to be
compensated on a non-contingent flat
fee or hourly basis that does not take
into account the results of the audit.
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55709
(2) Within five business days after
receiving the list of auditors from the
participating copyright owners, the
licensee shall select one of the proposed
auditors and shall notify the
participating copyright owners of its
selection. That auditor shall be retained
by the participating copyright owners
and shall conduct the audit on behalf of
all copyright owners who own a work
that was embodied in a secondary
transmission made by the licensee
during the accounting period(s)
specified in the Statement(s) of Account
identified in the notice of intent to
audit.
(3) The auditor shall be independent
and qualified as defined in this section.
An auditor shall be considered
independent and qualified if:
(i) He or she is a certified public
accountant and a member in good
standing with the American Institute of
Certified Public Accountants (‘‘AICPA’’)
and the licensing authority for the
jurisdiction(s) where the auditor is
licensed to practice;
(ii) He or she is not, for any purpose
other than the audit, an officer,
employee, or agent of any participating
copyright owner;
(iii) He or she is independent as that
term is used in the Code of Professional
Conduct of the AICPA, including the
Principles, Rules, and Interpretations of
such Code; and
(iv) He or she is independent as that
term is used in the Statements on
Auditing Standards promulgated by the
Auditing Standards Board of the AICPA
and Interpretations thereof issued by the
Auditing Standards Division of the
AICPA.
(e) Commencement of the audit. (1)
Within ten days after the selection of the
auditor, the auditor shall meet by
telephone or in person with designated
representatives of the participating
copyright owners and the statutory
licensee to review the scope of the
audit, audit methodology, and schedule
for conducting and completing the
audit.
(2) Within thirty days after the
selection of the auditor, the licensee
shall provide the auditor and a
representative of the participating
copyright owners with a list of all
broadcast signals retransmitted pursuant
to the statutory license in each
community covered by each of the
Statements of Account subject to the
audit, including the call sign for each
broadcast signal and each multicast
signal. In the case of an audit involving
a cable system or MSO, the list must
include the classification of each signal
on a community-by-community basis
pursuant to §§ 201.17(e)(9)(iv) through
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(v) and 201.17(h). The list shall be
signed by a duly authorized agent of the
licensee and the signature shall be
accompanied by the following
statement: I, the undersigned agent of
the statutory licensee, hereby declare
under penalty of law that all statements
of fact contained herein are true,
complete, and correct to the best of my
knowledge, information, and belief, and
are made in good faith.
(f) Failure to proceed with a noticed
audit. If the participating copyright
owners fail to provide the statutory
licensee with a list of auditors or fail to
retain the auditor selected by the
licensee pursuant to paragraph (d)(2) of
this section, the Statement(s) of Account
identified in the notice of intent to audit
shall not be subject to audit under this
section.
(g) Ex parte communications.
Following the initial consultation
pursuant to paragraph (e)(1) of this
section and until the distribution of the
auditor’s final report to the participating
copyright owners pursuant to paragraph
(i)(3) of this section, there shall be no ex
parte communications regarding the
audit between the auditor and the
participating copyright owners or their
representatives; provided, however, that
the auditor may engage in such ex parte
communications where either:
(1) Subject to paragraph (i)(4) of this
section, the auditor has a reasonable
basis to suspect fraud and that
participation by the licensee in
communications regarding the
suspected fraud would, in the
reasonable opinion of the auditor,
prejudice the investigation of such
suspected fraud; or
(2) The auditor provides the licensee
with a reasonable opportunity to
participate in communications with the
participating copyright owners or their
representatives and the licensee
declines to do so.
(h) Auditor’s authority and access. (1)
The auditor shall have exclusive
authority to verify all of the information
reported on the Statement(s) of Account
subject to the audit in order to confirm
the correctness of the calculations and
royalty payments reported therein;
provided, however, that the auditor
shall not determine whether any cable
system properly classified any broadcast
signal as required by §§ 201.17(e)(9)(iv)
through (v) and 201.17(h) or whether a
satellite carrier properly determined
that any subscriber or group of
subscribers is eligible to receive any
broadcast signals under 17 U.S.C.
119(a).
(2) The statutory licensee shall
provide the auditor with reasonable
access to the licensee’s books and
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records and any other information that
the auditor needs in order to conduct
the audit. The licensee shall provide the
auditor with any information the
auditor reasonably requests promptly
after receiving such a request.
(3) The audit shall be conducted
during regular business hours at a
location designated by the licensee with
consideration given to minimizing the
costs and burdens associated with the
audit. If the auditor and the licensee
agree, the audit may be conducted in
whole or in part by means of electronic
communication.
(4) With the exception of its
obligations under paragraphs (d) and (e)
of this section, a licensee may suspend
its participation in an audit for no more
than sixty days before the semi-annual
due dates for filing Statements of
Account by providing advance written
notice to the auditor and a
representative of the participating
copyright owners, provided however,
that if the participating copyright
owners notify the licensee within ten
days of receiving such notice of their
good faith belief that the suspension
could prevent the auditor from
delivering his or her final report to the
participating copyright owners before
the statute of limitations may expire on
any claims under the Copyright Act
related to a Statement of Account
covered by that audit, the licensee may
not suspend its participation in the
audit unless it first executes a tolling
agreement to extend the statute of
limitations by a period of time equal to
the period of the suspension.
(i) Audit report. (1) After reviewing
the books, records, and any other
information received from the statutory
licensee, the auditor shall prepare a
draft written report setting forth his or
her initial conclusions and shall deliver
a copy of that draft report to the
licensee. The auditor shall then consult
with a representative of the licensee
regarding the conclusions set forth in
the draft report for no more than thirty
days. If, upon consulting with the
licensee, the auditor concludes that
there are errors in the facts or
conclusions set forth in the draft report,
the auditor shall correct those errors.
(2) Within thirty days after the date
that the auditor delivered the draft
report to the licensee pursuant to
paragraph (i)(1) of this section, the
auditor shall prepare a final version of
the written report setting forth his or her
ultimate conclusions and shall deliver a
copy of that final version to the licensee.
Within fourteen days thereafter, the
licensee may provide the auditor with a
written rebuttal setting forth its good
faith objections to the facts or
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conclusions set forth in the final version
of the report.
(3) Subject to the confidentiality
provisions set forth in paragraph (l) of
this section, the auditor shall attach a
copy of any written rebuttal timely
received from the licensee to the final
version of the report and shall deliver a
copy of the complete final report to the
participating copyright owners and the
licensee. The final report must be
delivered by November 1st of the year
in which the notice was published in
the Federal Register pursuant to
paragraph (c)(1) of this section and
within five business days after the last
day on which the licensee may provide
the auditor with a written rebuttal
pursuant to paragraph (i)(2) of this
section. A representative of the
participating copyright owners shall
promptly notify the Office that the audit
has been completed and shall state
whether the auditor discovered an
underpayment or overpayment on any
Statement(s) examined in the audit, as
applicable. The notice should be
addressed to the ‘‘U.S. Copyright Office,
Office of the General Counsel’’ and
should be sent to the address for timesensitive requests specified in
§ 201.1(c)(1).
(4) Prior to the delivery of the final
report pursuant to paragraph (i)(3) of
this section the auditor shall not
provide any draft of his or her report to
the participating copyright owners or
their representatives; provided,
however, that the auditor may deliver a
draft report simultaneously to the
licensee and the participating copyright
owners if the auditor has a reasonable
basis to suspect fraud.
(j) Corrections, supplemental
payments, and refunds. (1) If the auditor
concludes in his or her final report that
any of the information reported on a
Statement of Account is incorrect or
incomplete, that the calculation of the
royalty fee payable for a particular
accounting period was incorrect, or that
the amount deposited in the Office for
that period was too low, a statutory
licensee may cure such incorrect or
incomplete information or
underpayment by filing an amendment
to the Statement and, in case of a
deficiency in payment, by depositing
supplemental royalty fee payments with
the Office using the procedures set forth
in §§ 201.11(h) or 201.17(m), provided
that the amendment and/or payments
are received within sixty days after the
delivery of the final report to the
participating copyright owners and the
licensee or within ninety days after the
delivery of such report in the case of an
audit of an MSO, and further provided
that the licensee reimburses the
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participating copyright owners for the
licensee’s share of the audit costs, if
any, determined to be owing pursuant to
paragraph (k)(3) of this section.
Supplemental royalty fee payments
made pursuant to this paragraph shall
be delivered to the Office and not to
participating copyright owners or their
representatives.
(2) Notwithstanding §§ 201.11(h)(3)(i)
and 201.17(m)(4)(i), if the auditor
concludes in his or her final report that
there was an overpayment on a
particular Statement, the licensee may
request a refund from the Office using
the procedures set forth in
§§ 201.11(h)(3) or 201.17(m)(4),
provided that the request is received
within sixty days after the delivery of
the final report to the participating
copyright owners and the licensee or
within ninety days after the delivery of
the final report in the case of an audit
of an MSO.
(k) Costs of the audit. (1) No later than
the fifteenth day of each month during
the course of the audit, the auditor shall
provide the participating copyright
owners with an itemized statement of
the costs incurred by the auditor during
the previous month, and shall provide
a copy to the licensee that is the subject
of the audit.
(2) If the auditor concludes in his or
her final report that there was no net
aggregate underpayment or a net
aggregate underpayment of five percent
or less, the participating copyright
owners shall pay for the full costs of the
auditor. If the auditor concludes in his
or her final report that there was a net
aggregate underpayment of more than
five percent but less than ten percent,
the costs of the auditor are to be split
evenly between the participating
copyright owners and the licensee that
is the subject of the audit. If the auditor
concludes in his or her final report that
there was a net aggregate underpayment
of ten percent or more, the licensee will
be responsible for the full costs of the
auditor.
(3) If a licensee is responsible for any
portion of the costs of the auditor, a
representative of the participating
copyright owners shall provide the
licensee with an itemized accounting of
the auditor’s total costs, the appropriate
share of which should be paid by the
licensee to such representative no later
than sixty days after the delivery of the
final report to the participating
copyright owners and licensee or within
ninety days after the delivery of such
report in the case of an audit of an MSO.
(4) Notwithstanding anything to the
contrary in paragraph (k) of this section,
no portion of the auditor’s costs that
exceed the amount of the net aggregate
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underpayment may be recovered from
the licensee.
(l) Confidentiality. (1) For purposes of
this section, confidential information
shall include any non-public financial
or business information pertaining to a
Statement of Account that has been
subjected to an audit under 17 U.S.C.
111(d)(6) or 119(b)(2).
(2) Access to confidential information
under this section shall be limited to:
(i) The auditor; and
(ii) Subject to the execution of a
reasonable confidentiality agreement,
outside counsel for the participating
copyright owners and any third party
consultants retained by outside counsel,
and any employees, agents, consultants,
or independent contractors of the
auditor who are not employees, officers,
or agents of a participating copyright
owner for any purpose other than the
audit, who are engaged in the audit of
a Statement or activities directly related
hereto, and who require access to the
confidential information for the purpose
of performing such duties during the
ordinary course of their employment.
(3) The auditor and any person
identified in paragraph (l)(2)(ii) of this
section shall implement procedures to
safeguard all confidential information
received from any third party in
connection with an audit, using a
reasonable standard of care, but no less
than the same degree of security used to
protect confidential financial and
business information or similarly
sensitive information belonging to the
auditor or such person.
(m) Frequency and scope of the audit.
(1) Except as provided in paragraph
(n)(2) of this section with respect to
expanded audits, a cable system, MSO,
or satellite carrier shall be subject to no
more than one audit per calendar year.
(2) Except as provided in paragraph
(n)(1) of this section, the audit of a
particular cable system or satellite
carrier shall include no more than two
of the Statements of Account from the
previous eight accounting periods
submitted by that cable system or
satellite carrier.
(3) Except as provided in paragraph
(n)(3)(ii), an audit of an MSO shall be
limited to a sample of no more than ten
percent of the MSO’s Form 3 cable
systems and no more than ten percent
of the MSO’s Form 2 systems.
(n) Expanded audits. (1) If the auditor
concludes in his or her final report that
there was a net aggregate underpayment
of five percent or more on the
Statements of Account examined in an
initial audit involving a cable system or
satellite carrier, a copyright owner may
expand the audit to include all previous
Statements filed by that cable system or
PO 00000
Frm 00053
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
55711
satellite carrier that may be timely
noticed for audit under paragraph (c)(2)
of this section. The expanded audit
shall be conducted using the procedures
set forth in paragraphs (d) through (l) of
this section, with the following
exceptions:
(i) The expanded audit may be
conducted by the same auditor that
performed the initial audit, provided
that the participating copyright owners
provide the licensee with updated
information reasonably sufficient to
allow the licensee to determine that
there has been no material change in the
auditor’s independence and
qualifications. In the alternative, the
expanded audit may be conducted by an
auditor selected by the licensee using
the procedure set forth in paragraph (d)
of this section.
(ii) The auditor shall deliver his or her
final report to the participating
copyright owners and the licensee
within five business days following the
last day on which the licensee may
provide the auditor with a written
rebuttal pursuant to paragraph (i)(2) of
this section, but shall not be required to
deliver the report by November 1st of
the year in which the notice was
published in the Federal Register
pursuant to paragraph (c) of this section.
(2) An expanded audit of a cable
system or a satellite carrier that is
conducted pursuant to paragraph (n)(1)
of this section may be conducted
concurrently with another audit
involving that same licensee.
(3) If the auditor concludes in his or
her final report that there was a net
aggregate underpayment of five percent
or more on the Statements of Account
examined in an initial audit involving
an MSO:
(i) The cable systems included in the
initial audit of that MSO shall be subject
to an expanded audit in accordance
with paragraph (n)(1) of this section;
and
(ii) The MSO shall be subject to an
initial audit involving a sample of no
more than thirty percent of its Form 3
cable systems and no more than thirty
percent of its Form 2 cable systems,
provided that the notice of intent to
conduct that audit is filed in the same
calendar year as the delivery of such
final report.
(o) Retention of records. For each
Statement of Account or amended
Statement that a statutory licensee files
with the Office for accounting periods
beginning on or after January 1, 2010,
the licensee shall maintain all records
necessary to confirm the correctness of
the calculations and royalty payments
reported in each Statement or amended
Statement for at least three and one-half
E:\FR\FM\17SEP1.SGM
17SEP1
55712
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 180 / Wednesday, September 17, 2014 / Proposed Rules
years after the last day of the year in
which that Statement or amended
Statement was filed with the Office and,
in the event that such Statement or
amended Statement is the subject of an
audit conducted pursuant to this
section, shall continue to maintain those
records until three years after the
auditor delivers the final report to the
participating copyright owners and the
licensee pursuant to paragraph (i)(3) of
this section.
§ 201.17
[Amended]
3. Amend § 201.17 as follows:
a. In paragraphs (m)(2) and (m)(4)(i)
by removing ‘‘(m)(3)’’ and adding in its
place ‘‘(m)(4)’’.
■ b. In paragraphs (m)(2)(ii),
(m)(4)(iii)(C), and (m)(4)(iv)(A) by
removing ‘‘(m)(1)(iii)’’ and adding in its
place ‘‘(m)(2)(iii)’’.
■ c. In paragraph (m)(4) by removing
‘‘(m)(1)’’ and adding in its place
‘‘(m)(2)’’.
■ d. In paragraph (m)(4)(iii)(A) by
removing ‘‘(m)(1)(i)’’ and adding in its
place ‘‘(m)(2)(i)’’.
■ e. In paragraph (m)(4)(iii)(B) by
removing ‘‘(m)(1)(ii)’’ and adding in its
place ‘‘(m)(2)(ii)’’.
■ f. In paragraph (m)(4)(vi) by removing
‘‘(m)(3)(i)’’ and adding in its place
‘‘(m)(4)(i)’’.
■
■
Dated: September 10, 2014.
Jacqueline C. Charlesworth,
General Counsel and Associate Register of
Copyrights.
[FR Doc. 2014–21944 Filed 9–16–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 1410–30–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R05–OAR–2011–0968; FRL–9916–46–
Region 5]
Approval and Promulgation of Air
Quality Implementation Plans; Indiana;
Open Burning Rule
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is proposing to approve a
November 14, 2011, request by Indiana
to revise the state implementation plan
open burning provisions in Title 326 of
the Indiana Administrative Code (IAC),
Article 4, Rule 1 (326 IAC 4–1), Open
Burning Rule. EPA is proposing to
approve this rule for attainment
counties and take no action on the rule
for Clark, Floyd, Lake and Porter
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:21 Sep 16, 2014
Jkt 232001
counties which are nonattainment or
maintenance areas for ozone or
particulate matter.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before October 17, 2014.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–R05–
OAR–2011–0968 by one of the following
methods:
1. www.regulations.gov: Follow the
on-line instructions for submitting
comments.
2. Email: blakley.pamela@epa.gov.
3. Fax: (312) 692–2450.
4. Mail: Pamela Blakley, Chief,
Control Strategies Section (AR–18J),
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
77 West Jackson Boulevard, Chicago,
Illinois 60604.
5. Hand Delivery: Pamela Blakley,
Chief, Control Strategies Section (AR–
18J), U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, 77 West Jackson Boulevard,
Chicago, Illinois 60604. Such deliveries
are only accepted during the Regional
Office normal hours of operation, and
special arrangements should be made
for deliveries of boxed information. The
Regional Office official hours of
business are Monday through Friday,
8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., excluding
Federal holidays.
Please see the direct final rule which
is located in the Rules section of this
Federal Register for detailed
instructions on how to submit
comments.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Charles Hatten, Environmental
Engineer, Control Strategies Section, Air
Programs Branch (AR–18J),
Environmental Protection Agency,
Region 5, 77 West Jackson Boulevard,
Chicago, Illinois 60604, (312) 886–6031,
hatten.charles@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In the
Final Rules section of this Federal
Register, EPA is approving the State’s
SIP submittal as a direct final rule
without prior proposal because the
Agency views this as a noncontroversial
submittal and anticipates no adverse
comments. A detailed rationale for the
approval is set forth in the direct final
rule. If no adverse comments are
received in response to this rule, no
further activity is contemplated. If EPA
receives adverse comments, the direct
final rule will be withdrawn and all
public comments received will be
addressed in a subsequent final rule
based on this proposed rule. EPA will
not institute a second comment period.
Any parties interested in commenting
on this action should do so at this time.
Please note that if EPA receives adverse
comment on an amendment, paragraph,
or section of this rule, and if that
PO 00000
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Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
provision may be severed from the
remainder of the rule, EPA may adopt
as final those provisions of the rule that
are not the subject of an adverse
comment. For additional information,
see the direct final rule which is located
in the Rules section of this Federal
Register.
Dated: September 2, 2014.
Susan Hedman,
Regional Administrator, Region 5.
[FR Doc. 2014–22047 Filed 9–16–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Office of Federal Contract Compliance
Programs
41 CFR Part 60–1
RIN 1250–AA06
Government Contractors, Prohibitions
Against Pay Secrecy Policies and
Actions
Office of Federal Contract
Compliance Programs (OFCCP), Labor.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
The Office of Federal Contract
Compliance Programs (OFCCP)
proposes amending the regulations
implementing Executive Order 11246
that set forth the basic equal
employment opportunity requirements
that apply to Federal contractors and
subcontractors. This Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking (NPRM) proposes including
definitions for key words or terms used
in Executive Order 13665. The NPRM
also proposes amending the mandatory
equal opportunity clauses that are
included in Federal contracts and
subcontracts and federally assisted
construction contracts. The NPRM
would delete the outdated reference to
the ‘‘Deputy Assistant Secretary’’ and
replace it with the ‘‘Director of OFCCP.’’
The NPRM also proposes to change the
title of a section regarding the inclusion
of the equal opportunity clause by
reference and making conforming
changes in the text. In addition, the
NPRM would establish contractor
defenses to allegations of violations of
the nondiscrimination provision. The
proposed rule also adds a section
requiring Federal contractors to notify
employees and job applicants of the
nondiscrimination protection created by
Executive Order 13665 using existing
methods of communicating to
applicants and employees.
DATES: To be assured of consideration,
comments must be received on or before
December 16, 2014.
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\17SEP1.SGM
17SEP1
Agencies
- Library of Congress
- U.S. Copyright Office
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 180 (Wednesday, September 17, 2014)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 55696-55712]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-21944]
[[Page 55696]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
U.S. Copyright Office
37 CFR Part 201
[Docket No. 2012-5]
Verification of Statements of Account Submitted by Cable
Operators and Satellite Carriers
AGENCY: U.S. Copyright Office, Library of Congress.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: On May 9, 2013 the U.S. Copyright Office issued a notice of
proposed rulemaking and request for comments concerning a new
regulation that will allow copyright owners to audit the statements of
account and royalty fees that cable operators and satellite carriers
deposit with the Office for secondary transmissions of broadcast
programming made pursuant to statutory licenses. The Office has revised
the proposed regulation to address certain logistical concerns and
based on further input that it has received from copyright owners,
cable operators, satellite carriers, and accounting professionals. The
Office seeks comments on the revised proposal before it is adopted as a
final rule.
DATES: Comments must be made in writing and must be received in the
U.S. Copyright Office no later than October 17, 2014.
ADDRESSES: The U.S. Copyright Office strongly prefers that comments be
submitted electronically. A comment page containing a comment
submission form is posted on the Office's Web site at https://
copyright.gov/docs/soaaudit/soaaudit.html. The Web site
interface requires submitters to complete a form specifying a name and
organization, as applicable, and to upload comments as an attachment.
To meet accessibility standards, all comments must be uploaded in a
single file in either Portable Document Format (PDF) that contains
searchable, accessible text (not an image); Word format (DOC or DOCX);
WordPerfect format (WPD); Rich Text Format (RTF); or ASCII text file
(not a scanned document). The maximum file size for comments is six
megabytes (MB). The name of the commenter and organization should
appear on both the form and on the comment itself. All comments will be
posted publicly on the Office's Web site exactly as they are received,
along with names and organizations. If electronic submission of
comments is not feasible, please contact the Office at 202-707-8350 for
special instructions.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jacqueline C. Charlesworth, General
Counsel and Associate Register of Copyrights, by email at
jcharlesworth@loc.gov, or by telephone at 202-707-8350; Erik Bertin,
Assistant General Counsel, by email at ebertin@loc.gov, or by telephone
at 202-707-8350; or Sy Damle, Special Advisor to the General Counsel,
by email at sdam@loc.gov, or by telephone at 202-707-8350.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
Sections 111 and 119 of the Copyright Act (the ``Act''), Title 17
of the United States Code, allow cable operators and satellite carriers
to retransmit programming that broadcast stations transmit on over-the-
air broadcast signals. To use these statutory licenses, cable operators
and satellite carriers are required to file statements of account
(``SOAs'') and deposit royalty fees with the U.S. Copyright Office
(``Office'') on a semi-annual basis. The Office invests these royalties
in United States Treasury securities pending distribution of the funds
to copyright owners that are entitled to receive a share of the
royalties.
The Satellite Television Extension and Localism Act of 2010
(``STELA''), Public Law 111-175, amended the Act by directing the
Register of Copyrights to issue regulations to allow copyright owners
to audit the SOAs and royalty fees that cable operators and satellite
carriers file with the Office. Section 119(b)(2) of the Act directs the
Register to ``issue regulations to permit interested parties to verify
and audit the statements of account and royalty fees submitted by
satellite carriers under this subsection.'' 17 U.S.C. 119(b)(2).
Similarly, section 111(d)(6) directs the Register to ``issue
regulations to provide for the confidential verification by copyright
owners whose works were embodied in the secondary transmissions of
primary transmissions pursuant to [section 111] of the information
reported on the semiannual statements of account filed under this
subsection for accounting periods beginning on or after January 1,
2010, in order that the auditor designated under subparagraph
[111(d)(6)(A)] is able to confirm the correctness of the calculations
and royalty payments reported therein.'' 17 U.S.C. 111(d)(6).
The Office began working on its initial draft for this procedure in
2011. The initial draft was based on similar audit regulations that the
Office developed for parties that make ephemeral recordings or transmit
digital sound recordings under 17 U.S.C. sections 112(e) and 114(f),
respectively, or manufacture, import, and distribute digital audio
recording devices under 17 U.S.C. chapter 10.
On January 31, 2012 the Office received a Petition for Rulemaking,
which was filed by a group of copyright owners.\1\ The copyright owners
urged the Office to adopt regulations that would allow them to audit
the SOAs filed by cable operators and satellite carriers, and they
provided the Office with proposed language for each regulation. See
Petition at 1-4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ This group included the Program Suppliers (commercial
entertainment programming), Joint Sports Claimants (professional and
college sports programming), National Association of Broadcasters
(``NAB'') (commercial television programming), Commercial Television
Claimants (local commercial television programming), Broadcaster
Claimants Group (U.S. commercial television stations), American
Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (``ASCAP'') (musical
works included in television programming), Broadcast Music, Inc.
(``BMI'') (same), Public Television Claimants (noncommercial
television programming), Public Broadcasting Service (``PBS'')
(same), National Public Radio (``NPR'') (noncommercial radio
programming), Canadian Claimants (Canadian television programming),
and Devotional Claimants (religious television programming).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On June 14, 2012, the Office issued a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
that set forth its initial proposal for the audit procedure (the
``First Proposed Rule''). See 77 FR 35643 (June 14, 2012). The Office
received extensive comments from groups representing copyright
owners,\2\ cable operators,\3\ and individual companies that retransmit
broadcast programming under sections 111 or 119 of the Act, namely,
AT&T, Inc., DIRECTV, LLC, and DISH Network L.L.C.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ This group included the Program Suppliers, Joint Sports
Claimants, Commercial Television Claimants, Broadcaster Claimants
Group, ASCAP, BMI, SESAC, Inc., Public Television Claimants,
Canadian Claimants, NPR, and Devotional Claimants. The NAB and PBS
did not submit comments in response to the First Proposed Rule.
\3\ The National Cable & Telecommunications Association
(``NCTA'') and the American Cable Association (``ACA'') filed
comments on the First Proposed Rule on behalf of cable operators.
\4\ Citations to the comments and reply comments submitted in
response to the First Proposed Rule are abbreviated ``[Name of
Party] First Comment'' and ``[Name of Party] First Reply.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In lieu of reply comments, DIRECTV, the NCTA, and a group
representing certain copyright owners \5\ submitted a joint proposal
for revising the First Proposed Rule. This group referred to themselves
collectively as the ``Joint Stakeholders,'' and they urged the Office
to incorporate their suggestions
[[Page 55697]]
``as promptly as possible after receiving any further public comment.''
JS First Submission at 1.\6\ The Office also received reply comments
from AT&T. AT&T explained that it was aware of the Joint Stakeholders'
negotiations and the ``potential areas of agreement'' among the
parties, but stated that it did not have a sufficient amount of time
for ``meaningful engagement'' with the group. AT&T First Reply at 1.
Therefore, AT&T urged the Office to publish the Joint Stakeholders'
proposal ``for further comment by other interested parties who were not
parties to the agreement.'' Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ The copyright owners that joined the NCTA and DIRECTV in
submitting the Joint Stakeholders' First Submission include the
Program Suppliers, Joint Sports Claimants, ASCAP, BMI, SESAC, Public
Television Claimants, Canadian Claimants Group, Devotional
Claimants, and NPR. The Commercial Television Claimants, the
Broadcaster Claimants Group, the NAB, and PBS did not join their
fellow copyright owners in submitting this proposal.
\6\ Citations to the proposals submitted by the Joint
Stakeholders ae abbreviated ``JS First Submission'' and ``JS Second
Submission.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Office carefully studied the Joint Stakeholders' proposal and
the other comments and reply comments submitted in response to the
First Proposed Rule. The Joint Stakeholders' proposal addressed many of
the concerns that the parties raised in their initial comments. The
Office therefore incorporated most of the Joint Stakeholders'
suggestions into a revised proposed regulation (the ``Second Proposed
Rule'').
On May 9, 2013, the Office published the Second Proposed Rule in
the Federal Register and invited AT&T, DISH, the ACA, the Broadcaster
Claimants Group, the Commercial Television Claimants, and other
interested parties to comment on the proposed regulation. The Office
also invited reply comments from the Joint Stakeholders and other
interested parties. See 78 FR 27137, 27138 (May 9, 2013). The Office
received comments from AT&T and the ACA, and it received reply comments
from the ACA, the NCTA, and a group representing the copyright owners
(``Copyright Owners'') that negotiated the Joint Stakeholders' Proposal
with the NCTA and DIRECTV.\7\ The parties raised a number of complex
issues, including issues of first impression that were not addressed in
the comments or reply comments submitted in response to the First
Proposed Rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ Citations to the comments and reply comments submitted in
response to the Second Proposed Rule are abbreviated ``[Name of
Party] Second Comment'' and ``[Name of Party] Second Reply.'' For
example, citations to the Copyright Owners' reply comments are
abbreviated ``CO Second Reply.'' This group includes all the
copyright owners listed in footnote five, but as mentioned in that
footnote, the Commercial Television Claimants, the Broadcaster
Claimants Group, the NAB, and PBS did not join their fellow
copyright owners in submitting the Joint Stakeholders' First
Submission.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On December 26, 2013, the Office issued an interim rule that
addresses a procedural issue that was not contested by the parties (the
``Interim Rule''). Specifically, the Interim Rule allows copyright
owners to identify any SOAs from accounting periods beginning on or
after January 1, 2010 that they intend to audit. At the same time, it
provides licensees with advance notice of the SOAs that will be subject
to audit when the final rule goes into effect. See 78 FR 28257 (Dec.
26, 2013).
After analyzing the latest round of comments, the Office identified
a number of issues that were not addressed in the First or Second
Proposed Rules or in the comments submitted in response to those
proposals. Because the Office believed these issues might be narrowed
through group discussion, it decided to convene a public roundtable
before issuing another notice of proposed rulemaking. See 79 FR 31992
(June 3, 2014). During the roundtable the Office received valuable
input from parties that previously submitted comments in this
proceeding, including the Motion Picture Association of America
(``MPAA''), the Commissioner of Baseball, the NCTA, the ACA, and
DIRECTV. The Office also received guidance from Crunch Digital, a
company that conducts audits on behalf of content owners and licensees
in the music industry.
The issues discussed at the roundtable are summarized in the
Office's Federal Register notice dated June 3, 2014 (the ``Roundtable
Notice''). The most significant concern was the potential for backlogs
to develop as a result of the limit on the number of SOAs that could be
audited at any one time under the existing proposal.\8\ The Office also
expressed concern about the accounting standards that should be applied
during the audit, the limitation on ex parte communications between the
auditor and the copyright owners, the amount of time allocated for
consultations between the auditor and the licensee, and the procedure
for allocating the costs of the audit between the copyright owners and
the licensee. See 79 FR at 31994-95.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ Under the Second Proposed Rule a satellite carrier or a
particular cable system would be subject to no more than one audit
per calendar year and each audit would involve no more than two SOAs
filed by that licensee. For multiple system operators (``MSOs''),
the audit would be limited to a sample of no more than ten percent
of the MSO's systems, and the audit of each system would involve no
more than two SOAs filed by each system. The Second Proposed Rule
also provided that if a single audit required multiple years to
complete, the licensee would not be subject to any other audits
during those years. See 78 FR at 27143; 79 FR at 31993.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Following the roundtable, the Joint Stakeholders consulted with
each other regarding three of these issues, namely: (i) Requiring an
initial consultation between the auditor and a representative of the
licensee and the participating copyright owners prior to the
commencement of an audit; (ii) the accounting standard that should
govern the audit; and (iii) the procedure for allocating the cost of an
audit between the participating copyright owners and the licensee. On
July 31, 2014, the Joint Stakeholders informed the Office that they had
reached a consensus on two of these issues and they offered specific
recommendations for modifying certain aspects of the proposed rule.\9\
JS Second Submission at 1-2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ The parties that submitted these recommendations are
identified in footnote five.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After reviewing the comments and reply comments submitted in
response to the Second Proposed Rule, the input provided during the
roundtable, and the Joint Stakeholders' Second Submission, the Office
made several changes to the proposed rule (the ``Third Proposed
Rule'').\10\ The Office invites public comment from copyright owners,
cable operators, satellite carriers, accounting professionals, and
other interested parties concerning the proposed modifications that are
discussed below in sections II, III.A, III.B, VI.A, VI.B, VII.A, VII.B,
and VIII.C.\11\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ For the convenience of the parties, the Office created a
document that illustrates the differences between the Second
Proposed Rule (as it was modified by the Interim Rule) and the Third
Proposed Rule. This document is available on the Office's Web site
at https://copyright.gov/docs/soaaudit/soaaudit.html.
\11\ The Office has reached a final decision concerning the
topics discussed in sections III.C, III.D, IV, V, VII.C, VIII.A,
VIII.B, or IX. Therefore, the Office does not invite further comment
on these topics.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Audit Notice, Timetable, and Transitional Provisions
A. Initial Audits
Under the Second Proposed Rule, a copyright owner could initiate an
audit by filing a written notice with the Office that identified the
statutory licensee, the SOAs, and the accounting periods that would be
subject to the audit. The Office would publish a notice in the Federal
Register announcing the receipt of the notice of intent to audit, and
within thirty days thereafter, any other copyright owner that wished to
participate in the audit would be required to notify both the copyright
owner that filed the notice and the licensee that would be subject to
the audit. Copyright owners that failed to comply with this requirement
would not be permitted to participate in the audit process and would
not be
[[Page 55698]]
permitted to audit the same SOAs in a subsequent proceeding.
The Third Proposed Rule modifies this portion of the audit
procedure in several respects. It provides that the notice should
include the copyright owner's name, address, telephone number, and
email address (but need not include a fax number). To facilitate the
submission of notices, the Third Proposed Rule provides that notices
should be addressed to the ``U.S. Copyright Office, Office of the
General Counsel,'' and specifies the mailing address for time-sensitive
materials where notices should be sent. It also establishes similar--
but separate--procedures for submitting a notice of intent to conduct
an initial audit and a notice of intent to conduct an expanded
audit.\12\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ As discussed in sections II.B and VII, the Third Proposed
Rule limits the number of SOAs and the number of cable systems that
may be included in an initial audit, but if the auditor discovers an
underpayment that exceeds a certain threshold, the copyright owners
may expand the scope of the initial audit to include other SOAs and
other cable systems that have not been audited before.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under the Third Proposed Rule a notice of intent to conduct an
initial audit must be received in the Office between December 1st and
December 31st. The Office will publish a notice in the Federal Register
announcing the receipt of that notice between January 1st and January
31st of the next calendar year. By contrast, a notice of intent to
conduct an expanded audit may be filed at any point during the calendar
year, provided that the notice is received within three years after the
last day of the year in which any statement to be reviewed was filed
with the Office. When the Office receives a notice of intent to conduct
an expanded audit, it will publish a notice in the Federal Register
within thirty days thereafter announcing the receipt of the notice. As
the Office noted in its Federal Register document dated May 9, 2013,
this step is intended to give copyright owners that did not join the
initial audit an opportunity to participate in the expanded audit. See
78 FR at 27143.
The Office decided to modify the timing of the receipt and
publication of the initial notice to prevent the development of
backlogs in pending audits. This concern stemmed from the fact that--
under the Second Proposed Rule--a licensee could be subject to only one
audit during a calendar year, but there was no assurance that any given
audit would be started and finished within a single calendar year. See
79 FR at 31993. Indeed, the Second Proposed Rule made clear that if a
single audit spanned multiple years, the licensee would not be subject
to any other audits during those years. See 78 FR at 27153.
At the roundtable, several participants suggested that the Office's
concerns were unwarranted, because they expected audits to be completed
within relatively short periods of time. The MPAA explained that it has
audited SOAs on an informal basis for many years. According to the
MPAA, before an audit begins, copyright owners often have a sense of
what the problems may be based on the information already provided in
the licensee's SOAs, and thus will be able to give the auditor a sense
of what he or she should focus on from the outset. The MPAA stated that
the most difficult part of the audit process is identifying the
stations and signals carried by the provider. Under the proposed rule,
the licensee would be required to provide this information at the
outset. Therefore, the MPAA is of the view that the audit as a whole
would be expected to proceed smoothly. The MPAA predicted that an audit
involving a small cable system could be completed within a few weeks,
while an audit of a large cable system might require three months. In
response to the Office's concerns that some licensees may not be
diligent in responding to the auditor's requests for information, the
MPAA indicated that in its experience this was not a problem. According
to the MPAA, copyright owners and licensees traditionally have been
cooperative during the audit process, with disputes typically resolved
through settlement and voluntary adoption of corrective practices.
While the Office appreciates the MPAA's experience, it is concerned
that the level of cooperation experienced by the MPAA during these
voluntary informal audits might not be universal. Indeed, as the NCTA
observed in its written comments, ``no one can predict at this point
how smoothly the audit process will be for the cable and satellite
industries.'' NCTA Second Reply at 6.
As discussed in section IV.C, the Third Proposed Rule will allow
licensees to suspend the audit for several months during each year. The
Office is concerned that the audit process may be delayed even further
if the licensee fails to respond to the auditor's requests in a timely
manner. The Office believes that this is a real possibility given
that--under the Joint Stakeholders' first proposal and the Second
Proposed Rule--prolonging an audit into the next calendar year would
preclude the copyright owners from commencing another audit involving
that same licensee, thus creating an incentive for delay. See JS First
Submission at 9-10; 78 FR at 27143; 79 FR at 31993. The roundtable
revealed that, apart from the MPAA, none of the cable or satellite
industry representatives in attendance has had any meaningful
experience with audits involving SOAs. At the same time, the Office is
aware that royalty audits of other types of content licensees may well
take longer than a year to complete.
The Third Proposed Rule addresses this concern by establishing a
schedule that is intended to ensure that the initial audit will be
completed within a single calendar year. Specifically, it will require
the copyright owners to file a notice of intent to conduct an initial
audit during the month of December in the year before the audit is to
begin, will require the Office to publish a notice in the Federal
Register during January of the following year, and will require the
auditor to deliver his or her final report to the participating
copyright owners by November 1st of that same year.\13\
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\13\ Under the Third Proposed Rule, a statutory licensee will be
subject to no more than one initial audit per calendar year, and an
initial audit involving a particular satellite carrier or a
particular cable system will be limited to no more than two of the
SOAs filed by that licensee. But, as discussed in section VII.B,
these limits will not apply to an expanded audit, which could be
conducted concurrently with an initial audit involving the same
licensee.
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This approach provides advantages over the Second Proposed Rule,
which would have allowed the copyright owners to commence an initial
audit at any time during the year. For instance, the Third Proposed
Rule will substantially alleviate administrative burdens on the Office
related to initial audits since notices will arrive in the Office
within a set period of time, which in turn will allow the Office to
publish them in the Federal Register as a group instead of publishing
them on a piecemeal basis. In addition, this approach will improve
certainty for both the copyright owners and statutory licensees.
Copyright owners will be able to better coordinate their collective
auditing activities, since notices of intent to conduct an initial
audit will be submitted to the Office and published in the Federal
Register at the same time each year. Likewise, a routine schedule for
the submission and publication of notices will allow licensees to
organize their affairs, because each December they will know whether
they will be subject to an initial audit in the following calendar
year.
In order to comply with the time limits set forth in section
111(d)(6)(E) of the Act, the copyright owners must file a notice of
intent to audit a particular SOA within three years after the last day
[[Page 55699]]
of the year in which the SOA was filed with the Office (regardless of
whether they intend to conduct an initial audit or an expanded audit).
The Third Proposed Rule recognizes that in any given year the copyright
owners may file a notice of intent to conduct an initial audit
involving any two of the SOAs that the licensee filed with the Office
during that year or the three previous \14\ calendar years. Once the
Office receives a notice of intent to conduct an initial audit
involving two SOAs filed by a particular satellite carrier or a
particular cable system, the Office will not accept a notice of intent
to conduct an initial audit involving that same carrier or that same
system until the following calendar year.
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\14\ In this context, the word ``previous'' means an SOA filed
prior to the date that the copyright owners filed a notice of intent
to audit with the Office.
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B. Expanded Audits
Under the Third Proposed Rule, if the auditor discovers a net
aggregate underpayment \15\ of five percent or more during an initial
audit of a satellite carrier or a single cable system, the copyright
owners may expand the scope of the audit to include previous \16\ SOAs
filed by that licensee. If the auditor makes such a finding during an
initial audit involving a sample of cable systems that are owned by a
multiple system operator (``MSO''), the copyright owners may expand the
scope of that audit to include previous SOAs filed by those cable
systems, and in the following calendar year, the copyright owners may
conduct an initial audit involving a larger sample of the cable systems
owned by that MSO.
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\15\ The Second Proposed Rule defined ``net aggregate
underpayment'' as the aggregate amount of underpayments found by the
auditor less the aggregate amount of any overpayments found by the
auditor, as measured against the total amount of royalties reflected
on the Statements of Account examined by the auditor. See 78 FR at
27150. The same definition also appears in the Third Proposed Rule.
\16\ In this context, the word ``previous'' means SOAs filed
before the SOAs that were reviewed during the initial audit. See 78
FR at 27143.
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During an expanded audit the copyright owners would be able to
audit any of the previous statements filed by the licensee, as long as
they file a notice of intent to audit those statements within three
years after the last day of the year in which those statements were
filed with the Office. 17 U.S.C. 111(d)(6)(E). Although a notice of
intent to conduct an initial audit must be filed in December and
although the initial audit must be completed by November 1st of the
following year, these requirements will not apply to expanded audits.
Under the Third Proposed Rule a notice of intent to conduct an expanded
audit may be filed during any month, and the auditor does not need to
deliver his or her final report by November 1st of any given year.
C. Notices Filed Under the Interim Rule
Assuming the Third Proposed Rule is adopted as a final rule, it
will supersede the Interim Rule in its entirety. Until then, copyright
owners may use the Interim Rule to preserve their right to audit any
SOA that was filed with the Office for accounting periods 2010-2
through 2014-1,\17\ so long as the notice is received in a timely
manner.\18\
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\17\ The deadline for filing a notice of intent to audit a
statement for the 2010-1 accounting period expired on December 31,
2013, and as discussed in the Federal Register document dated June
14, 2012, statements covering accounting periods that began before
January 1, 2010 are not subject to audit under this procedure. See
77 FR at 35645.
\18\ To date, the Office has not received any notices filed
pursuant to the Interim Rule.
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If a copyright owner does file a notice of intent to audit before
the Third Proposed Rule goes into effect, then, as stated in the
Interim Rule, the Office will publish that notice in the Federal
Register within thirty days after it is received in the Office. See 37
CFR 201.16(c)(1). In such cases, the Third Proposed Rule provides that
the audit shall be conducted using the procedures set forth in the
proposed rule, except that regardless of the timing of the notice and
its publication pursuant to the Interim Rule, the copyright owners must
provide the licensee with a list of proposed auditors by March 16,
2015, and the auditor must deliver his or her final report to the
copyright owners and the licensee by November 1, 2015.
III. Commencement of the Audit
A. Designation of the Auditor
The Second Proposed Rule provided that the copyright owners must
deliver a list of three independent and qualified auditors to the
licensee, along with information that is reasonably sufficient for the
licensee to evaluate the independence and qualifications of each
individual. Within five business days thereafter, the licensee would be
required to select one of these individuals to conduct the audit. See
78 FR at 27139-40. None of the parties objected to this aspect of the
Second Proposed Rule.
The Interim Rule allows a copyright owner to preserve the right to
audit a particular SOA so long as it files a notice of intent within
three years after the last day of the year in which that statement was
filed. 37 CFR 201.16(c)(1). However, the Interim Rule does not specify
a precise deadline by which a copyright owner must commence the actual
audit. As the Office observed in the Roundtable Notice, copyright
owners may feel obligated to file notices of intent to audit on a
routine basis in order to preserve the option of auditing a particular
statement, even if they do not expect to proceed with the audit in the
foreseeable future. 79 FR 31993. In such cases, the licensee might be
required to maintain records related to SOAs for many years before an
audit got underway, which would create administrative burdens and
increase the risk that records would be lost or damaged in the interim.
The Third Proposed Rule addresses this concern by establishing a
deadline for commencing the audit. Specifically, it provides that the
participating copyright owners must deliver the list of prospective
auditors to the licensee within forty-five days after the date that the
Office publishes a notice in the Federal Register announcing the
receipt of the notice of intent to audit. Once the licensee has made
its selection, the Third Proposed Rule provides that the licensee must
notify the participating copyright owners and the participating
copyright owners must retain the auditor that the licensee selected. It
also provides that if the copyright owners fail to deliver a list of
prospective auditors to the licensee within the time allowed or fail to
retain the auditor that the licensee selected, the SOAs identified in
the notice of intent to audit shall not be subject to audit.
B. Initial Consultation With the Auditor
At the roundtable, the audit firm Crunch Digital explained that it
typically schedules a ``kick-off call'' at the start of each of its
audits. During this call, the auditor and the party that is subject to
the audit identify the types of books and records that the auditor
intends to examine and the parties set a mutually agreeable schedule
for the production of those items. In addition, each party designates a
contact person who will be responsible for receiving and responding to
communications regarding the audit. Crunch Digital explained that this
improves the efficiency of the examination process, thus reducing the
overall cost of the audit. The Joint Stakeholders made a similar
recommendation in their Second Submission and the Office has
incorporated that suggestion into the proposed rule. JS Second
Submission at 1. Specifically, the Third Proposed Rule provides that
the auditor shall meet with designated representatives of the licensee
and the participating copyright
[[Page 55700]]
owners (either in person or by telephone) within ten days after he or
she has been selected. During the consultation, the parties are to
review the scope of the audit, the methodology that the auditor will
use during his or her review, and the schedule for conducting and
completing the audit. The objective of this consultation is to
establish the schedule and procedures for the production and review of
information so that the audit will be completed in a timely fashion.
C. Limitation on Ex Parte Communications
The Second Proposed Rule contained a provision that banned ex parte
communications between the auditor and the participating copyright
owners, except in certain narrow circumstances. For example, the
auditor may communicate directly with the copyright owners if he or she
has a reasonable basis to suspect fraud, and if the auditor reasonably
believes that involving the licensee in the communication would
prejudice the investigation of that fraud. In the Roundtable Notice the
Office questioned whether this restriction is necessary and whether it
might create inefficiencies. See 79 FR at 31994. At the roundtable the
NCTA explained that this provision will promote transparency in the
audit process. Specifically, the NCTA opined that it will ensure that
copyright owners do not exercise undue influence over the auditor's
deliberations, and that licensees are made aware of potential issues at
the same time as the copyright owners, thus helping to eliminate the
possibility of unfair surprise when the auditor delivers the initial
draft of his or her report. Crunch Digital noted that this could be
accomplished in most cases simply by copying the licensee on email
communications between the auditor and the copyright owners or their
representatives. The Office found the foregoing observations
persuasive. Therefore, the Office has retained the prohibition against
ex parte communications in the Third Proposed Rule.
D. Certified List of Broadcast Signals
1. Comments
The Second Proposed Rule provided that the licensee must deliver a
document to the auditor and the copyright owners containing a certified
list of the broadcast signals retransmitted during each accounting
period that is subject to the audit, including the call sign for each
broadcast signal and each multicast signal. In addition, cable
operators must identify the classification of each signal on a
community-by-community basis pursuant to sections 201.17(e)(9)(iv)-(v)
and 201.17(h) of the regulations. See 78 FR at 27141.
The Office added this requirement to the Second Proposed Rule at
the request of the Joint Stakeholders. As the Office noted in the
Federal Register document dated May 9, 2013, licensees are supposed to
report this information in their SOAs and the person signing each SOA
must certify that this information is true, correct, and complete. The
Office sought comment on whether there is any benefit in requiring
licensees to provide information that should be apparent from the face
of an SOA. See 78 FR at 27141.
AT&T stated that ``there is no need to include this `make-work'
step in the audit process,'' because ``it does not provide the auditor
or the copyright owners with any information that is not readily
available from the SOA.'' AT&T Second Comment at 3. The ACA stated that
``whatever benefit is derived, it is far outweighed by the
administrative and financial burdens of compiling and submitting this
information, especially for smaller cable operators.'' ACA Second
Comment at 3.
The Copyright Owners responded that this provision ``provides
tangible benefits that will promote the efficiency and effectiveness''
of the audit procedure. CO Second Reply at 10. They noted that
licensees that use Form SA 1-2, or the previous version of Form SA-3,
are not required to identify ``different channel line-ups linked to
different subscriber groups.'' Id. at 7. Therefore, ``it is impossible
to link communities with reported local stations'' when reviewing these
types of SOAs. Id. at 8.
Licensees that use the current version of Form SA-3 are supposed to
identify the communities they serve, along with the relevant channel
line-ups and subscriber groups. The Copyright Owners acknowledged that
this information ``might be sufficient to match communities and
stations for systems having one or two subscriber groups and one or two
separate channel line-ups.'' Id. at 8. But identifying the signals that
are retransmitted in each community can be ``difficult, if not
impossible'' for larger cable systems ``that cover large geographic
areas'' with ``multiple channel line-ups and numerous subscriber
groups.'' Id. at 7, 10. For example, the Copyright Owners noted that
Comcast of Southeast PA LLC recently reported 589 communities, 30
channel line-ups with 7 to 49 stations each, and 46 subscriber groups,
while Time Warner Northeast LLC recently reported 257 communities, 17
channel line-ups with 9 to 21 stations each, and 51 subscriber groups.
Id. at 8. The Copyright Owners contended that it would be ``cumbersome
and costly'' for the auditor to identify the distant and local signals
that are retransmitted in each community, given the complexity of
information reported in these types of SOAs. Id. at 10. By contrast,
they contended that it would be easy for the licensee to compile this
information, because ``the cable system is more likely to know what
stations that it carries in each community.'' Id. at 10.
Requiring the licensee to provide this information at the beginning
of the audit was ``an important component of the Joint [Stakeholders']
Proposal'' from the Copyright Owners' point of view.\19\ Id. at 7. The
Joint Stakeholders agreed that the auditor should verify the
information reported on the SOAs in order to confirm the correctness of
the calculations and royalty payments reported therein, but the auditor
should not determine whether a cable operator properly classified the
broadcast signals reported on its SOAs, or whether a satellite carrier
properly determined if any subscriber or group of subscribers is
eligible to receive any broadcast signals under the Act.\20\ See 78 FR
at 27151.
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\19\ As noted in section I, the Joint Stakeholders' proposal was
submitted by the NCTA, DIRECTV, and the Copyright Owners identified
in footnote five.
\20\ The Office included this suggested revision in both the
Second Proposed Rule and the Third Proposed Rule. See 78 FR at
27151.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In their reply comments, the Copyright Owners explained that they
agreed to narrow the scope of the auditor's inquiry on the condition
that the licensee produces a certified list of broadcast signals that
were retransmitted during the accounting period that is subject to the
audit. CO Reply at 7-8. They contended that the auditor needs this
information to confirm the correctness of the calculations and royalty
payments reported in the licensee's SOAs. Id. at 7, 9. They also
contended that the certified list will avoid the need for ``costly,
time-consuming litigation'' over signal classification issues. Id. at
9-10. The Copyright Owners explained that the list will help them
determine whether the licensee correctly classified the carriage of
each signal. If they disagree with the licensee's classification, the
Copyright Owners will be able to raise their concerns during the audit,
which in turn will give the licensee an opportunity to amend its SOAs
if it agrees that a mistake has been made. Id. at 9.
[[Page 55701]]
2. Discussion
The Office has noted AT&T's and the ACA's concerns, but has
concluded that the Copyright Owners have the better argument. Requiring
the licensee to identify the broadcast signals that the licensee
retransmitted and the communities that the licensee served provides the
auditor with information he or she needs to interpret an SOA and to
verify the calculations and royalty payments reported therein. It is
also a fair trade-off for excluding the classification of signals as
local/distant or permitted/non-permitted from the scope of the
auditor's inquiry.
The Copyright Owners correctly noted that the previous version of
Form SA-3 did not require licensees to report specific channel line-ups
for each subscriber group. The current version of Form SA-3 instructs
the licensee to identify each community served by the cable system and
each television station carried by the cable system during the
accounting period.\21\ In the Office's experience, this information is
clearly stated in the SOA in some cases, but in other cases it is not.
When the information is deficient, the Office may write the licensee to
request a clarification.\22\
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\21\ The Office issued the current version of Form SA-3 in April
2011. It may be used to prepare SOAs for accounting periods
beginning on or after January 1, 2011.
\22\ The fact that the Office does not communicate with the
licensee does not necessarily mean that an SOA is clear or correct.
The Office generally accepts the licensee's representations unless
they are contradicted by information provided elsewhere in the SOA
or in the Office's records or by information that is known to the
Licensing Division.
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Requiring the licensee to provide this information at the outset of
the audit should not impose an undue burden on the licensee. The
licensee should be familiar with the stations that it carries and the
communities that it serves and thus should be able to prepare a list of
stations and communities without difficulty. Moreover, the Third
Proposed Rule provides that the licensee must retain any records needed
to confirm the correctness of the calculations and royalty payments
reported in its SOAs for at least three and a half years after the last
day of the year that the SOA is filed with the Office, and if an SOA
has been audited under this procedure, must continue to maintain those
records until three years after the auditor delivers his or her final
report. By definition, this would include records that identify the
stations that the licensee carries and the communities it serves. Thus,
even if the required information is not apparent from the face of the
SOA, the licensee should be able to compile a list of stations and
communities from its own records.
The Office made one minor change to the Third Proposed Rule to make
it consistent with the rules governing statements of account. Rather
than employing the somewhat vague term ``certified list,'' the Third
Proposed Rule clarifies that the list of broadcast signals must be
signed by a duly authorized agent of the licensee, and that person must
confirm that the facts contained in the document are true, complete,
and correct to the best of his or her knowledge, information, and
belief. See 37 CFR 201.11(e)(9)(iii)(E), 201.17(e)(14)(iii)(E).
IV. Scope of the Audit
A. Accounting Standard
The Second Proposed Rule provided that audits must be conducted
``according to generally accepted auditing standards.'' 78 FR at 27151.
In the Roundtable Notice, the Office questioned whether this is the
appropriate standard, noting that guidance from the American Institute
of Certified Public Accountants (``AICPA'') indicates that ``generally
accepted auditing standards'' are those used by accountants to audit
corporate financial statements. See 79 FR at 31994. At the roundtable
and in their Second Submission, the Joint Stakeholders were unable to
reach agreement on what standard, if any, should be specified in lieu
of ``generally accepted auditing standards.'' For its part, Crunch
Digital confirmed at the roundtable that ``generally accepted auditing
standards'' are not directly relevant to the type of audit contemplated
by this rule. It also suggested that it is generally unnecessary to
specify in advance the standard that will be applied during the audit,
and that the auditor's approach can be considered by the parties during
the initial consultation.
Given the lack of consensus on this issue, and that none of the
parties could explain why any particular auditing standard should apply
to these proceedings, the Office believes it is unnecessary to specify
the professional standard to be employed under the rule. Instead, the
Office believes that it is appropriate to rely on the auditors
themselves to adopt an appropriate audit methodology based on their
professional judgment, and to review that methodology with the
participating copyright owners and the licensee during the initial
consultation described in section III.B.
B. Subscriber Information
1. Comments
Under the Second Proposed Rule the statutory licensee would be
required to provide reasonable access to its books, records, or any
other information that the auditor needs to conduct the audit. It also
provided that the licensee should produce any other information that
the auditor reasonably requests. See 78 FR at 27141-42.
AT&T asserted that a cable operator should not be required to
produce information regarding individual subscribers, because this
would impose an undue burden on the licensee. AT&T Second Comment at 4.
Instead, AT&T argued that the licensee should be allowed to provide
``reports that include the number of subscribers, the amount of revenue
and the numbers of subscribers and revenues applicable to specific
service offerings at the system level.'' Id.
The Copyright Owners contended that AT&T is seeking ``a special set
of accounting standards'' for cable operators. CO Second Reply at 6. In
their view, ``[a]uditors should be free to request whatever information
they need to fulfill their responsibility,'' and they stated that
``ill-defined subscriber and revenue `information in the form of
reports' '' would not provide the participating copyright owners with
the level of certainty that an audit should provide. Id. at 6-7.
2. Discussion
The Office believes that it would be inappropriate to place
categorical limits on the type of information that the auditor may
request during an audit procedure. On the contrary, the auditor should
be allowed to request any information he or she reasonably needs to
conduct an audit. The Office is in no position to determine whether the
auditor does or does not need individual subscriber information to
satisfy applicable professional standards, and the Copyright Owners
correctly note that the Office lacks the expertise that would be
required to craft particularized exceptions to the information that
reasonably could be called for in an audit.
The Office has considered AT&T's comments, but has concluded that
the proposed rule adequately addresses AT&T's concerns. The Third
Proposed Rule limits the number of SOAs and the number of cable systems
that may be included in an initial audit or an expanded audit, which in
turn limits the amount of information that the auditor may request. It
provides that the auditor should be given ``reasonable
[[Page 55702]]
access'' to the licensee's books, records, and any other information
that the auditor needs to conduct an audit (emphasis added). It
provides that the licensee is only required to produce information that
the auditor ``reasonably requests'' (emphasis added). It also provides
that the audit must be conducted during regular business hours at a
location designated by the licensee, that consideration should be
``given to minimizing the costs and burdens associated with the
audit,'' and, if the parties agree, that the audit may be conducted in
whole or in part by means of electronic communication.
As the Office stated in the Federal Register document dated May 9,
2013, cable operators receive a substantial benefit from the statutory
licensing system, insofar as it provides a mechanism for licensing
broadcast content without having to negotiate with the individual
owners of that content. During the legislative process that led to the
enactment of STELA, the Congressional Budget Office estimated that the
cost of responding to an audit would be minimal, because the auditor
would verify information that the licensee already collected and
maintained as a condition for using the statutory license. See H.R.
Rep. No. 111-319, at 20 (2009). While the cost of producing information
needed to verify the calculations and royalty payments reported in an
SOA may be a new obligation, it is a reasonable cost of doing business
under the statutory licensing system. See 78 FR at 27148.
C. Suspension of the Audit
1. Comments
The Second Proposed Rule provided that statutory licensees could
suspend an audit for up to thirty days before the semi-annual deadlines
for filing an SOA, although licensees could not exercise this option
after the auditor issues the initial draft of his or her report. See 78
FR at 27141. The NCTA strongly disagreed with this aspect of the Second
Proposed Rule. NCTA Second Reply at 6. It contended that a licensee
should be allowed to suspend an audit for up to sixty days before the
filing deadlines, because ``the same individuals that will be involved
in responding to an audit . . . typically will be responsible for
preparing new statements of account for that licensee.'' Id. at 5. AT&T
expressed similar concerns in its comments on the First Proposed Rule,
explaining that the staff members who would be responsible for
responding to an audit would be the same individuals who are
responsible for preparing AT&T's SOAs. AT&T First Comment at 1. AT&T
explained that preparing these SOAs ``essentially occupies the full
time of the staff from two weeks before the close of each semi-annual
period through the due date for the [SOA], two months after the close
of the period.'' Id.
2. Discussion
The Office believes it would be unduly restrictive to prevent the
auditor from working for up to four months out of the year, given the
limit on the number of audits that may be conducted each year. However,
the Office recognizes that the same individuals may be responsible for
preparing the licensee's SOAs, responding to the auditor's requests for
information, and reviewing the conclusions set forth in the auditor's
report, and that it is difficult to predict how much time or effort
this may require.
The Third Proposed Rule balances these interests by allowing the
licensee to suspend its participation in the audit for up to sixty days
before the semi-annual deadlines for filing an SOA (regardless of
whether the licensee is subject to an initial audit or an expanded
audit, and regardless of whether the auditor has issued the initial
draft of his or her report). However, there are two exceptions to this
rule. If the participating copyright owners provide the licensee with a
list of prospective auditors, then, as discussed in section III.A, the
licensee will be required to select one of those individuals within
five business days thereafter, even if the licensee has suspended its
participation in the audit. Likewise, the licensee will be required to
provide the participating copyright owners with the list of broadcast
signals discussed in section III.D, and a representative of the
licensee will be required to participate in the initial consultation
discussed in section III.B. These pre-examination activities should not
impose an undue burden on the licensee. Moreover, under the proposed
schedule for conducting an initial audit involving a cable operator,
these preliminary activities may need to take place at the same time
that the licensee is preparing its statement of account for the second
accounting period of the previous year.\23\ If the licensee could
postpone these initial activities until after the filing of its SOA, it
could prevent the auditor from completing his or her review in a timely
manner.
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\23\ Cable companies must file SOAs covering the second half of
the preceding calendar year by March 1st. 37 CFR 201.17(c)(1).
Satellite companies must file SOAs for this period by January 30th.
37 CFR 201.11(c)(1)).
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While the Third Proposed rule allows the licensee to suspend its
participation in the audit, it does not prevent the auditor from
continuing to work on the audit during the suspension. For example, the
auditor could review information he or she has received from the
licensee and formulate requests for additional information, but the
licensee would not be required to respond to those follow-up requests
until the suspension ended. Since the SOA deadlines are known in
advance, the parties are strongly encouraged to discuss these issues
during the initial consultation that is contemplated under the Third
Proposed Rule. If the licensee intends to suspend its obligations under
this provision, the auditor should schedule the delivery of critical
information that might otherwise threaten the audit deadline well in
advance of the suspension period.
V. Draft Audit Report and Final Audit Reports
A. Thirty Day Consultation Period
The Second Proposed Rule provided that the auditor should prepare a
written report setting forth his or her initial conclusions and should
deliver the initial findings to the licensee (but not the copyright
owners). It provided that the auditor should then consult with the
licensee for a period of thirty days, and if the auditor agreed that
there were errors in the report, the auditor should correct those
errors before delivering a final report to the participating copyright
owners. If the auditor and the licensee were unable to resolve their
differences, then under the Second Proposed Rule, the licensee could
prepare a written rebuttal within fourteen days after the thirty-day
consultation period, which would be attached as an exhibit to the final
report.
In the Roundtable Notice, the Office asked the parties to consider
whether the auditor and the licensee should be given more flexibility
with respect to the consultation phase of the audit. In particular, the
Office wanted to know whether the licensee should be given an
opportunity to review the auditor's initial findings before the
consultation period begins, whether a thirty-day consultation period
would be a sufficient amount of time to resolve potential differences
between the auditor and the licensee, whether the auditor should
provide the licensee with a revised version of the report at the end of
the consultation period (i.e., before the licensee submits its written
rebuttal), whether the licensee should be given more than fourteen days
to prepare a rebuttal, or whether the
[[Page 55703]]
auditor should be given more than five days to prepare the final report
after receiving the licensee's rebuttal. See 79 FR at 31994.
At the roundtable, the NCTA stated that thirty days is a sufficient
amount of time for the consultation period and that licensees do not
need to receive an initial draft of the auditor's report in advance of
the consultation period or an updated draft at the conclusion of that
period. In the NCTA's view, adding any additional time to the calendar
would merely delay the audit process. The NCTA stated that the written
rebuttal will focus solely on the issues that the auditor and the
licensee were unable to resolve during the consultation period (if
any), and that fourteen days is a sufficient amount of time to prepare
that response. If the licensee cannot convince the auditor to change
his or her conclusions during the consultation period, then, in the
NCTA's view, it is unlikely that the auditor will be persuaded by
anything that the licensee says in its rebuttal and unlikely that the
auditor will make any changes or revisions to the final version of that
report before it is delivered to the participating copyright owners.
The NCTA suggested that the rebuttal essentially would be a ``minority
report'' and the act of attaching the rebuttal to the final report
would be a ministerial task without any immediate practical
significance. Thus, the auditor should not need any additional time to
review the rebuttal or prepare the final report for the participating
copyright owners.
In adjusting the proposed rule, the Office has largely relied upon
the NCTA's understanding of how the consultation process would operate.
Under the Third Proposed Rule, the auditor will deliver an initial
draft of his or her report to the licensee (but, absent a suspicion of
fraud, not to the participating copyright owners). The delivery of the
initial draft will mark the beginning of the thirty-day consultation
period. If, after consulting with the licensee, the auditor agrees that
there are errors in the initial draft, the auditor is required to
correct those errors. The auditor will then prepare a written report
setting forth his or her ultimate conclusions, and on the last day of
the consultation period will deliver the final version of that report
to the licensee (but not to the participating copyright owners, again
absent a suspicion of fraud).
Although the Office accepted most of the NCTA's suggestions, the
Office believes it would be helpful if the auditor provides the
licensee with the final version of the audit report at the end of the
consultation period. This will create a clear record of any changes
that the auditor made based on his or her discussions with the
licensee, and if the licensee decides to prepare a written rebuttal, it
will make it easier for the licensee to identify and respond to any
issues that remain in dispute.
Upon receiving the final version of the report, the licensee may
provide a written rebuttal within fourteen days after the conclusion of
the thirty-day consultation period, but is not required to do so.
Consistent with the NCTA's recommendation, the auditor will simply
attach any rebuttal received from the licensee to the final version of
his or her report, which together will constitute the final report. The
auditor will not otherwise address the issues raised in the rebuttal;
the rebuttal will serve merely to capture the ultimate areas of
disagreement between the auditor and the licensee for the benefit of
the participating copyright owners--since they may not be privy to the
issues discussed during the consultation period--and to memorialize the
licensee's position in the event that the licensee and the
participating copyright owners revisit these issues in follow-on
negotiations or litigation.
Within five business days after the written rebuttal has been
delivered to the auditor or, if no rebuttal is provided, after the
fourteen-day deadline for providing a rebuttal has passed, the auditor
will deliver a complete copy of the final report to the participating
copyright owners, with a copy to the licensee. As discussed in section
II, the Third Proposed Rule further provides that the final report must
be delivered by November 1st of the year in which the notice of intent
to audit was published in the Federal Register (except that, as noted
above, this requirement would not apply in the case of an expanded
audit).
B. Suspicion of Fraud
1. Comments
As discussed in section V.A, the Second Proposed Rule provided that
the auditor must deliver the initial draft of his or her report to the
licensee (but not the participating copyright owners) at the beginning
of the consultation period. However, the Second Proposed Rule provided
that the auditor could also send the initial draft to the participating
copyright owners if the auditor reasonably suspected that the licensee
had committed fraud. In such a case, the Second Proposed Rule provided
that the auditor could send the licensee an abridged version of the
initial draft containing all of the auditor's initial findings except
for the auditor's suspicion of fraud. Consistent with certain other
regulatory audit provisions,\24\ the Office wanted to address the
possibility that if an auditor discloses his or her suspicions to a
licensee, the licensee may be tempted to conceal or destroy
incriminating evidence before copyright owners are able to take action.
See 78 FR at 27145.
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\24\ See 37 CFR 261.6(f), 261.7(f), 262.6(f), 262.7(f) (SOAs for
ephemeral recordings and digital performance of sound recordings).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The NCTA objected to this approach. It contended (incorrectly) that
there is ``no precedent in the Office's other audit rules'' for
withholding a suspicion of fraud from the licensee. NCTA Second Reply
at 3. The NCTA predicted that the auditor ``likely will lack formal
legal training'' and contended that ``the Office's rules or precedent''
do not provide ``any guidance as to what types of actions might be
considered `fraud' in this context.'' Id. at 3. Instead, the NCTA
stated that the auditor should be allowed to discuss his or her
suspicions with the copyright owners ``while still giving licensees an
opportunity to respond to those allegations prior to the issuance of a
final report.'' Id. at 3.
2. Discussion
As referenced above, the fraud exception set forth in the Second
Proposed Rule was based, in part, on similar regulations that the
Office has adopted in the past. See 37 CFR 261.6(f), 261.7(f),
262.6(f), 262.7(f). However, the NCTA is correct that the statutory
provisions governing cable audits expressly state that the Register
``shall issue regulations'' that ``shall . . . require'' the ``auditor
to review [his or her] conclusions'' with the licensee and ``shall . .
. provide an opportunity to remedy any disputed facts or conclusions.''
17 U.S.C. 111(d)(6)(C)(i), (iii).
After weighing the NCTA's concerns, the Office has concluded that
the licensee should be given an opportunity to review and respond to
the auditor's entire report, even in cases where the auditor suspects
fraud. As noted in Section IX, licensees will be required to retain any
records needed to confirm the correctness of the calculations and
royalty payments reported in their SOAs for three and a half years
after the last day of the year in which the SOA is filed with the
Office, and if an SOA is audited under this procedure, to continue to
maintain those records until three years after the auditor delivers his
or her final report to the copyright owners. The risk that the licensee
may conceal or destroy incriminating evidence should be minimized if
the
[[Page 55704]]
auditor preserves copies of that evidence before disclosing his or her
suspicions to the licensee. If the auditor has a reasonable basis for
suspecting fraud during the initial phase of the audit (i.e., before
the auditor prepares the initial draft of his or her report and before
the consultation period begins), then, as discussed in section III.C,
the auditor may communicate privately with the participating copyright
owners, provided that the auditor reasonably believes that involving
the licensee in the communication could prejudice further investigation
of the fraud. As an additional protective measure, the Third Proposed
Rule provides that the auditor may share the initial draft of his or
her report with both the participating copyright owners and the
licensee during the consultation period in cases where the auditor
suspects fraud.
VI. Corrections, Supplemental Royalty Payments, and Refunds
Congress directed the Office to ``establish a mechanism for the
[licensee] to remedy any errors identified in the auditor's report and
to cure any underpayment identified.'' 17 U.S.C. 111(d)(6)C)(ii). If
the information in an SOA is incorrect or incomplete, if the
calculation of the royalty fee is incorrect, or if the licensee has
failed to deposit the correct amount of royalties, the Second Proposed
Rule provided that the licensee may correct those errors by following
the procedures set forth in 37 CFR 201.11(h)(1) or 201.17(m)(3). See 78
FR at 27145.
The Third Proposed Rule modifies this aspect of the audit procedure
in three respects. First, it clarifies that the licensee may cure an
underpayment by depositing additional royalties with the Office, but
may not deliver those payments directly to the participating copyright
owners or their representatives. Second, it provides that the licensee
may cure deficiencies identified in the auditor's report only if the
licensee represents that it has reimbursed the participating copyright
owners for its share of the audit costs if reimbursement is owed.
Third, it allows the licensee to request a refund from the Office if
the auditor discovers an overpayment on any of the SOAs at issue in the
audit.
A. Supplemental Royalty Payments Must Be Deposited With the Office
The statute clearly indicates that copyright owners should be given
a single opportunity to audit a particular SOA, and that the auditor
should review that statement on behalf of all copyright owners,
regardless of whether they participate in the audit or not. See 77 FR
at 35647. The statute also indicates that any copyright owner should be
allowed to claim an appropriate share of additional royalty fees that
result from the audit, even if that copyright owner did not join the
audit or pay for the auditor's services. Id. at 35649.
Consistent with these principles, the Third Proposed Rule provides
that a licensee may cure the underpayments identified in the auditor's
final report only by depositing the additional royalties due under the
statutory license with the Office. Paying additional royalties directly
to the participating copyright owners pursuant to a negotiated
settlement agreement would not satisfy this requirement, because that
would unfairly prevent non-participating copyright owners from claiming
an appropriate share of those payments. In the interests of
transparency, the Third Proposed Rule provides that a representative of
the participating copyright owners is to promptly notify the Office if
the auditor discovered an underpayment or overpayment on any of the
statements that were reviewed during the audit (although the copyright
owners do not need to disclose the specific amounts). This will create
a public record for the benefit of copyright owners that did not
participate in the audit process, and will inform the Office that
supplemental royalty payments, amended statements, and/or refund
requests may be forthcoming from the licensee.
B. Reimbursement of Costs
The Office previously determined that it has the authority to
include a cost-shifting provision in the regulation, and the Second
Proposed Rule expressly provided that the licensee ``shall pay'' for a
portion of the audit costs if the auditor discovers a net aggregate
underpayment that exceeds certain thresholds. See 78 FR at 27152. But
as the ACA noted at the roundtable, some licensees may refuse to
reimburse the participating copyright owners if they believe that the
auditor's conclusions are unjustified. And as discussed in section
VIII.C.2, Congress did not create a specific cause of action for
licensees that fail to reimburse the copyright owners for their share
of the audit costs.
The Third Proposed Rule addresses this issue by providing that a
licensee may exercise its right to address deficiencies identified in
an auditor's report only if the licensee confirms that it has
reimbursed the participating copyright owners for any audit costs that
the licensee is required to pay. In other words, the Office will not
accept an amended SOA seeking to cure deficiencies discovered in an
audit unless the licensee confirms in writing that it has reimbursed
the participating copyright owners for its share of the audit costs or
that it has no obligation to do so under the cost-shifting or cost-
splitting rule.
The Second Proposed Rule provided that an amended SOA and/or
additional royalty payments must be received within sixty days after
the delivery of the final report to the participating copyright owners
and the licensee, or within ninety days in the case of an audit
involving an MSO.\25\ In their Second Submission, the Joint
Stakeholders stated that the licensee should reimburse the
participating copyright owners for its share of the audit costs (if
any) within thirty days after these deadlines. The Office agrees that
the licensee should be given a precise deadline for reimbursing the
participating copyright owners, but because a licensee's ability to
cure its SOAs may be contingent upon paying its share of the audit
costs, the Third Proposed Rule provides that the deadline for
reimbursing the participating copyright owners and the deadline for
filing an amended SOA and/or depositing additional royalties will be
the same.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ None of the parties objected to these deadlines.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Refunds
If the auditor discovers an overpayment on a particular SOA, the
statutory licensee may request a refund by following the procedures set
forth in sections 201.17(m) or 201.11(h) of the Office's existing
regulations. The Second Proposed Rule provided that the refund request
must be received in the Office within thirty days after the auditor
delivers his or her final report to the licensee. The NCTA suggested
that a licensee should be given sixty days to submit a refund request.
NCTA Second Reply at 5. The Office has accepted the NCTA's suggestion,
because it would be consistent with the sixty-day deadline for
submitting supplementary royalty payments under the Third Proposed
Rule, and consistent with the sixty-day deadline for requesting refunds
under section 201.17(m) of the Office's existing regulations. In
addition, the Third Proposed Rule corrects certain numbering errors in
section 201.17(m) that were inadvertently created when the Office added
a new paragraph to that section of the regulations. See 78 FR 1755
(Jan. 11, 2013).
VII. Expanded Audits
Under the Second Proposed Rule, copyright owners would be allowed
to
[[Page 55705]]
conduct an initial audit of no more than two SOAs in a proceeding
involving a satellite carrier or a single cable system. In a proceeding
involving an MSO, copyright owners would be allowed to audit no more
than ten percent of the Form 2 and Form 3 systems owned by that MSO.
See 78 FR at 27143. To protect the interests of copyright owners, the
Second Proposed Rule also created an exception to these rules. If the
auditor discovered a net aggregate underpayment in his or her review of
a satellite carrier or a single cable system, the copyright owners
would be allowed to audit previous SOAs filed by that cable system or
satellite carrier, so long as they filed a notice of intent to audit
those statements in a timely manner. Likewise, if the auditor
discovered a net aggregate underpayment in his or her review of an MSO,
the copyright owners would be allowed to audit previous statements
filed by each of the systems subject to the initial audit, and in the
following calendar year they would also be allowed to audit a larger
sample of the cable systems owned by that MSO. See id. The Third
Proposed Rule modifies this portion of the audit procedure in several
respects.
A. Procedure for Conducting an Expanded Audit
As discussed in section II, the Third Proposed Rule provides that
the copyright owners must file a notice of intent to conduct an
expanded audit, the notice must specify the statements that will be
included in the expanded audit, and the notice must be received within
three years after the last day of the year in which those statements
were filed. It further provides that the expanded audit should be
conducted using the same procedures that applied to the initial audit,
although there are two exceptions to this rule. First, a notice of
intent to conduct an expanded audit may be filed during any month of
the year, as long as the copyright owners comply with the time limits
set forth in section 111(d)(6)(E) of the Act; and second, the auditor
does not need to deliver his or her final report by November 1st of the
year in which the notice was published in the Federal Register.
B. An Expanded Audit May Be Conducted Concurrently With an Initial
Audit
Under the Third Proposed Rule, an expanded audit of a single cable
system, multiple cable systems owned by the same MSO, or a satellite
carrier may be conducted concurrently with another audit involving that
same licensee. Since the initial audit may not be completed until late
in the year and since the expanded audit may involve multiple SOAs and/
or multiple cable systems, it seems unlikely--if not impossible--that
the auditor would be able to complete the initial audit and the
expanded audit within the same calendar year.
If the auditor discovers an underpayment of five percent or more
during an initial audit, the Office believes that the copyright owners
should be allowed to review previous statements filed by that licensee
and to promptly initiate a new audit of the licensee's more recent
statements. Likewise, if the auditor discovers an underpayment in the
case of an MSO, then, as contemplated by the Second Proposed Rule, the
copyright owners should be allowed to audit a larger sample of the
MSO's cable systems in the following calendar year, even if an expanded
audit remains pending. Copyright owners are entitled to know if the
same problems appear in the licensee's earlier or later filings, or
more broadly throughout an MSO's systems. If the expanded audit
displaced the copyright owners' ability to initiate a new audit, it
could impede the copyright owners' ability to audit the licensee's more
recent filings, particularly because an expanded audit may be noticed
at any time and has no deadline for completion. It would seem
unwarranted to constrain the copyright owners' ongoing audit right vis-
[agrave]-vis a particular licensee where that licensee has been found
to have underpaid royalty fees in the past.
C. The Initial Audit and the Expanded Audit May Be Conducted by the
Same Auditor
The Third Proposed Rule provides that the expanded audit may be
conducted by the same auditor that conducted the initial audit of that
licensee. The NCTA contended that the Second Proposed Rule created a
procedure for selecting an auditor for an expanded audit involving a
satellite carrier or a single cable system, but ``[t]here is no
provision made for the selection of an auditor for an expanded MSO
audit.'' NCTA Second Reply at 7. That is incorrect. The Second Proposed
Rule provided that if the auditor discovered a net aggregate
underpayment on the statements at issue in an audit involving an MSO,
``[t]he number of Statements of Account of a particular cable system
subject to audit in a calendar year may be expanded in accordance with
paragraph (k)(3) of this section'' (emphasis added). 78 FR at 27153. In
other words, the procedure for selecting an auditor for an expanded
audit involving a cable operator that owns multiple cable systems would
be the same as the procedure for an expanded audit involving a cable
operator that owns a single cable system.
To eliminate further confusion, the Third Proposed Rule clarifies
that if the auditor discovers a net aggregate underpayment on the
statements at issue in an initial audit involving an MSO, the cable
systems that were included within that initial audit may be subject to
an expanded audit. It also clarifies that the MSO may be subject to an
initial audit involving a larger sample of its cable systems in the
following calendar year, provided that the copyright owners file a
notice of intent to audit those systems in a timely manner (i.e., in
the month of December of the year in which the auditor delivered the
final report that triggered the option of auditing a larger sample).
The NCTA also contended that copyright owners should not be allowed
to unilaterally use the same auditor in two consecutive expanded audits
involving an MSO.\26\ NCTA Second Reply at 8. Instead, the MSO should
select the auditor ``from a slate of names supplied by the [copyright]
owners that could include the same auditor that conducted the initial
audit.'' Id. at 7.
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\26\ The Joint Stakeholders made a similar suggestion in their
First Submission. The NCTA correctly notes that the Office did not
include this suggestion in the Second Proposed Rule because it
``fail[ed] to see the justification for this limitation.'' See 78 FR
27143 n.19; NCTA Second Reply at 7-8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As noted in section III.A, the Second Proposed Rule provided that
the licensee could select the auditor from a list of names provided by
the copyright owners. Because an expanded audit is simply an extension
of the initial audit, it is appropriate and efficient for the same
individual to conduct the audit from start to finish. Under the Second
Proposed Rule, the same auditor who conducted the initial audit could
conduct the expanded audit, provided that the copyright owners supply
the licensee with information sufficient to show that there has been no
material change in the auditor's independence and qualifications. If
the auditor is no longer qualified or independent, or if the copyright
owners prefer to use a different individual, a new auditor could be
selected using the procedure discussed in section III.A.
In its comments, the NCTA recognized that there are benefits to
using the same auditor to conduct an initial audit and an expanded
audit. The auditor will be familiar with the licensee's accounting
systems and
[[Page 55706]]
methodologies, which should improve the efficiency of the expanded
audit and reduce the potential burden on the licensee. The NCTA
contended that these benefits should be balanced against the ``benefits
of giving the [MSO] a new opportunity to have a say in the selection of
the auditor.'' Id. at 8. However, the NCTA failed to explain what these
purported benefits might be, why they should be bestowed upon MSOs (but
denied to satellite carriers or cable operators that own a single cable
system), or why they outweigh the benefits of using the same individual
to conduct the initial audit and the expanded audit.
VIII. Cost of the Audit Procedure
A. Allocation of Costs
1. Comments
Building off a proposal made by the Joint Stakeholders, the Second
Proposed Rule provided that the participating copyright owners would be
required to pay the auditor for his or her services if the auditor
discovered an overpayment on the SOAs at issue in the audit, or if the
auditor discovered a net aggregate underpayment of ten percent or less
of the amount reported on those statements. If the auditor discovered a
net aggregate underpayment of more than ten percent on the SOAs at
issue in the audit, the statutory licensee would be required to
reimburse the copyright owners for those costs.
In addition, the Second Proposed Rule included a provision for
splitting these fees in certain circumstances. If the auditor concluded
in his or her final report that there was a net aggregate underpayment
of more than ten percent, the cost of the audit would be split evenly
between the copyright owners and the licensee if the licensee prepared
a written rebuttal explaining the basis for its good faith belief that
the net aggregate underpayment was between five percent and ten percent
of the amount reported on the SOAs.\27\ See 78 FR at 27152.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ If the licensee failed to provide a written rebuttal in
this situation, then as discussed in the preceding paragraph, the
licensee would be required to reimburse the copyright owners for the
cost of the audit procedure.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In all cases, there would be an overall limit on the costs that the
licensee would be expected to pay. Specifically, the licensee would not
be required to pay for any costs that exceeded the amount of the net
aggregate underpayment that the auditor identified in his or her final
report. See 78 FR at 27148.
In comments received in response to the Second Proposed Rule, the
ACA asked the Office to go a step further by making it clear that if
the auditor discovers a net aggregate underpayment of ten percent or
more the licensee should not have to pay for any portion of the audit
costs if the licensee prepares a written rebuttal stating that the
underpayment was five percent or less and explaining the basis for its
belief. ACA Second Comment at 4.
In the Roundtable Notice, the Office questioned whether the costs
should be split between the parties based merely on the views expressed
in the licensee's rebuttal. As the NCTA indicated during the
roundtable, it is unlikely that the auditor will change his or her mind
based on anything said in the rebuttal. If that is the case, it is
unclear why a licensee's objections should gain renewed significance
for the purpose of allocating costs, when those objections presumably
were considered and rejected by the auditor during the consultation
period. See 79 FR at 31995.
Following the roundtable, the Joint Stakeholders provided a
substitute recommendation in their Second Submission. Under that
proposal, the copyright owners would bear the costs of the audit if the
auditor concluded in the final report that there was an overpayment or
a net aggregate underpayment of five percent or less, and that the
licensee would bear the costs if the auditor concluded that there was a
net aggregate underpayment of ten percent or more. In cases falling in
between, where the auditor found a net aggregate payment of more than
five percent but less than ten percent, the audit costs would be split
evenly between the licensee on the one hand and the participating
copyright owners on the other.
2. Discussion
The Office concurs with the cost-shifting and cost-splitting
proposals set forth in the Joint Stakeholders' Second Submission. The
Office does not accept the ACA's proposal, which would allow a licensee
to avoid paying any portion of the audit costs simply by offering its
views as to why an underpayment was five percent or less (even if the
auditor determined that the underpayment was ten percent or more). ACA
Second Comment at 4. As the Office noted in its Roundtable Notice, it
is unclear why the licensee's rebuttal should be given greater weight
than the auditor's conclusions, particularly given the NCTA's
observation that the auditor would not be expected to make any changes
to the final report based on the views expressed in the rebuttal.
The ACA contended that the proposed rule ``may impose an unfair
burden on small cable operators'' by requiring them to pay for the cost
of the audit ``if the auditor finds a net aggregate underpayment of
less than five percent.'' Id. at 3. But as discussed above, the
licensee would not be required to pay for any portion of the audit
costs in this situation. The ACA does not contend that it would be
unfairly burdensome for small cable operators to pay for the cost of an
audit when the underpayment exceeds ten percent. Indeed, the ACA
acknowledged that small cable operators will largely be protected by
the provision stating that licensees will not be required to pay for
any costs that exceed the amount of the underpayment that the auditor
identifies in his or her final report. Id. at 2. The Office's existing
regulations provide additional limitations for small cable operators
that use Form SA 1-2. There is an upper limit on the gross receipts
that may be reported on this form, which limits the amount of any
underpayment that could be discovered during the course of an audit,
which in turn limits the amount of any cost-shifting or cost-splitting
that could be required. See 37 CFR 201.17(d)(2)(i). As the MPAA
observed at the roundtable, it seems unlikely that copyright owners
will be inclined to audit small cable operators, because even if the
auditor discovers an underpayment, the cost of conducting the audit may
exceed any amount that could conceivably be recovered from the
licensee.
B. Monthly Invoices
1. Comments
The Second Proposed Rule provided that the copyright owners should
deliver an itemized statement to the licensee at the conclusion of the
audit specifying the total cost of the audit procedure. See 78 FR at
27149. The Joint Stakeholders disagreed with this aspect of the Second
Proposed Rule. In both their first and second proposals, they suggested
that the auditor should be required to provide the licensee with
itemized invoices during the course of the audit and that these
invoices should be delivered by the fifteenth of each month. 78 FR at
27149; JS Second Submission at 2. The NCTA explained that this would
minimize surprises for the licensee, and noted that monthly statements
are a common feature of audits involving private sector program
carriage agreements. NCTA Second Reply at 6-7.
[[Page 55707]]
2. Discussion
After further analysis, the Office has included the Joint
Stakeholders' suggestion in the Third Proposed Rule. The House
Committee stated that the Office ``may consider . . . audit provisions
in private agreements to which cable operators or content owners may be
parties.'' H.R. Rep. No. 111-319 at 9 (2009). A monthly reporting
requirement would promote transparency by requiring the auditor to
disclose the ongoing cost of the audit procedure. And this would
provide copyright owners and licensees with advance notice in the event
that the auditor discovers an underpayment that triggers the cost-
shifting or cost-splitting mechanisms discussed in section VIII.A
above.
C. Enforcement of Cost-Shifting Provision
1. Comments
Under the Second Proposed Rule, if the auditor discovered a net
aggregate underpayment that triggered the licensee's obligation to pay
all or part of the cost of the audit, the licensee would be required to
make such a reimbursement within a specified period of time. If the
licensee disagreed with the auditor's conclusions, however, the rule
provided the licensee with a mechanism for recouping those costs from
the participating copyright owners, so long as a court issued a final
judgment finding that the net aggregate underpayment was ten percent or
less. See 78 FR at 27149. In proposing that provision, the Office
assumed that the licensee might seek a declaratory judgment of non-
infringement, and as part of that proceeding, obtain a judgment from a
court evaluating the correctness of the conclusions set forth in the
audit report. Id.
In response to the Second Proposed Rule, AT&T objected to any
provision that would affirmatively obligate licensees to pay the costs
of the audit.\28\ It stated that ``the enforcement mechanism built into
the statutory license'' allows copyright owners to seek ``recourse
through the courts if they believe that the licensee has failed to
fulfill its obligations under the statute and the rules.'' AT&T Second
Comment at 2. AT&T contended that the Second Proposed Rule stands this
``fundamental premise'' on its head, because it ``shifts the
enforcement obligation from the copyright owners to the licensee'' to
seek reimbursement of costs. Id. at 2. It also contended that this
would be ``an unwieldy and potentially costly process,'' because ``the
licensee would be forced to seek reimbursement from numerous sources''
if the copyright owners divide the payment among themselves. Id. at 2.
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\28\ AT&T also contended that the Office does not have the
authority to include a cost-shifting provision in this audit
regulation. AT&T Second Comment at 1-2. AT&T made the same argument
in the initial phase of this rulemaking. AT&T First Comment at 5-8.
The Office addressed that argument in its Federal Register document
dated May 9, 2013, concluding that it does have such authority. See
78 FR at 27146-48.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The ACA expressed the same view in its reply comments. It contended
that it would be ``burdensome and unfair'' to expect small cable
operators to pay for the audit and then take legal action to recover
those costs from the copyright owners. The ACA explained that small
cable operators have fewer financial and legal resources than the
copyright owners, and stated that the cost of bringing a declaratory
judgment action may exceed the amount that the licensee could expect to
recover. ACA Second Reply at 2-4.
The Copyright Owners noted that AT&T made a similar argument during
an earlier phase of this rulemaking,\29\ and that AT&T's latest
argument is simply a variation on the same theme. CO Second Reply at 2-
3. They also stated that the licensee ``will have no trouble''
identifying the relevant copyright owners if there is a dispute between
the parties. Id. at 5. They noted that the copyright owners will be
required to identify themselves at the beginning of the audit by filing
a notice with the Office. In the event that the court rules in the
licensee's favor, they stated that the copyright owners will ``likely''
be subject to an order directing them to reimburse the licensee. Id. at
5.
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\29\ The Office addressed this argument in its Federal Register
document dated May 9, 2013. See 78 FR at 27149.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Office expressed several concerns about this provision in the
Roundtable Notice and during the roundtable discussion. See 79 FR at
31995. In particular, the Office questioned whether the parties expect
to engage in the sort of litigation contemplated by the Second Proposed
Rule, the gravamen of which would seemingly be an infringement action
or a declaratory judgment action for non-infringement; whether the
court would review the auditor's report to determine the exact amount
of underpayment in any such litigation; and whether the issue of audit
costs might be better understood as a potential element of actual
damages in such an infringement suit. The Office expressed reservations
about its authority to essentially dictate the issues that a federal
district court would be required to address in a suit initiated after
the completion of the audit. In addition, the Office questioned whether
the rule should affirmatively require the licensee to pay for the audit
costs.
In their Second Submission, the Joint Stakeholders reiterated their
belief that the proposed rule should provide a method for licensees to
recover the costs of the audit from the participating copyright owners
in a judicial proceeding. Specifically, they urged the Office to
include the following provision in the proposed rule:
In the event the statutory licensee disputes the amount of the
net aggregate underpayment identified by the auditor, and an action
is brought in a court of competent jurisdiction to determine the
royalties due for the period(s) covered by the auditor's final
report, there shall be a final true-up of the amount of the
auditor's costs borne by either party based on the final outcome of
that action relative to the cost responsibilities set forth herein.
JS Second Submission at 2.
2. Discussion
As AT&T and the ACA correctly observed, under the Second Proposed
Rule, the licensee would have had an absolute obligation to reimburse
the copyright owners for the cost of the audit, even if the licensee
disagreed with the auditors' conclusions and declined to submit any
additional royalty payments to the Office. AT&T Second Comment at 2;
ACA Second Reply at 2-3. The Third Proposed Rule modifies the Second
Proposed Rule so that licensees are required to pay the costs of the
audit if they wish to cure a deficiency, as explained in section VI.B
above. This revised approach has several advantages. Although the
Second Proposed Rule directed the licensee to pay for the audit costs,
it provided no obvious mechanism for the Office or any other party to
enforce that mandate. Tying the payment of audit costs to the cure
provisions, by contrast, will give the licensee an incentive to make
these payments. If the licensee disagrees with the auditor's conclusion
regarding the royalty underpayment, the licensee may choose not to
deposit additional royalties with the Office or pay the attendant audit
costs. In the case where a licensee opts not to cure, the licensee will
run the risk of being subject to an infringement action, or in the
alternative, could bring its own action against one or more of the
copyright owners seeking a declaratory judgment of non-infringement.
The Office believes it is unnecessary for the rule to require a
``true-up'' of the auditor's costs after the close of any follow-on
litigation, as the Joint Commenters urged in their Second
[[Page 55708]]
Submission. To begin with, it is unclear what the term ``true-up'' is
intended to mean or how the Joint Stakeholders propose to enforce this
regulatory obligation. Moreover, the Joint Stakeholders' proposal
raises issues that can and should be resolved by a court in the
exercise of its remedial discretion as part of the contemplated
judicial proceeding. In this regard, the Office notes that the audit
costs might be characterized as an element of actual damages incurred
by the copyright owners, or as an element of the relief to be awarded
in a declaratory judgment action. See 28 U.S.C. 2202 (authorizing
courts to grant ``[f]urther necessary or proper relief based on a
declaratory judgment or decree . . . against any adverse party whose
rights have been determined by such judgment'').
IX. Retention of Records
A. Comments
The Second Proposed Rule provided that a statutory licensee should
retain any records needed to confirm the correctness of the
calculations and royalty payments reported in an SOA or amended SOA for
three and a half years after the last day of the year that the SOA or
amendment was filed with the Office, or in the event that an SOA or
amended SOA was the subject of an audit, for three years after the
auditor delivered his or her final report to the parties. As the Office
explained in its earlier Federal Register document dated June 14, 2012,
it is important to ensure that licensees ``retain their records until
the deadline for auditing [an SOA] has passed.'' 77 FR at 35647. The
Office is also concerned that copyright owners have the benefit of the
three-year statute of limitations provided in the Act when an audit
takes place. See 17 U.S.C. 507(b).
The NCTA contended that the Second Proposed Rule contemplates ``a
very lengthy, and burdensome, record retention period'' following the
completion of the audit and that it ``imposes a significant burden'' on
small cable operators as well as MSOs that file multiple SOAs in each
accounting period. NCTA Second Reply at 4. The NCTA instead suggested
that a licensee be required to retain the required records for no more
than one year after the auditor issues his or her final report.
B. Discussion
The Office has considered the NCTA's concerns but has concluded
that a licensee should be required to retain relevant records during
the pendency of an audit and for three years after the auditor issues
his or her final report, as provided in the Third Proposed Rule. This
will ensure that the licensee does not discard its records before the
three-year statute of limitations may expire. Moreover, the burden of
retaining such records should be minimal. Many licensees collect,
report, and maintain their records in electronic form, which should
limit the cost of complying with the proposed rule. The Third Proposed
Rule limits the number of SOAs that may be included in each audit,
which in turn limits the number of records that must be retained when
the auditor issues his or her final report. Furthermore, the licensee
is only required to keep records that are ``necessary to confirm the
correctness of the calculations and royalty payments reported'' in
those SOAs.
List of Subjects in 37 CFR Part 201
Copyright, General Provisions.
Proposed Regulations
In consideration of the foregoing, the U.S. Copyright Office
proposes to amend part 201 of 37 CFR, Chapter II, as follows:
PART 201--GENERAL PROVISIONS
0
1. Amend the authority citation for part 201 to read as follows:
Authority: 17 U.S.C. 702.
Section 201.10 also issued under 17 U.S.C. 304.
Section 201.16 also issued under 17 U.S.C. 111(d)(6) and 17
U.S.C. 119(b)(2).
0
2. Revise Sec. 201.16 to read as follows:
Sec. 201.16 Verification of a Statement of Account and royalty fee
payments for secondary transmissions made by cable systems and
satellite carriers.
(a) General. This section prescribes procedures pertaining to the
verification of a Statement of Account and royalty fees filed with the
Copyright Office pursuant to sections 111(d)(1) or 119(b)(1) of title
17 of the United States Code.
(b) Definitions. As used in this section:
(1) The term cable system has the meaning set forth in Sec.
201.17(b)(2).
(2) Copyright owner means any person or entity that owns the
copyright in a work embodied in a secondary transmission made by a
statutory licensee that filed a Statement of Account with the Copyright
Office for an accounting period beginning on or after January 1, 2010,
or a designated agent or representative of such person or entity.
(3) Multiple system operator or MSO means an entity that owns,
controls, or operates more than one cable system.
(4) Net aggregate underpayment means the aggregate amount of
underpayments found by the auditor less the aggregate amount of any
overpayments found by the auditor, as measured against the total amount
of royalties reflected on the Statements of Account examined by the
auditor.
(5) Participating copyright owner means a copyright owner that
filed a notice of intent to audit a Statement of Account pursuant to
paragraph (c)(1) or (2) of this section and any other copyright owner
that has given notice of its intent to participate in such audit
pursuant to paragraph (c)(3) of this section.
(6) The term satellite carrier has the meaning set forth in 17
U.S.C. 119(d)(6).
(7) The term secondary transmission has the meaning set forth in 17
U.S.C. 111(f)(2).
(8) Statement of Account or Statement means a semiannual Statement
of Account filed with the Copyright Office under 17 U.S.C. 111(d)(1) or
119(b)(1) or an amended Statement of Account filed with the Office
pursuant to Sec. Sec. 201.11(h) or 201.17(m).
(9) Statutory licensee or licensee means a cable system or
satellite carrier that filed a Statement of Account with the Office
under 17 U.S.C. 111(d)(1) or 119(b)(1).
(c) Notice of intent to audit. (1) Any copyright owner that intends
to audit a Statement of Account for an accounting period beginning on
or after January 1, 2010 must provide written notice to the Register of
Copyrights no later than three years after the last day of the year in
which the Statement was filed with the Office. The notice must be
received in the Office between December 1st and December 31st, and a
copy of the notice must be provided to the statutory licensee on the
same day that it is filed with the Office. Between January 1st and
January 31st of the next calendar year the Office will publish a notice
in the Federal Register announcing the receipt of the notice of intent
to audit. A notice of intent to audit may be filed by an individual
copyright owner or a designated agent that represents a group or
multiple groups of copyright owners. The notice shall include a
statement indicating that it is a ``notice of intent to audit'' and it
shall contain the following information:
(i) It shall identify the licensee that filed the Statement(s) with
the Office, and the Statement(s) and accounting period(s) that will be
subject to the audit.
(ii) It shall identify the party that filed the notice, including
its name, address, telephone number, and email address, and it shall
include a statement that the
[[Page 55709]]
party owns, or represents one or more copyright owners that own, a work
that was embodied in a secondary transmission made by the statutory
licensee during one or more of the accounting period(s) specified in
the statement(s) that will be subject to the audit.
(2) Notwithstanding the schedule set forth in paragraph (c)(1) of
this section, any copyright owner that intends to audit a Statement of
Account pursuant to an expanded audit under paragraph (n) of this
section may provide written notice to the Register of Copyrights during
any month, but no later than three years after the last day of the year
in which the Statement was filed with the Office. A copy of the notice
must be provided to the licensee on the same day that the notice is
filed with the Office. Within thirty days after the notice has been
received, the Office will publish a notice in the Federal Register
announcing the receipt of the notice of intent to conduct an expanded
audit. A notice given pursuant to this paragraph may be provided by an
individual copyright owner or a designated agent that represents a
group or multiple groups of copyright owners. The notice shall include
a statement indicating that it is a ``notice of intent to conduct an
expanded audit'' and it shall contain the information specified in
paragraphs (c)(1)(i) and (ii) of this section.
(3) Within thirty days after a notice is published in the Federal
Register pursuant to paragraphs (c)(1) or (2) of this section, any
other copyright owner that owns a work that was embodied in a secondary
transmission made by that statutory licensee during an accounting
period covered by the Statement(s) of Account referenced in the Federal
Register notice and that wishes to participate in the audit of such
Statement(s) must provide written notice of such participation to the
licensee and to the party that filed the notice of intent to audit. A
notice given pursuant to this paragraph may be provided by an
individual copyright owner or a designated agent that represents a
group or multiple groups of copyright owners, and shall include the
information specified in paragraphs (c)(1)(i) and (ii) of this section.
(4) Notices submitted under paragraphs (c)(1) through (3) of this
section should be addressed to the ``U.S. Copyright Office, Office of
the General Counsel'' and should be sent to the address for time-
sensitive requests set forth in Sec. 201.1(c)(1).
(5) Once the Office has received a notice of intent to audit a
Statement of Account under paragraphs (c)(1) or (2) of this section, a
notice of intent to audit that same Statement will not be accepted for
publication in the Federal Register.
(6) Once the Office has received a notice of intent to audit two
Statements of Account filed by a particular satellite carrier or a
particular cable system, a notice of intent to audit that same carrier
or that same system under paragraph (c)(1) of this section will not be
accepted for publication in the Federal Register until the following
calendar year.
(7) If the Office has received or receives a notice of intent to
audit prior to the effective date of this section, the Office will
publish a notice in the Federal Register within thirty days thereafter
announcing the receipt of the notice of intent to audit. In such a
case, the audit shall be conducted using the procedures set forth in
paragraphs (d) through (l) of this section, with the following
exceptions:
(i) The participating copyright owners shall provide the statutory
licensee with a list of three independent and qualified auditors
pursuant to paragraph (d)(1) by March 16, 2015.
(ii) The auditor shall deliver his or her final report to the
participating copyright owners and the licensee pursuant to paragraph
(i)(3) of this section by November 1, 2015.
(d) Selection of the auditor. (1) Within forty-five days after a
notice is published in the Federal Register pursuant to paragraph
(c)(1) of this section, the participating copyright owners shall
provide the statutory licensee with a list of three independent and
qualified auditors, along with information reasonably sufficient for
the licensee to evaluate the proposed auditors' independence and
qualifications, including:
(i) The auditor's curriculum vitae and a list of audits that the
auditor has conducted pursuant to 17 U.S.C. 111(d)(6) or 119(b)(2);
(ii) A list and, subject to any confidentiality or other legal
restrictions, a brief description of any other work the auditor has
performed for any of the participating copyright owners during the
prior two calendar years;
(iii) A list identifying the participating copyright owners for
whom the auditor's firm has been engaged during the prior two calendar
years; and,
(iv) A copy of the engagement letter that would govern the
auditor's performance of the audit and that provides for the auditor to
be compensated on a non-contingent flat fee or hourly basis that does
not take into account the results of the audit.
(2) Within five business days after receiving the list of auditors
from the participating copyright owners, the licensee shall select one
of the proposed auditors and shall notify the participating copyright
owners of its selection. That auditor shall be retained by the
participating copyright owners and shall conduct the audit on behalf of
all copyright owners who own a work that was embodied in a secondary
transmission made by the licensee during the accounting period(s)
specified in the Statement(s) of Account identified in the notice of
intent to audit.
(3) The auditor shall be independent and qualified as defined in
this section. An auditor shall be considered independent and qualified
if:
(i) He or she is a certified public accountant and a member in good
standing with the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants
(``AICPA'') and the licensing authority for the jurisdiction(s) where
the auditor is licensed to practice;
(ii) He or she is not, for any purpose other than the audit, an
officer, employee, or agent of any participating copyright owner;
(iii) He or she is independent as that term is used in the Code of
Professional Conduct of the AICPA, including the Principles, Rules, and
Interpretations of such Code; and
(iv) He or she is independent as that term is used in the
Statements on Auditing Standards promulgated by the Auditing Standards
Board of the AICPA and Interpretations thereof issued by the Auditing
Standards Division of the AICPA.
(e) Commencement of the audit. (1) Within ten days after the
selection of the auditor, the auditor shall meet by telephone or in
person with designated representatives of the participating copyright
owners and the statutory licensee to review the scope of the audit,
audit methodology, and schedule for conducting and completing the
audit.
(2) Within thirty days after the selection of the auditor, the
licensee shall provide the auditor and a representative of the
participating copyright owners with a list of all broadcast signals
retransmitted pursuant to the statutory license in each community
covered by each of the Statements of Account subject to the audit,
including the call sign for each broadcast signal and each multicast
signal. In the case of an audit involving a cable system or MSO, the
list must include the classification of each signal on a community-by-
community basis pursuant to Sec. Sec. 201.17(e)(9)(iv) through
[[Page 55710]]
(v) and 201.17(h). The list shall be signed by a duly authorized agent
of the licensee and the signature shall be accompanied by the following
statement: I, the undersigned agent of the statutory licensee, hereby
declare under penalty of law that all statements of fact contained
herein are true, complete, and correct to the best of my knowledge,
information, and belief, and are made in good faith.
(f) Failure to proceed with a noticed audit. If the participating
copyright owners fail to provide the statutory licensee with a list of
auditors or fail to retain the auditor selected by the licensee
pursuant to paragraph (d)(2) of this section, the Statement(s) of
Account identified in the notice of intent to audit shall not be
subject to audit under this section.
(g) Ex parte communications. Following the initial consultation
pursuant to paragraph (e)(1) of this section and until the distribution
of the auditor's final report to the participating copyright owners
pursuant to paragraph (i)(3) of this section, there shall be no ex
parte communications regarding the audit between the auditor and the
participating copyright owners or their representatives; provided,
however, that the auditor may engage in such ex parte communications
where either:
(1) Subject to paragraph (i)(4) of this section, the auditor has a
reasonable basis to suspect fraud and that participation by the
licensee in communications regarding the suspected fraud would, in the
reasonable opinion of the auditor, prejudice the investigation of such
suspected fraud; or
(2) The auditor provides the licensee with a reasonable opportunity
to participate in communications with the participating copyright
owners or their representatives and the licensee declines to do so.
(h) Auditor's authority and access. (1) The auditor shall have
exclusive authority to verify all of the information reported on the
Statement(s) of Account subject to the audit in order to confirm the
correctness of the calculations and royalty payments reported therein;
provided, however, that the auditor shall not determine whether any
cable system properly classified any broadcast signal as required by
Sec. Sec. 201.17(e)(9)(iv) through (v) and 201.17(h) or whether a
satellite carrier properly determined that any subscriber or group of
subscribers is eligible to receive any broadcast signals under 17
U.S.C. 119(a).
(2) The statutory licensee shall provide the auditor with
reasonable access to the licensee's books and records and any other
information that the auditor needs in order to conduct the audit. The
licensee shall provide the auditor with any information the auditor
reasonably requests promptly after receiving such a request.
(3) The audit shall be conducted during regular business hours at a
location designated by the licensee with consideration given to
minimizing the costs and burdens associated with the audit. If the
auditor and the licensee agree, the audit may be conducted in whole or
in part by means of electronic communication.
(4) With the exception of its obligations under paragraphs (d) and
(e) of this section, a licensee may suspend its participation in an
audit for no more than sixty days before the semi-annual due dates for
filing Statements of Account by providing advance written notice to the
auditor and a representative of the participating copyright owners,
provided however, that if the participating copyright owners notify the
licensee within ten days of receiving such notice of their good faith
belief that the suspension could prevent the auditor from delivering
his or her final report to the participating copyright owners before
the statute of limitations may expire on any claims under the Copyright
Act related to a Statement of Account covered by that audit, the
licensee may not suspend its participation in the audit unless it first
executes a tolling agreement to extend the statute of limitations by a
period of time equal to the period of the suspension.
(i) Audit report. (1) After reviewing the books, records, and any
other information received from the statutory licensee, the auditor
shall prepare a draft written report setting forth his or her initial
conclusions and shall deliver a copy of that draft report to the
licensee. The auditor shall then consult with a representative of the
licensee regarding the conclusions set forth in the draft report for no
more than thirty days. If, upon consulting with the licensee, the
auditor concludes that there are errors in the facts or conclusions set
forth in the draft report, the auditor shall correct those errors.
(2) Within thirty days after the date that the auditor delivered
the draft report to the licensee pursuant to paragraph (i)(1) of this
section, the auditor shall prepare a final version of the written
report setting forth his or her ultimate conclusions and shall deliver
a copy of that final version to the licensee. Within fourteen days
thereafter, the licensee may provide the auditor with a written
rebuttal setting forth its good faith objections to the facts or
conclusions set forth in the final version of the report.
(3) Subject to the confidentiality provisions set forth in
paragraph (l) of this section, the auditor shall attach a copy of any
written rebuttal timely received from the licensee to the final version
of the report and shall deliver a copy of the complete final report to
the participating copyright owners and the licensee. The final report
must be delivered by November 1st of the year in which the notice was
published in the Federal Register pursuant to paragraph (c)(1) of this
section and within five business days after the last day on which the
licensee may provide the auditor with a written rebuttal pursuant to
paragraph (i)(2) of this section. A representative of the participating
copyright owners shall promptly notify the Office that the audit has
been completed and shall state whether the auditor discovered an
underpayment or overpayment on any Statement(s) examined in the audit,
as applicable. The notice should be addressed to the ``U.S. Copyright
Office, Office of the General Counsel'' and should be sent to the
address for time-sensitive requests specified in Sec. 201.1(c)(1).
(4) Prior to the delivery of the final report pursuant to paragraph
(i)(3) of this section the auditor shall not provide any draft of his
or her report to the participating copyright owners or their
representatives; provided, however, that the auditor may deliver a
draft report simultaneously to the licensee and the participating
copyright owners if the auditor has a reasonable basis to suspect
fraud.
(j) Corrections, supplemental payments, and refunds. (1) If the
auditor concludes in his or her final report that any of the
information reported on a Statement of Account is incorrect or
incomplete, that the calculation of the royalty fee payable for a
particular accounting period was incorrect, or that the amount
deposited in the Office for that period was too low, a statutory
licensee may cure such incorrect or incomplete information or
underpayment by filing an amendment to the Statement and, in case of a
deficiency in payment, by depositing supplemental royalty fee payments
with the Office using the procedures set forth in Sec. Sec. 201.11(h)
or 201.17(m), provided that the amendment and/or payments are received
within sixty days after the delivery of the final report to the
participating copyright owners and the licensee or within ninety days
after the delivery of such report in the case of an audit of an MSO,
and further provided that the licensee reimburses the
[[Page 55711]]
participating copyright owners for the licensee's share of the audit
costs, if any, determined to be owing pursuant to paragraph (k)(3) of
this section. Supplemental royalty fee payments made pursuant to this
paragraph shall be delivered to the Office and not to participating
copyright owners or their representatives.
(2) Notwithstanding Sec. Sec. 201.11(h)(3)(i) and 201.17(m)(4)(i),
if the auditor concludes in his or her final report that there was an
overpayment on a particular Statement, the licensee may request a
refund from the Office using the procedures set forth in Sec. Sec.
201.11(h)(3) or 201.17(m)(4), provided that the request is received
within sixty days after the delivery of the final report to the
participating copyright owners and the licensee or within ninety days
after the delivery of the final report in the case of an audit of an
MSO.
(k) Costs of the audit. (1) No later than the fifteenth day of each
month during the course of the audit, the auditor shall provide the
participating copyright owners with an itemized statement of the costs
incurred by the auditor during the previous month, and shall provide a
copy to the licensee that is the subject of the audit.
(2) If the auditor concludes in his or her final report that there
was no net aggregate underpayment or a net aggregate underpayment of
five percent or less, the participating copyright owners shall pay for
the full costs of the auditor. If the auditor concludes in his or her
final report that there was a net aggregate underpayment of more than
five percent but less than ten percent, the costs of the auditor are to
be split evenly between the participating copyright owners and the
licensee that is the subject of the audit. If the auditor concludes in
his or her final report that there was a net aggregate underpayment of
ten percent or more, the licensee will be responsible for the full
costs of the auditor.
(3) If a licensee is responsible for any portion of the costs of
the auditor, a representative of the participating copyright owners
shall provide the licensee with an itemized accounting of the auditor's
total costs, the appropriate share of which should be paid by the
licensee to such representative no later than sixty days after the
delivery of the final report to the participating copyright owners and
licensee or within ninety days after the delivery of such report in the
case of an audit of an MSO.
(4) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in paragraph (k) of
this section, no portion of the auditor's costs that exceed the amount
of the net aggregate underpayment may be recovered from the licensee.
(l) Confidentiality. (1) For purposes of this section, confidential
information shall include any non-public financial or business
information pertaining to a Statement of Account that has been
subjected to an audit under 17 U.S.C. 111(d)(6) or 119(b)(2).
(2) Access to confidential information under this section shall be
limited to:
(i) The auditor; and
(ii) Subject to the execution of a reasonable confidentiality
agreement, outside counsel for the participating copyright owners and
any third party consultants retained by outside counsel, and any
employees, agents, consultants, or independent contractors of the
auditor who are not employees, officers, or agents of a participating
copyright owner for any purpose other than the audit, who are engaged
in the audit of a Statement or activities directly related hereto, and
who require access to the confidential information for the purpose of
performing such duties during the ordinary course of their employment.
(3) The auditor and any person identified in paragraph (l)(2)(ii)
of this section shall implement procedures to safeguard all
confidential information received from any third party in connection
with an audit, using a reasonable standard of care, but no less than
the same degree of security used to protect confidential financial and
business information or similarly sensitive information belonging to
the auditor or such person.
(m) Frequency and scope of the audit. (1) Except as provided in
paragraph (n)(2) of this section with respect to expanded audits, a
cable system, MSO, or satellite carrier shall be subject to no more
than one audit per calendar year.
(2) Except as provided in paragraph (n)(1) of this section, the
audit of a particular cable system or satellite carrier shall include
no more than two of the Statements of Account from the previous eight
accounting periods submitted by that cable system or satellite carrier.
(3) Except as provided in paragraph (n)(3)(ii), an audit of an MSO
shall be limited to a sample of no more than ten percent of the MSO's
Form 3 cable systems and no more than ten percent of the MSO's Form 2
systems.
(n) Expanded audits. (1) If the auditor concludes in his or her
final report that there was a net aggregate underpayment of five
percent or more on the Statements of Account examined in an initial
audit involving a cable system or satellite carrier, a copyright owner
may expand the audit to include all previous Statements filed by that
cable system or satellite carrier that may be timely noticed for audit
under paragraph (c)(2) of this section. The expanded audit shall be
conducted using the procedures set forth in paragraphs (d) through (l)
of this section, with the following exceptions:
(i) The expanded audit may be conducted by the same auditor that
performed the initial audit, provided that the participating copyright
owners provide the licensee with updated information reasonably
sufficient to allow the licensee to determine that there has been no
material change in the auditor's independence and qualifications. In
the alternative, the expanded audit may be conducted by an auditor
selected by the licensee using the procedure set forth in paragraph (d)
of this section.
(ii) The auditor shall deliver his or her final report to the
participating copyright owners and the licensee within five business
days following the last day on which the licensee may provide the
auditor with a written rebuttal pursuant to paragraph (i)(2) of this
section, but shall not be required to deliver the report by November
1st of the year in which the notice was published in the Federal
Register pursuant to paragraph (c) of this section.
(2) An expanded audit of a cable system or a satellite carrier that
is conducted pursuant to paragraph (n)(1) of this section may be
conducted concurrently with another audit involving that same licensee.
(3) If the auditor concludes in his or her final report that there
was a net aggregate underpayment of five percent or more on the
Statements of Account examined in an initial audit involving an MSO:
(i) The cable systems included in the initial audit of that MSO
shall be subject to an expanded audit in accordance with paragraph
(n)(1) of this section; and
(ii) The MSO shall be subject to an initial audit involving a
sample of no more than thirty percent of its Form 3 cable systems and
no more than thirty percent of its Form 2 cable systems, provided that
the notice of intent to conduct that audit is filed in the same
calendar year as the delivery of such final report.
(o) Retention of records. For each Statement of Account or amended
Statement that a statutory licensee files with the Office for
accounting periods beginning on or after January 1, 2010, the licensee
shall maintain all records necessary to confirm the correctness of the
calculations and royalty payments reported in each Statement or amended
Statement for at least three and one-half
[[Page 55712]]
years after the last day of the year in which that Statement or amended
Statement was filed with the Office and, in the event that such
Statement or amended Statement is the subject of an audit conducted
pursuant to this section, shall continue to maintain those records
until three years after the auditor delivers the final report to the
participating copyright owners and the licensee pursuant to paragraph
(i)(3) of this section.
Sec. 201.17 [Amended]
0
3. Amend Sec. 201.17 as follows:
0
a. In paragraphs (m)(2) and (m)(4)(i) by removing ``(m)(3)'' and adding
in its place ``(m)(4)''.
0
b. In paragraphs (m)(2)(ii), (m)(4)(iii)(C), and (m)(4)(iv)(A) by
removing ``(m)(1)(iii)'' and adding in its place ``(m)(2)(iii)''.
0
c. In paragraph (m)(4) by removing ``(m)(1)'' and adding in its place
``(m)(2)''.
0
d. In paragraph (m)(4)(iii)(A) by removing ``(m)(1)(i)'' and adding in
its place ``(m)(2)(i)''.
0
e. In paragraph (m)(4)(iii)(B) by removing ``(m)(1)(ii)'' and adding in
its place ``(m)(2)(ii)''.
0
f. In paragraph (m)(4)(vi) by removing ``(m)(3)(i)'' and adding in its
place ``(m)(4)(i)''.
Dated: September 10, 2014.
Jacqueline C. Charlesworth,
General Counsel and Associate Register of Copyrights.
[FR Doc. 2014-21944 Filed 9-16-14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 1410-30-P