Notices of Intention and Statements of Account Under Compulsory License To Make and Distribute Phonorecords of Musical Works, 63061-63066 [2018-26579]
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List of Subjects in 33 CFR Part 165
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requirements, Security measures,
Waterways.
For the reasons discussed in the
preamble, the Coast Guard amends 33
CFR part 165 as follows:
PART 165—REGULATED NAVIGATION
AREAS AND LIMITED ACCESS AREAS
1. The authority citation for part 165
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 33 U.S.C. 1231; 50 U.S.C. 191;
33 CFR 1.05–1, 6.04–1, 6.04–6, and 160.5;
Department of Homeland Security Delegation
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§ 165.T01–0843 Safety Zone; Barters
Island Bridge, Back River, Barters Island,
ME.
(a) Location. The following area is a
safety zone: All navigable waters on
Back River, within a 50-yard radius of
the center point of the Barters Island
Bridge that spans Back River between
Barters Island and Hodgdon Island in
position 43°52′51″ N, 069°40′19″ W
(NAD 83).
(b) Definitions. As used in this
section:
Designated representative means any
Coast Guard commissioned, warrant,
petty officer, or any federal, state, or
local law enforcement officer who has
been designated by the Captain of the
Port (COTP) Northern New England, to
act on his or her behalf. The designated
representative may be on an official
patrol vessel or may be on shore and
will communicate with vessels via
VHF–FM radio or loudhailer. In
addition, members of the Coast Guard
Auxiliary may be present to inform
vessel operators of this regulation.
Official patrol vessels means any
Coast Guard, Coast Guard Auxiliary,
state, or local law enforcement vessels
assigned or approved by the COTP
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Northern New England to enforce this
section.
(c) Effective and enforcement period.
This rule is effective without actual
notice from December 7, 2018 through
11:59 p.m. on January 31, 2021. For the
purposes of enforcement, actual notice
will be used from 12:01 a.m. on
December 1, 2018 through December 7,
2018. This rule will only be enforced
during operations on replacement of the
Barters Island Bridge or other instances
which may cause a hazard to navigation,
or when deemed necessary by the
Captain of the Port (COTP), Northern
New England.
(d) Regulations. The general
regulations contained in § 165.23, as
well as the following regulations, apply:
(1) No person or vessel may enter or
remain in this safety zone without the
permission of the COTP or the COTP’s
designated representative.
(2) To obtain permission required by
this regulation, individuals may reach
the COTP or the COTP’s designated
representative via Channel 16 (VHF–
FM) or (207) 741–5465 (Sector Northern
New England Command Center).
(3) During periods of enforcement,
any person or vessel permitted to enter
the safety zone shall comply with the
directions and orders of the COTP or the
COTP’s designated representative.
(4) During periods of enforcement,
upon being hailed by a U.S. Coast Guard
vessel by siren, radio, flashing lights, or
other means, the operator of a vessel
within the zone must proceed as
directed. Any person or vessel within
the safety zone shall exit the zone when
directed by the COTP or the COTP’s
designated representative.
Dated: November 30, 2018.
B.J. LeFebvre,
Captain, U.S. Coast Guard, Captain of the
Port, Sector Northern New England.
[FR Doc. 2018–26578 Filed 12–6–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110–04–P
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
Copyright Office
37 CFR Parts 201, 203, and 210
[Docket No. 2018–10]
Notices of Intention and Statements of
Account Under Compulsory License
To Make and Distribute Phonorecords
of Musical Works
U.S. Copyright Office, Library
of Congress.
ACTION: Interim rule with request for
comments.
AGENCY:
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63061
The U.S. Copyright Office is
issuing interim regulations pursuant to
the Musical Works Modernization Act,
title I of the recently enacted Orrin G.
Hatch–Bob Goodlatte Music
Modernization Act. This interim rule
amends the Office’s existing regulations
pertaining to the compulsory license to
make and distribute phonorecords of
musical works so as to conform the
existing regulations to the new law,
including with respect to the operation
of notices of intention and statements of
account, and to make other minor
technical updates. To be clear, this
interim rule is generally directed at the
present transition period before a
blanket license is offered by a
mechanical licensing collective and
does not include regulatory updates that
may be required in connection with the
future offering of that blanket license;
such updates will be the subject of
future rulemakings. These regulations
are issued on an interim basis with
opportunity for public comment to
avoid delay in making these necessary
updates and clarifications and because
they are technical in nature. The Office
welcomes comment on these interim
regulations.
DATES: The effective date of the interim
regulations is December 7, 2018. Written
comments must be received no later
than 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time on
January 22, 2019.
ADDRESSES: For reasons of government
efficiency, the Copyright Office is using
the regulations.gov system for the
submission and posting of public
comments in this proceeding. All
comments are therefore to be submitted
electronically through regulations.gov.
Specific instructions for submitting
comments are available on the
Copyright Office’s website at https://
www.copyright.gov/rulemaking/mma115-techamend/. If electronic
submission of comments is not feasible
due to lack of access to a computer
and/or the internet, please contact the
Office using the contact information
below for special instructions.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Regan A. Smith, General Counsel and
Associate Register of Copyrights, by
email at regans@copyright.gov, Steve
Ruwe, Assistant General Counsel, by
email at sruwe@copyright.gov, or Jason
E. Sloan, Assistant General Counsel, by
email at jslo@copyright.gov. Each can be
contacted by telephone by calling (202)
707–8350.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
I. Background
On October 11, 2018, the president
signed into law the Orrin G. Hatch–Bob
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Goodlatte Music Modernization Act
(‘‘MMA’’).1 This bipartisan and
unanimously enacted legislation
represents the realization of years of
effort by a wide array of policymakers
and stakeholders, as well as the U.S.
Copyright Office, to update the music
licensing landscape to better facilitate
legal licensing of music by digital
services.2
Title I of the MMA, the Musical
Works Modernization Act, substantially
modifies the compulsory ‘‘mechanical’’
license for making and distributing
phonorecords of nondramatic musical
works available under 17 U.S.C. 115.
Prior to the MMA, a compulsory license
was obtained by licensees on a perwork, song-by-song basis, whereby a
licensee was required to serve a notice
of intention to obtain a compulsory
license (‘‘NOI’’) on the relevant
copyright owner (or file the NOI with
the Copyright Office if the Office’s
public records did not identify the
copyright owner and include an address
at which notice could be served) and
then pay applicable royalties
accompanied by accounting
statements.3
The MMA amends this regime in
multiple ways, most significantly by
establishing a new blanket compulsory
license that digital music providers may
obtain to make digital phonorecord
deliveries (‘‘DPDs’’) of musical works,
including in the form of permanent
downloads, limited downloads, or
interactive streams.4 Instead of licensing
one song at a time by serving NOIs on
individual copyright owners, the
blanket license will cover all musical
works available for compulsory
licensing and will be centrally
administered by a new entity called the
mechanical licensing collective
(‘‘MLC’’), to be designated by the
Register of Copyrights.5 Under the
MMA, compulsory licensing of
phonorecords that are not DPDs (e.g.,
1 Public
Law 115–264, 132 Stat. 3676 (2018).
S. Rep. No. 115–339, at 1–2 (2018); Report
and Section-by-Section Analysis of H.R. 1551 by the
Chairmen and Ranking Members of Senate and
House Judiciary Committees, at 1 (2018), https://
judiciary.house.gov/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/
Music-Modernization-Act.pdf; see also H.R. Rep.
No. 115–651, at 2–3 (2018) (detailing the House
Judiciary Committee’s efforts to review music
copyright laws).
3 See 17 U.S.C. 115(b)(1), (c)(5) (2017); U.S.
Copyright Office, Copyright and the Music
Marketplace 28–31 (2015), https://
www.copyright.gov/policy/musiclicensingstudy/
copyright-and-the-music-marketplace.pdf
(describing operation of prior section 115 license).
4 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(1), (e)(7); see H.R. Rep. No.
115–651, at 4–6 (describing operation of the blanket
license and the new mechanical licensing
collective); S. Rep. No. 115–339, at 3–6 (same).
5 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(1), (3).
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CDs, vinyl, tapes, and other types of
physical phonorecords) continues to
operate on a per-work, song-by-song
basis, the same as before.6
The new blanket license created by
the MMA will not become available
until the license availability date, which
is January 1 following the expiration of
the 2-year period after the enactment
date, or January 1, 2021.7 Until that
time, the MMA ‘‘creates a transition
period in order to move from the current
work-by-work license to the new
blanket license.’’ 8 During this current
transition period, anyone seeking to
obtain a compulsory license to make
DPDs must continue to do so on a songby-song basis by serving NOIs on
copyright owners ‘‘if the identity and
location of the musical work copyright
owner is known,’’ and paying them
applicable royalties accompanied by
statements of account.9 If the musical
work copyright owner is unknown, a
digital music provider may no longer
file a NOI with the Copyright Office, but
must ‘‘continue[] to search for the
musical work copyright owner’’ using
good-faith, commercially reasonable
efforts.10 The digital music provider
must eventually either account for and
pay accrued royalties to the relevant
musical work copyright owner(s) when
found or, if they are not found before
the end of the transition period, account
for and transfer the royalties to the MLC
at that time.11 A digital music provider
complying with these requirements can
avail itself of a limitation on liability for
making an unauthorized DPD to the
royalties that would be due under the
compulsory license.12
On and after the license availability
date, a compulsory license to make
DPDs will generally only be available
through the new blanket license, subject
to a limited exception for record
companies to continue using the songby-song licensing process to make and
distribute, or authorize the making and
distribution of, permanent downloads
embodying a specific individual
6 Id. 115(b)(1); see H.R. Rep. No. 115–651, at 3
(noting ‘‘[t]his is the historical method by which
record labels have obtained compulsory licenses’’);
S. Rep. No. 115–339, at 3 (same); see also U.S.
Copyright Office, Orrin G. Hatch–Bob Goodlatte
Music Modernization Act, https://
www.copyright.gov/music-modernization/.
7 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(2)(B), (e)(15).
8 H.R. Rep. No. 115–651, at 10; S. Rep. No. 115–
339, at 10.
9 17 U.S.C. 115(b)(2)(A), (c)(2)(I); H.R. Rep. No.
115–651, at 4; S. Rep. No. 115–339, at 3.
10 17 U.S.C. 115(b)(2)(A), (d)(9)(D)(i), (d)(10)(A)–
(B); H.R. Rep. No. 115–651, at 4, 10; S. Rep. No.
115–339, at 3, 10, 22.
11 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(10)(B); see H.R. Rep. No. 115–
651, at 4, 10; S. Rep. No. 115–339, at 3, 10.
12 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(10)(A)–(B); see H.R. Rep. No.
115–651, at 4, 10; S. Rep. No. 115–339, at 3, 10.
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musical work (called an ‘‘individual
download license’’).13 As the legislative
history notes, the MMA ‘‘maintains the
‘pass-through’ license for record labels
to obtain and pass through mechanical
license rights for individual permanent
downloads,’’ but eliminates the passthrough license for digital music
providers ‘‘to engage in activities related
to interactive streams or limited
downloads.’’ 14
II. Interim Rule
The Office promulgates the following
interim rule to make technical
amendments to its existing section 115related regulations to harmonize them
with the MMA’s requirements, and to
make other minor technical updates.
These amendments largely fall into two
categories: Those affecting NOIs and
those affecting statements of account.15
The Office declines at this time to
substantively amend the existing
regulations beyond the statutorily
required updates. The intent of the
legislation does not signal to the Office
that it should be overhauling its existing
regulations during the transition period
before the blanket license becomes
available; such changes could alter
private companies’ long-established
business practices and expectations
with respect to NOIs and royalty
statements during the transition period
beyond what the statute requires.
Having said that, the Office welcomes
public comment on these amendments
and any other specific technical
amendments that stakeholders would
like the Office to consider.
A. Notices of Intention
Under the interim rule, 37 CFR 201.18
is primarily updated to implement 17
U.S.C. 115(b), as amended by the MMA.
As outlined above, as of enactment of
the MMA on October 11, 2018: (1) NOIs
pertaining to phonorecords that are not
DPDs (i.e., physical phonorecords such
as CDs, vinyl, or tapes) may still be
served on copyright owners or, if the
registration or other public records of
the Copyright Office do not identify the
copyright owner and include an address
at which the NOI can be served, filed
with the Copyright Office, the same as
13 17 U.S.C. 115(b)(2)(B), (b)(3), (e)(12); see H.R.
Rep. No. 115–651, at 4; S. Rep. No. 115–339, at 3–
4.
14 H.R. Rep. No. 115–651, at 4; S. Rep. No. 115–
339, at 4.
15 This interim rule also makes minor technical
changes to other provisions relating to section 115,
such as updating the description of the Office’s
Licensing Division in its FOIA-related regulations.
The Office is also taking this opportunity to make
an additional technical update to its FOIA-related
regulations to reflect the Office’s current
organizational structure.
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before enactment of the MMA; (2) NOIs
pertaining to DPDs (e.g., permanent
downloads, limited downloads, or
interactive streams) may still be served
on copyright owners until the license
availability date, but not afterward,
except in the case of a record company
seeking an individual download license;
and (3) NOIs pertaining to DPDs can no
longer be filed with the Copyright Office
under any circumstances.16 The
definition of ‘‘digital phonorecord
delivery’’ is also updated in the
regulation to match the amended
definition in the MMA.
Under the interim rule, the Office is
not making any changes to the form,
content, or manner of service for NOIs.
In addition to the conforming
amendments necessitated by the MMA,
the Office is taking this opportunity to
make two minor clarifying technical
updates. First, the regulations
previously stated that the Office does
not provide forms to use for serving or
filing NOIs, but since 2016, the Office
has had a required form that must be
used to file NOIs electronically with the
Office.17 The interim rule acknowledges
this electronic form. Second, the interim
rule clarifies the Office’s current
practice, as detailed in a 2017 policy
statement, of charging a filing fee for socalled ‘‘returned-to-sender NOIs’’ 18
submitted to the Office.19 Of course,
both of these updates only apply to
NOIs pertaining to phonorecords that
are not DPDs.
B. Statements of Account
Under the interim rule, the Office is
not making any amendments to the
form, content, or manner of service for
monthly or annual statements of
account under subpart B of part 210 of
the Office’s regulations. But the interim
rule clarifies that on and after the
license availability date, these
regulations will not apply to any DPDs
made under a compulsory license,
unless they are made by a record
company under an individual download
license.20 This means that the
regulations will not apply to digital
music providers reporting and paying
royalties under a blanket license (such
16 17
U.S.C. 115(b), (d)(9)(D)(i).
Section 115 NOIs May Now Be Filed With
Office In Bulk Electronic Form, U.S. Copyright
Office NewsNet No. 618 (Apr. 13, 2016), https://
www.copyright.gov/newsnet/2016/618.html.
18 A ‘‘returned-to-sender NOI’’ is one that is sent
to the last address for the copyright owner shown
by the Office’s records, but that is returned to the
sender because the copyright owner is no longer
located at that address or refused to accept delivery.
In such cases, the original NOI can be filed with the
Office. See 37 CFR 201.18(f)(2).
19 See 82 FR 52221, 52223 (Nov. 13, 2017).
20 See 17 U.S.C. 115(b)(3).
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activity will be the subject of a separate,
future rulemaking).21
The interim rule also details the
requirements for digital music providers
to report and pay royalties regarding
previously unmatched works for
purposes of eligibility for the limitation
on liability for making unauthorized
DPDs during the transition period before
the blanket license becomes available.
As noted, once a digital music provider
has identified and located a musical
work copyright owner, the statute
requires the provider to pay the
copyright owner all accrued royalties
accompanied by a cumulative statement
of account that includes all of the
information that would have been
provided in monthly statements of
account from the initial use of the work,
had the copyright owner been
previously identified and located.22 If
the digital music provider has not
located the musical work copyright
owner by the license availability date,
the accrued royalties and cumulative
statement must be provided to the
MLC.23 The interim regulations follow
the statute, specifying that the digital
music provider must pay royalties and
provide cumulative statements under
subpart B of part 210 as if they were a
compulsory licensee. In providing these
cumulative statements, the interim rule
also requires digital music providers to
identify the total period covered by the
cumulative statement and the total
royalty payable for the period. This
addition is meant to assist the copyright
owner or the MLC, as the case may be,
to quickly ascertain the sum of the
contents of the cumulative statement.
As mandated by the MMA, the interim
rule also requires that such cumulative
statements include the certification
required for monthly statements of
account under Copyright Office
regulations.24
III. Request for Comments
These interim regulations will go into
effect immediately after publication of
this document in the Federal Register.
Comments will be due 45 days
thereafter. The Copyright Office is
issuing these interim regulations after
finding, for good cause, that notice and
comment prior to their issuance would
be contrary to the public interest.25 The
21 See
id. 115(d)(4)(A)(i).
115(d)(10)(B)(iv)(II)(aa).
23 Id. 115(d)(10)(B)(iv)(III)(aa).
24 See id. 115(d)(10)(B)(iv)(II)(aa), (III)(aa)
(cumulative statements to be provided ‘‘in
accordance with this section and applicable
regulations, including the requisite certification
under subsection (c)(2)(I)’’).
25 In the past, the Copyright Office has similarly
issued interim rules upon the enactment of
22 Id.
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changes to section 115 made by the
MMA were effective on October 11,
2018, and this interim rule conforms the
regulations to the new law and clarifies
for the public the operation of the
Office’s existing section 115-related
regulations during the current transition
period before the license availability
date. The rule also must be issued
without delay because it specifies the
information to be contained in
statements of account provided by
digital music providers seeking to avail
themselves of the limitation on liability
available during this transition period.
Moreover, the amendments made by
this interim rule are meant to be
technical in nature, as they are largely
non-discretionary and merely make
statutorily mandated modifications to
existing rules.
The Copyright Office notes that this is
only the first of what will be a number
of rulemakings required by the MMA
that concern the section 115 license.
Over the next few months, the Office
will be issuing additional notices to
address other issues presented by the
MMA, including the designation of the
MLC and the filing by digital music
providers of notices of license and
reports of usage with the MLC under the
blanket license. This interim rule, in
contrast, does not cover the MLC or
activity under the blanket license, and
comments on such matters should not
be submitted in response to it. Rather,
comments submitted in response to this
notice should be limited to the subjects
of this interim rule. The Office looks
forward to hearing from all who are
interested in these important issues as
the process continues.
List of Subjects
37 CFR Part 201
Copyright, General provisions.
37 CFR Part 203
Freedom of information.
legislation before soliciting public comments. See,
e.g., Filing of Schedules by Rights Owners and
Contact Information by Transmitting Entities
Relating to Pre-1972 Sound Recordings, 83 FR
52150, 52153 (Oct. 16, 2018) (issuing interim rule
regarding certain new types of filings because ‘‘[t]he
MMA requires swift action by the Office’’ and ‘‘a
prompt interim rule best serves the legal interests
of all relevant stakeholders as well as the general
public’’); Freedom of Information Act Regulations,
82 FR 9505, 9506 (Feb. 7, 2017) (issuing interim
rule to implement the FOIA Improvement Act of
2016 because ‘‘allowing for notice and public
procedure prior to the issuance of . . . interim
regulations would be impracticable’’); Designation
of Agent to Receive Notification of Claimed
Infringement, 63 FR 59233, 59234 (Nov. 3, 1998)
(issuing interim rule regarding designation of agent
after enactment of the Digital Millennium Copyright
Act because ‘‘online service providers may wish
immediately to designate agents to receive
notification of claimed infringement’’).
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37 CFR Part 210
Copyright, Phonorecords, Recordings.
Interim Regulations
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Copyright Office amends
37 CFR parts 201, 203, and 210 as
follows:
§ 201.18 Notice of intention to obtain a
compulsory license for making and
distributing phonorecords of nondramatic
musical works.
PART 201—GENERAL PROVISIONS
1. The authority citation for part 201
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 17 U.S.C. 702.
2. Amend § 201.18 as follows:
a. Revise paragraphs (a)(1) and (2).
b. In paragraph (a)(3):
i. Remove ‘‘is each’’ and add in its
place ‘‘means each’’.
■ ii. Remove ‘‘which results’’ and add in
its place ‘‘that results’’.
■ iii. Remove ‘‘nondramatic’’.
■ iv. Add two sentences at the end of
the paragraph.
■ c. In paragraph (a)(4) introductory
text:
■ i. Remove ‘‘A Notice of Intention
shall’’ and add in its place ‘‘As eligible
under paragraph (a)(2) of this section, a
Notice of Intention shall’’.
■ ii. Remove ‘‘(f)(3)’’ and add in its
place ‘‘(f)(2) or (3)’’.
■ d. In paragraph (a)(6), remove
‘‘Notwithstanding paragraph (a)(2) of
this section, a’’ and add in its place ‘‘A’’.
■ e. Revise paragraph (c).
■ f. In paragraph (d)(1)(iii), remove ‘‘(for
example: a record company or digital
music service)’’.
■ g. In paragraph (d)(1)(v)(D), remove
‘‘delivery, or’’ and add in its place
‘‘delivery (if eligible under paragraph
(a)(2) of this section), or’’.
■ h. In paragraph (f)(1):
■ i. Remove ‘‘If the’’ and add in its place
‘‘As eligible under paragraph (a)(2) of
this section, if the’’.
■ ii. Remove the second sentence.
■ i. In paragraph (f)(2):
■ i. Remove ‘‘If the Notice is’’ and add
in its place ‘‘If a Notice of Intention
seeking a compulsory license to make
and distribute phonorecords of a
musical work other than by means of
digital phonorecord delivery is’’.
■ ii. Remove ‘‘accompanied by a’’ and
add in its place ‘‘accompanied by the
fee specified in § 201.3(e) and a’’.
■ j. In paragraph (f)(3), remove ‘‘in the
Notice of Intention, the’’ and add in its
place ‘‘in a Notice of Intention seeking
a compulsory license to make and
distribute phonorecords of a musical
work other than by means of digital
phonorecord delivery, the’’.
■ k. In paragraph (f)(4), remove ‘‘section
115(b)(1) of title 17 of the United States
Code’’ and add in its place ‘‘17 U.S.C.
115(b)’’.
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l. In paragraph (g), add three sentences
at the end of the paragraph.
■ m. In paragraph (h), remove ‘‘section
115(b)(1) of title 17 of the United States
Code’’ and add in its place ‘‘17 U.S.C.
115(b)’’.
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
■
(a) General. (1) A ‘‘Notice of
Intention’’ is a Notice identified in
section 115(b) of title 17 of the United
States Code. If the eligibility
requirements of 17 U.S.C. 115(a) are
satisfied, then, subject to 17 U.S.C.
115(b), a person may serve on a
copyright owner or file with the
Copyright Office, as applicable, a Notice
of Intention and thereby obtain a
compulsory license pursuant to 17
U.S.C. 115.
(2)(i) To obtain a compulsory license
to make and distribute phonorecords of
a musical work other than by means of
digital phonorecord delivery, a Notice
must be served on the copyright owner
or, if the registration or other public
records of the Copyright Office do not
identify the copyright owner and
include an address at which Notice can
be served, filed with the Copyright
Office, before, or not later than 30
calendar days after, making, and before
distributing, any phonorecord of the
work.
(ii) Prior to the license availability
date, as defined in 17 U.S.C. 115(e), to
obtain a compulsory license to make
and distribute phonorecords of a
musical work by means of digital
phonorecord delivery, a Notice must be
served on the copyright owner, before,
or not later than 30 calendar days after,
first making any such digital
phonorecord delivery. On and after the
license availability date, as defined in
17 U.S.C. 115(e), to obtain such a
compulsory license, the procedure
described in 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(2) must be
followed. As of October 11, 2018, the
Copyright Office does not accept
Notices that pertain to digital
phonorecord deliveries, regardless of
whether such a Notice also pertains to
phonorecords that are not digital
phonorecord deliveries.
(iii) Notwithstanding paragraph
(a)(2)(ii) of this section, a record
company, as defined in 17 U.S.C. 115(e),
may, on or after the license availability
date, as defined in 17 U.S.C. 115(e),
obtain an individual download license,
as described in 17 U.S.C. 115(b)(3) and
defined in 17 U.S.C. 115(e), by serving
a Notice on the copyright owner, before,
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
or not later than 30 calendar days after,
first making any digital phonorecord
delivery in the form of a permanent
download.
(3) * * * Notwithstanding the
foregoing, a permanent download, a
limited download, or an interactive
stream, as defined in 17 U.S.C. 115(e),
is a digital phonorecord delivery. A
digital phonorecord delivery does not
include the digital transmission of
sounds accompanying a motion picture
or other audiovisual work as defined in
17 U.S.C. 101.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Form. The Copyright Office does
not provide physical printed forms for
the use of persons serving or filing
Notices of Intention, but Notices filed
electronically must be submitted to the
Office in the form and manner
prescribed in instructions on the
Office’s website.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) * * * Notwithstanding the
foregoing, the Copyright Office will
examine Notices to ensure that they do
not pertain to digital phonorecord
deliveries. Any Notice submitted to the
Office that does pertain to digital
phonorecord deliveries, regardless of
whether such a Notice also pertains to
phonorecords that are not digital
phonorecord deliveries, will be rejected.
The Office’s decision to accept or reject
such a Notice is without prejudice to
any party claiming that the Notice does
or does not pertain to digital
phonorecord deliveries, including
before a court of competent jurisdiction.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 203—FREEDOM OF
INFORMATION ACT: POLICIES AND
PROCEDURES
3. The authority citation for part 203
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552.
4. Amend § 203.3 as follows:
a. Remove paragraph (b)(2).
b. Redesignate paragraph (b)(3) as
paragraph (b)(2).
■ c. Revise paragraphs (h) and (i).
The revisions read as follows:
■
■
■
§ 203.3
Organization.
*
*
*
*
*
(h) The Copyright Modernization
Office (‘‘CMO’’) is headed by the
Director, who is the Register’s top
advisor on Copyright Office
modernization and oversees the
development and implementation of
technology initiatives affecting
registration and recordation. This Office
directs and coordinates all
modernization activities on behalf of the
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U.S. Copyright Office, including
resources, communications, stakeholder
engagement, and business project
management. The CMO ensures that
modernization activities are
continuously aligned with the Office’s
and the Library of Congress’s strategic
goals, and collaborates with the Office
and the Library to drive modernization
efforts. The CMO provides project
management, data management/
analytics, and business analysis. It also
serves as the primary liaison with the
Library of Congress’s Office and Chief
Information Officer (‘‘OCIO’’) and serves
in a leadership function on the Office’s
Modernization Governance Board.
(i) The Chief Financial Officer
(‘‘CFO’’) is a senior staff position that
serves under the Register and oversees
all fiscal, financial, and budgetary
activities for the Copyright Office. The
CFO also oversees the Licensing
Division, which administers certain
statutory licenses set forth in the
Copyright Act. The Division collects
royalty payments and examines
statements of account for the cable
statutory license (17 U.S.C. 111), the
satellite statutory license for
retransmission of distant television
broadcast stations (17 U.S.C. 119), and
the statutory license for digital audio
recording technology (17 U.S.C. chapter
10). The Division also accepts and
records certain documents associated
with the use of the mechanical statutory
license for making and distributing
phonorecords of nondramatic musical
works (17 U.S.C. 115) and the statutory
licenses for publicly performing sound
recordings by means of digital audio
transmission (17 U.S.C. 112, 114).
*
*
*
*
*
PART 210—COMPULSORY LICENSE
FOR MAKING AND DISTRIBUTING
PHYSICAL AND DIGITAL
PHONORECORDS OF NONDRAMATIC
MUSICAL WORKS
5. The authority citation for part 210
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 17 U.S.C. 115, 702.
6. Amend subpart B by revising the
heading to read as follows:
■
Subpart B—Royalties and Statements
of Account Under Non-Blanket
Compulsory License
7. Amend § 210.11 by adding a
sentence at the end of the paragraph to
read as follows:
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with RULES
■
§ 210.11
General.
* * * On and after the license
availability date, this subpart shall not
apply with respect to any digital
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:58 Dec 06, 2018
Jkt 247001
phonorecord delivery made pursuant to
the compulsory license unless such
digital phonorecord delivery is made by
a record company under an individual
download license under 17 U.S.C.
115(b)(3), which must be reported and
paid for in accordance with § 210.21;
that is, this subpart shall not apply
where a digital music provider reports
and pays royalties under a blanket
license under 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(4)(A)(i).
§ 210.12
[Amended]
8. Amend § 210.12 as follows:
a. In paragraphs (a) and (b), remove
‘‘115(c)(5)’’ and add in its place
‘‘115(c)(2)(I)’’.
■ b. In paragraph (c):
■ i. Remove ‘‘is each’’ and add in its
place ‘‘means each’’.
■ ii. Remove ‘‘which results’’ and add in
its place ‘‘that results’’.
■ iii. Remove ‘‘nondramatic’’.
■ iv. Add two sentences at the end of
the paragraph.
■ c. Add paragraphs (k) through (o).
The additions read as follows:
■
■
§ 210.12
Definitions.
(c) * * * Notwithstanding the
foregoing, a permanent download, a
limited download, or an interactive
stream, as defined in 17 U.S.C. 115(e),
is a digital phonorecord delivery. A
digital phonorecord delivery does not
include the digital transmission of
sounds accompanying a motion picture
or other audiovisual work as defined in
17 U.S.C. 101.
*
*
*
*
*
(k) The term license availability date
shall have the meaning given in 17
U.S.C. 115(e)(15).
(l) The term digital music provider
shall have the meaning given in 17
U.S.C. 115(e)(8).
(m) The term blanket license shall
have the meaning given in 17 U.S.C.
115(e)(5).
(n) The term record company shall
have the meaning given in 17 U.S.C.
115(e)(26).
(o) The term individual download
license shall have the meaning given in
17 U.S.C. 115(e)(12).
§ 210.16
[Amended]
9. Amend § 210.16(d)(3) by removing
‘‘115(c)(5)’’ and adding in its place
‘‘115(c)(2)(I)’’.
■
§ 210.19
[Amended]
10. Amend § 210.19 by removing
‘‘115(c)(6)’’ and adding in its place
‘‘115(c)(2)(J)’’.
■ 11. Add §§ 210.20 and 210.21 to read
as follows:
■
PO 00000
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
63065
§ 210.20 Statements required for limitation
on liability for digital music providers for
the transition period prior to the license
availability date.
This section specifies the
requirements for a digital music
provider to report and pay royalties for
purposes of being eligible for the
limitation on liability described in 17
U.S.C. 115(d)(10). Terms used in this
section that are defined in 17 U.S.C.
115(e) shall have the meaning given
those terms in 17 U.S.C. 115(e).
(a) If the required matching efforts are
successful in identifying and locating a
copyright owner of a musical work (or
share thereof) by the end of the calendar
month in which the digital music
provider first makes use of the work, the
digital music provider shall provide
statements of account and pay royalties
to such copyright owner as a
compulsory licensee in accordance with
this subpart.
(b) If the copyright owner is not
identified or located by the end of the
calendar month in which the digital
music provider first makes use of the
work, the digital music provider shall
accrue and hold royalties calculated
under the applicable statutory rate in
accordance with usage of the work, from
initial use of the work until the accrued
royalties can be paid to the copyright
owner or are required to be transferred
to the mechanical licensing collective,
as follows:
(1) Accrued royalties shall be
maintained by the digital music
provider in accordance with generally
accepted accounting principles.
(2) If a copyright owner of an
unmatched musical work (or share
thereof) is identified and located by or
to the digital music provider before the
license availability date, the digital
music provider shall—
(i) Not later than 45 calendar days
after the end of the calendar month
during which the copyright owner was
identified and located, pay the
copyright owner all accrued royalties,
such payment to be accompanied by a
cumulative statement of account that
includes all of the information that
would have been provided to the
copyright owner had the digital music
provider been providing Monthly
Statements of Account as a compulsory
licensee in accordance with this subpart
to the copyright owner from initial use
of the work, and including, in addition
to the information and certification
required by § 210.16, a clear
identification of the total period covered
by the cumulative statement and the
total royalty payable for the period;
(ii) Beginning with the accounting
period following the calendar month in
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amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with RULES
which the copyright owner was
identified and located, and for all other
accounting periods prior to the license
availability date, provide Monthly
Statements of Account and pay royalties
to the copyright owner as a compulsory
licensee in accordance with this
subpart; and
(iii) Beginning with the monthly
royalty reporting period commencing on
the license availability date, report
usage and pay royalties for such musical
work (or share thereof) for such
reporting period and reporting periods
thereafter to the mechanical licensing
collective, as required under 17 U.S.C.
115(d) and applicable regulations.
(3) If a copyright owner of an
unmatched musical work (or share
thereof) is not identified and located by
the license availability date, the digital
music provider shall—
(i) Not later than 45 calendar days
after the license availability date,
transfer all accrued royalties to the
mechanical licensing collective, such
payment to be accompanied by a
cumulative statement of account that
includes all of the information that
would have been provided to the
copyright owner had the digital music
provider been serving Monthly
Statements of Account as a compulsory
licensee in accordance with this subpart
on the copyright owner from initial use
of the work, accompanied by a
certification by a duly authorized officer
of the digital music provider that the
digital music provider has fulfilled the
requirements of 17 U.S.C.
115(d)(10)(B)(i) and (ii) but has not been
successful in locating or identifying the
copyright owner, and further including,
in addition to the information and
certification required by § 210.16, a
clear identification of the total period
covered by the cumulative statement
and the total royalty payable for the
period; and
(ii) Beginning with the monthly
royalty reporting period commencing on
the license availability date, report
usage and pay royalties for such musical
work (or share thereof) for such period
and reporting periods thereafter to the
mechanical licensing collective, as
required under 17 U.S.C. 115(d) and
applicable regulations.
§ 210.21 Record companies using
individual download licenses.
A record company that obtains an
individual download license under 17
U.S.C. 115(b)(3) shall provide
statements of account and pay royalties
as a compulsory licensee in accordance
with this subpart.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:58 Dec 06, 2018
Jkt 247001
Dated: November 30, 2018.
Karyn A. Temple,
Acting Register of Copyrights and Director
of the U.S. Copyright Office.
Approved by:
Carla D. Hayden,
Librarian of Congress.
[FR Doc. 2018–26579 Filed 12–6–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 1410–30–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Parts 9 and 721
[EPA–HQ–OPPT–2018–0649; FRL–9987–43]
RIN 2070–AB27
Significant New Use Rules on Certain
Chemical Substances; Withdrawal
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Withdrawal of direct final rule.
AGENCY:
EPA is withdrawing
significant new use rules (SNURs)
promulgated under the Toxic
Substances Control Act (TSCA) for 28
chemical substances, which were the
subject of premanufacture notices
(PMNs). EPA published these SNURs
using direct final rulemaking
procedures, which requires EPA to take
certain actions if an adverse comment is
received. EPA received adverse
comments regarding the SNURs
identified in the direct final rule.
Therefore, the Agency is withdrawing
the direct final rule SNURs identified in
this document, as required under the
direct final rulemaking procedures.
DATES: The direct final rule published at
83 FR 50838 on October 10, 2018 (FRL–
9984–65) is withdrawn effective
December 7, 2018.
ADDRESSES: The docket for this action,
identified by docket identification (ID)
number EPA–HQ–OPPT–2018–0649, is
available at https://www.regulations.gov
or at the Office of Pollution Prevention
and Toxics Docket (OPPT Docket),
Environmental Protection Agency
Docket Center (EPA/DC), West William
Jefferson Clinton Bldg., Rm. 3334, 1301
Constitution Ave. NW, Washington, DC.
The Public Reading Room is open from
8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through
Friday, excluding legal holidays. The
telephone number for the Public
Reading Room is (202) 566–1744, and
the telephone number for the OPPT
Docket is (202) 566–0280. Please review
the visitor instructions and additional
information about the docket available
at https://www.epa.gov/dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
SUMMARY:
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For technical information contact:
Kenneth Moss, Chemical Control
Division (7405M), Office of Pollution
Prevention and Toxics, Environmental
Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania
Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20460–0001;
telephone number: (202) 564–9232;
email address: moss.kenneth@epa.gov.
For general information contact: The
TSCA-Hotline, ABVI-Goodwill, 422
South Clinton Ave., Rochester, NY
14620; telephone number: (202) 554–
1404; email address: TSCA-Hotline@
epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Does this action apply to me?
A list of potentially affected entities is
provided in the Federal Register of
October 10, 2018 (83 FR 50838) (FRL–
9984–65). If you have questions
regarding the applicability of this action
to a particular entity, consult the
technical person listed under FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
II. What direct final SNURs are being
withdrawn?
In the Federal Register of October 10,
2018 (83 FR 50838) (FRL–9984–65),
EPA issued direct final SNURs for 28
chemical substances that are identified
in the document. Because the Agency
received adverse comments regarding
the SNURs identified in the document,
EPA is withdrawing the direct final
SNURs issued for these 28 chemical
substances, which were the subject of
PMNs. In addition to the Direct Final
SNURs, elsewhere in the same issue of
the Federal Register of October 10, 2018
(83 FR 50872) (FRL–9984–67), EPA
issued proposed SNURs covering these
28 chemical substances. EPA will
address all adverse public comments in
a subsequent final rule, based on the
proposed rule.
III. Good Cause Finding
EPA determined that this document is
not subject to the 30-day delay of
effective date generally required by the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA) (5
U.S.C. 553(d)) because of the time
limitations for publication in the
Federal Register. This document must
publish on or before the effective date
of the direct final rule containing the
direct final SNURs being withdrawn.
IV. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
This action withdraws regulatory
requirements that have not gone into
effect and which contain no new or
amended requirements and reopens a
comment period. As such, the Agency
has determined that this action will not
have any adverse impacts, economic or
E:\FR\FM\07DER1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 235 (Friday, December 7, 2018)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 63061-63066]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-26579]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
Copyright Office
37 CFR Parts 201, 203, and 210
[Docket No. 2018-10]
Notices of Intention and Statements of Account Under Compulsory
License To Make and Distribute Phonorecords of Musical Works
AGENCY: U.S. Copyright Office, Library of Congress.
ACTION: Interim rule with request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The U.S. Copyright Office is issuing interim regulations
pursuant to the Musical Works Modernization Act, title I of the
recently enacted Orrin G. Hatch-Bob Goodlatte Music Modernization Act.
This interim rule amends the Office's existing regulations pertaining
to the compulsory license to make and distribute phonorecords of
musical works so as to conform the existing regulations to the new law,
including with respect to the operation of notices of intention and
statements of account, and to make other minor technical updates. To be
clear, this interim rule is generally directed at the present
transition period before a blanket license is offered by a mechanical
licensing collective and does not include regulatory updates that may
be required in connection with the future offering of that blanket
license; such updates will be the subject of future rulemakings. These
regulations are issued on an interim basis with opportunity for public
comment to avoid delay in making these necessary updates and
clarifications and because they are technical in nature. The Office
welcomes comment on these interim regulations.
DATES: The effective date of the interim regulations is December 7,
2018. Written comments must be received no later than 11:59 p.m.
Eastern Time on January 22, 2019.
ADDRESSES: For reasons of government efficiency, the Copyright Office
is using the regulations.gov system for the submission and posting of
public comments in this proceeding. All comments are therefore to be
submitted electronically through regulations.gov. Specific instructions
for submitting comments are available on the Copyright Office's website
at https://www.copyright.gov/rulemaking/mma-115-techamend/. If
electronic submission of comments is not feasible due to lack of access
to a computer and/or the internet, please contact the Office using the
contact information below for special instructions.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Regan A. Smith, General Counsel and
Associate Register of Copyrights, by email at [email protected],
Steve Ruwe, Assistant General Counsel, by email at [email protected],
or Jason E. Sloan, Assistant General Counsel, by email at
[email protected]. Each can be contacted by telephone by calling (202)
707-8350.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
On October 11, 2018, the president signed into law the Orrin G.
Hatch-Bob
[[Page 63062]]
Goodlatte Music Modernization Act (``MMA'').\1\ This bipartisan and
unanimously enacted legislation represents the realization of years of
effort by a wide array of policymakers and stakeholders, as well as the
U.S. Copyright Office, to update the music licensing landscape to
better facilitate legal licensing of music by digital services.\2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Public Law 115-264, 132 Stat. 3676 (2018).
\2\ See S. Rep. No. 115-339, at 1-2 (2018); Report and Section-
by-Section Analysis of H.R. 1551 by the Chairmen and Ranking Members
of Senate and House Judiciary Committees, at 1 (2018), https://judiciary.house.gov/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/Music-Modernization-Act.pdf; see also H.R. Rep. No. 115-651, at 2-3 (2018) (detailing
the House Judiciary Committee's efforts to review music copyright
laws).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Title I of the MMA, the Musical Works Modernization Act,
substantially modifies the compulsory ``mechanical'' license for making
and distributing phonorecords of nondramatic musical works available
under 17 U.S.C. 115. Prior to the MMA, a compulsory license was
obtained by licensees on a per-work, song-by-song basis, whereby a
licensee was required to serve a notice of intention to obtain a
compulsory license (``NOI'') on the relevant copyright owner (or file
the NOI with the Copyright Office if the Office's public records did
not identify the copyright owner and include an address at which notice
could be served) and then pay applicable royalties accompanied by
accounting statements.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ See 17 U.S.C. 115(b)(1), (c)(5) (2017); U.S. Copyright
Office, Copyright and the Music Marketplace 28-31 (2015), https://www.copyright.gov/policy/musiclicensingstudy/copyright-and-the-music-marketplace.pdf (describing operation of prior section 115
license).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The MMA amends this regime in multiple ways, most significantly by
establishing a new blanket compulsory license that digital music
providers may obtain to make digital phonorecord deliveries (``DPDs'')
of musical works, including in the form of permanent downloads, limited
downloads, or interactive streams.\4\ Instead of licensing one song at
a time by serving NOIs on individual copyright owners, the blanket
license will cover all musical works available for compulsory licensing
and will be centrally administered by a new entity called the
mechanical licensing collective (``MLC''), to be designated by the
Register of Copyrights.\5\ Under the MMA, compulsory licensing of
phonorecords that are not DPDs (e.g., CDs, vinyl, tapes, and other
types of physical phonorecords) continues to operate on a per-work,
song-by-song basis, the same as before.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(1), (e)(7); see H.R. Rep. No. 115-651, at
4-6 (describing operation of the blanket license and the new
mechanical licensing collective); S. Rep. No. 115-339, at 3-6
(same).
\5\ 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(1), (3).
\6\ Id. 115(b)(1); see H.R. Rep. No. 115-651, at 3 (noting
``[t]his is the historical method by which record labels have
obtained compulsory licenses''); S. Rep. No. 115-339, at 3 (same);
see also U.S. Copyright Office, Orrin G. Hatch-Bob Goodlatte Music
Modernization Act, https://www.copyright.gov/music-modernization/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The new blanket license created by the MMA will not become
available until the license availability date, which is January 1
following the expiration of the 2-year period after the enactment date,
or January 1, 2021.\7\ Until that time, the MMA ``creates a transition
period in order to move from the current work-by-work license to the
new blanket license.'' \8\ During this current transition period,
anyone seeking to obtain a compulsory license to make DPDs must
continue to do so on a song-by-song basis by serving NOIs on copyright
owners ``if the identity and location of the musical work copyright
owner is known,'' and paying them applicable royalties accompanied by
statements of account.\9\ If the musical work copyright owner is
unknown, a digital music provider may no longer file a NOI with the
Copyright Office, but must ``continue[] to search for the musical work
copyright owner'' using good-faith, commercially reasonable
efforts.\10\ The digital music provider must eventually either account
for and pay accrued royalties to the relevant musical work copyright
owner(s) when found or, if they are not found before the end of the
transition period, account for and transfer the royalties to the MLC at
that time.\11\ A digital music provider complying with these
requirements can avail itself of a limitation on liability for making
an unauthorized DPD to the royalties that would be due under the
compulsory license.\12\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(2)(B), (e)(15).
\8\ H.R. Rep. No. 115-651, at 10; S. Rep. No. 115-339, at 10.
\9\ 17 U.S.C. 115(b)(2)(A), (c)(2)(I); H.R. Rep. No. 115-651, at
4; S. Rep. No. 115-339, at 3.
\10\ 17 U.S.C. 115(b)(2)(A), (d)(9)(D)(i), (d)(10)(A)-(B); H.R.
Rep. No. 115-651, at 4, 10; S. Rep. No. 115-339, at 3, 10, 22.
\11\ 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(10)(B); see H.R. Rep. No. 115-651, at 4,
10; S. Rep. No. 115-339, at 3, 10.
\12\ 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(10)(A)-(B); see H.R. Rep. No. 115-651, at
4, 10; S. Rep. No. 115-339, at 3, 10.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On and after the license availability date, a compulsory license to
make DPDs will generally only be available through the new blanket
license, subject to a limited exception for record companies to
continue using the song-by-song licensing process to make and
distribute, or authorize the making and distribution of, permanent
downloads embodying a specific individual musical work (called an
``individual download license'').\13\ As the legislative history notes,
the MMA ``maintains the `pass-through' license for record labels to
obtain and pass through mechanical license rights for individual
permanent downloads,'' but eliminates the pass-through license for
digital music providers ``to engage in activities related to
interactive streams or limited downloads.'' \14\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ 17 U.S.C. 115(b)(2)(B), (b)(3), (e)(12); see H.R. Rep. No.
115-651, at 4; S. Rep. No. 115-339, at 3-4.
\14\ H.R. Rep. No. 115-651, at 4; S. Rep. No. 115-339, at 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Interim Rule
The Office promulgates the following interim rule to make technical
amendments to its existing section 115-related regulations to harmonize
them with the MMA's requirements, and to make other minor technical
updates. These amendments largely fall into two categories: Those
affecting NOIs and those affecting statements of account.\15\ The
Office declines at this time to substantively amend the existing
regulations beyond the statutorily required updates. The intent of the
legislation does not signal to the Office that it should be overhauling
its existing regulations during the transition period before the
blanket license becomes available; such changes could alter private
companies' long-established business practices and expectations with
respect to NOIs and royalty statements during the transition period
beyond what the statute requires. Having said that, the Office welcomes
public comment on these amendments and any other specific technical
amendments that stakeholders would like the Office to consider.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ This interim rule also makes minor technical changes to
other provisions relating to section 115, such as updating the
description of the Office's Licensing Division in its FOIA-related
regulations. The Office is also taking this opportunity to make an
additional technical update to its FOIA-related regulations to
reflect the Office's current organizational structure.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. Notices of Intention
Under the interim rule, 37 CFR 201.18 is primarily updated to
implement 17 U.S.C. 115(b), as amended by the MMA. As outlined above,
as of enactment of the MMA on October 11, 2018: (1) NOIs pertaining to
phonorecords that are not DPDs (i.e., physical phonorecords such as
CDs, vinyl, or tapes) may still be served on copyright owners or, if
the registration or other public records of the Copyright Office do not
identify the copyright owner and include an address at which the NOI
can be served, filed with the Copyright Office, the same as
[[Page 63063]]
before enactment of the MMA; (2) NOIs pertaining to DPDs (e.g.,
permanent downloads, limited downloads, or interactive streams) may
still be served on copyright owners until the license availability
date, but not afterward, except in the case of a record company seeking
an individual download license; and (3) NOIs pertaining to DPDs can no
longer be filed with the Copyright Office under any circumstances.\16\
The definition of ``digital phonorecord delivery'' is also updated in
the regulation to match the amended definition in the MMA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ 17 U.S.C. 115(b), (d)(9)(D)(i).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under the interim rule, the Office is not making any changes to the
form, content, or manner of service for NOIs. In addition to the
conforming amendments necessitated by the MMA, the Office is taking
this opportunity to make two minor clarifying technical updates. First,
the regulations previously stated that the Office does not provide
forms to use for serving or filing NOIs, but since 2016, the Office has
had a required form that must be used to file NOIs electronically with
the Office.\17\ The interim rule acknowledges this electronic form.
Second, the interim rule clarifies the Office's current practice, as
detailed in a 2017 policy statement, of charging a filing fee for so-
called ``returned-to-sender NOIs'' \18\ submitted to the Office.\19\ Of
course, both of these updates only apply to NOIs pertaining to
phonorecords that are not DPDs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ See Section 115 NOIs May Now Be Filed With Office In Bulk
Electronic Form, U.S. Copyright Office NewsNet No. 618 (Apr. 13,
2016), https://www.copyright.gov/newsnet/2016/618.html.
\18\ A ``returned-to-sender NOI'' is one that is sent to the
last address for the copyright owner shown by the Office's records,
but that is returned to the sender because the copyright owner is no
longer located at that address or refused to accept delivery. In
such cases, the original NOI can be filed with the Office. See 37
CFR 201.18(f)(2).
\19\ See 82 FR 52221, 52223 (Nov. 13, 2017).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Statements of Account
Under the interim rule, the Office is not making any amendments to
the form, content, or manner of service for monthly or annual
statements of account under subpart B of part 210 of the Office's
regulations. But the interim rule clarifies that on and after the
license availability date, these regulations will not apply to any DPDs
made under a compulsory license, unless they are made by a record
company under an individual download license.\20\ This means that the
regulations will not apply to digital music providers reporting and
paying royalties under a blanket license (such activity will be the
subject of a separate, future rulemaking).\21\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ See 17 U.S.C. 115(b)(3).
\21\ See id. 115(d)(4)(A)(i).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The interim rule also details the requirements for digital music
providers to report and pay royalties regarding previously unmatched
works for purposes of eligibility for the limitation on liability for
making unauthorized DPDs during the transition period before the
blanket license becomes available. As noted, once a digital music
provider has identified and located a musical work copyright owner, the
statute requires the provider to pay the copyright owner all accrued
royalties accompanied by a cumulative statement of account that
includes all of the information that would have been provided in
monthly statements of account from the initial use of the work, had the
copyright owner been previously identified and located.\22\ If the
digital music provider has not located the musical work copyright owner
by the license availability date, the accrued royalties and cumulative
statement must be provided to the MLC.\23\ The interim regulations
follow the statute, specifying that the digital music provider must pay
royalties and provide cumulative statements under subpart B of part 210
as if they were a compulsory licensee. In providing these cumulative
statements, the interim rule also requires digital music providers to
identify the total period covered by the cumulative statement and the
total royalty payable for the period. This addition is meant to assist
the copyright owner or the MLC, as the case may be, to quickly
ascertain the sum of the contents of the cumulative statement. As
mandated by the MMA, the interim rule also requires that such
cumulative statements include the certification required for monthly
statements of account under Copyright Office regulations.\24\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ Id. 115(d)(10)(B)(iv)(II)(aa).
\23\ Id. 115(d)(10)(B)(iv)(III)(aa).
\24\ See id. 115(d)(10)(B)(iv)(II)(aa), (III)(aa) (cumulative
statements to be provided ``in accordance with this section and
applicable regulations, including the requisite certification under
subsection (c)(2)(I)'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
III. Request for Comments
These interim regulations will go into effect immediately after
publication of this document in the Federal Register. Comments will be
due 45 days thereafter. The Copyright Office is issuing these interim
regulations after finding, for good cause, that notice and comment
prior to their issuance would be contrary to the public interest.\25\
The changes to section 115 made by the MMA were effective on October
11, 2018, and this interim rule conforms the regulations to the new law
and clarifies for the public the operation of the Office's existing
section 115-related regulations during the current transition period
before the license availability date. The rule also must be issued
without delay because it specifies the information to be contained in
statements of account provided by digital music providers seeking to
avail themselves of the limitation on liability available during this
transition period. Moreover, the amendments made by this interim rule
are meant to be technical in nature, as they are largely non-
discretionary and merely make statutorily mandated modifications to
existing rules.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ In the past, the Copyright Office has similarly issued
interim rules upon the enactment of legislation before soliciting
public comments. See, e.g., Filing of Schedules by Rights Owners and
Contact Information by Transmitting Entities Relating to Pre-1972
Sound Recordings, 83 FR 52150, 52153 (Oct. 16, 2018) (issuing
interim rule regarding certain new types of filings because ``[t]he
MMA requires swift action by the Office'' and ``a prompt interim
rule best serves the legal interests of all relevant stakeholders as
well as the general public''); Freedom of Information Act
Regulations, 82 FR 9505, 9506 (Feb. 7, 2017) (issuing interim rule
to implement the FOIA Improvement Act of 2016 because ``allowing for
notice and public procedure prior to the issuance of . . . interim
regulations would be impracticable''); Designation of Agent to
Receive Notification of Claimed Infringement, 63 FR 59233, 59234
(Nov. 3, 1998) (issuing interim rule regarding designation of agent
after enactment of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act because
``online service providers may wish immediately to designate agents
to receive notification of claimed infringement'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Copyright Office notes that this is only the first of what will
be a number of rulemakings required by the MMA that concern the section
115 license. Over the next few months, the Office will be issuing
additional notices to address other issues presented by the MMA,
including the designation of the MLC and the filing by digital music
providers of notices of license and reports of usage with the MLC under
the blanket license. This interim rule, in contrast, does not cover the
MLC or activity under the blanket license, and comments on such matters
should not be submitted in response to it. Rather, comments submitted
in response to this notice should be limited to the subjects of this
interim rule. The Office looks forward to hearing from all who are
interested in these important issues as the process continues.
List of Subjects
37 CFR Part 201
Copyright, General provisions.
37 CFR Part 203
Freedom of information.
[[Page 63064]]
37 CFR Part 210
Copyright, Phonorecords, Recordings.
Interim Regulations
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Copyright Office
amends 37 CFR parts 201, 203, and 210 as follows:
PART 201--GENERAL PROVISIONS
0
1. The authority citation for part 201 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 17 U.S.C. 702.
0
2. Amend Sec. 201.18 as follows:
0
a. Revise paragraphs (a)(1) and (2).
0
b. In paragraph (a)(3):
0
i. Remove ``is each'' and add in its place ``means each''.
0
ii. Remove ``which results'' and add in its place ``that results''.
0
iii. Remove ``nondramatic''.
0
iv. Add two sentences at the end of the paragraph.
0
c. In paragraph (a)(4) introductory text:
0
i. Remove ``A Notice of Intention shall'' and add in its place ``As
eligible under paragraph (a)(2) of this section, a Notice of Intention
shall''.
0
ii. Remove ``(f)(3)'' and add in its place ``(f)(2) or (3)''.
0
d. In paragraph (a)(6), remove ``Notwithstanding paragraph (a)(2) of
this section, a'' and add in its place ``A''.
0
e. Revise paragraph (c).
0
f. In paragraph (d)(1)(iii), remove ``(for example: a record company or
digital music service)''.
0
g. In paragraph (d)(1)(v)(D), remove ``delivery, or'' and add in its
place ``delivery (if eligible under paragraph (a)(2) of this section),
or''.
0
h. In paragraph (f)(1):
0
i. Remove ``If the'' and add in its place ``As eligible under paragraph
(a)(2) of this section, if the''.
0
ii. Remove the second sentence.
0
i. In paragraph (f)(2):
0
i. Remove ``If the Notice is'' and add in its place ``If a Notice of
Intention seeking a compulsory license to make and distribute
phonorecords of a musical work other than by means of digital
phonorecord delivery is''.
0
ii. Remove ``accompanied by a'' and add in its place ``accompanied by
the fee specified in Sec. 201.3(e) and a''.
0
j. In paragraph (f)(3), remove ``in the Notice of Intention, the'' and
add in its place ``in a Notice of Intention seeking a compulsory
license to make and distribute phonorecords of a musical work other
than by means of digital phonorecord delivery, the''.
0
k. In paragraph (f)(4), remove ``section 115(b)(1) of title 17 of the
United States Code'' and add in its place ``17 U.S.C. 115(b)''.
0
l. In paragraph (g), add three sentences at the end of the paragraph.
0
m. In paragraph (h), remove ``section 115(b)(1) of title 17 of the
United States Code'' and add in its place ``17 U.S.C. 115(b)''.
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 201.18 Notice of intention to obtain a compulsory license for
making and distributing phonorecords of nondramatic musical works.
(a) General. (1) A ``Notice of Intention'' is a Notice identified
in section 115(b) of title 17 of the United States Code. If the
eligibility requirements of 17 U.S.C. 115(a) are satisfied, then,
subject to 17 U.S.C. 115(b), a person may serve on a copyright owner or
file with the Copyright Office, as applicable, a Notice of Intention
and thereby obtain a compulsory license pursuant to 17 U.S.C. 115.
(2)(i) To obtain a compulsory license to make and distribute
phonorecords of a musical work other than by means of digital
phonorecord delivery, a Notice must be served on the copyright owner
or, if the registration or other public records of the Copyright Office
do not identify the copyright owner and include an address at which
Notice can be served, filed with the Copyright Office, before, or not
later than 30 calendar days after, making, and before distributing, any
phonorecord of the work.
(ii) Prior to the license availability date, as defined in 17
U.S.C. 115(e), to obtain a compulsory license to make and distribute
phonorecords of a musical work by means of digital phonorecord
delivery, a Notice must be served on the copyright owner, before, or
not later than 30 calendar days after, first making any such digital
phonorecord delivery. On and after the license availability date, as
defined in 17 U.S.C. 115(e), to obtain such a compulsory license, the
procedure described in 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(2) must be followed. As of
October 11, 2018, the Copyright Office does not accept Notices that
pertain to digital phonorecord deliveries, regardless of whether such a
Notice also pertains to phonorecords that are not digital phonorecord
deliveries.
(iii) Notwithstanding paragraph (a)(2)(ii) of this section, a
record company, as defined in 17 U.S.C. 115(e), may, on or after the
license availability date, as defined in 17 U.S.C. 115(e), obtain an
individual download license, as described in 17 U.S.C. 115(b)(3) and
defined in 17 U.S.C. 115(e), by serving a Notice on the copyright
owner, before, or not later than 30 calendar days after, first making
any digital phonorecord delivery in the form of a permanent download.
(3) * * * Notwithstanding the foregoing, a permanent download, a
limited download, or an interactive stream, as defined in 17 U.S.C.
115(e), is a digital phonorecord delivery. A digital phonorecord
delivery does not include the digital transmission of sounds
accompanying a motion picture or other audiovisual work as defined in
17 U.S.C. 101.
* * * * *
(c) Form. The Copyright Office does not provide physical printed
forms for the use of persons serving or filing Notices of Intention,
but Notices filed electronically must be submitted to the Office in the
form and manner prescribed in instructions on the Office's website.
* * * * *
(g) * * * Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Copyright Office will
examine Notices to ensure that they do not pertain to digital
phonorecord deliveries. Any Notice submitted to the Office that does
pertain to digital phonorecord deliveries, regardless of whether such a
Notice also pertains to phonorecords that are not digital phonorecord
deliveries, will be rejected. The Office's decision to accept or reject
such a Notice is without prejudice to any party claiming that the
Notice does or does not pertain to digital phonorecord deliveries,
including before a court of competent jurisdiction.
* * * * *
PART 203--FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT: POLICIES AND PROCEDURES
0
3. The authority citation for part 203 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552.
0
4. Amend Sec. 203.3 as follows:
0
a. Remove paragraph (b)(2).
0
b. Redesignate paragraph (b)(3) as paragraph (b)(2).
0
c. Revise paragraphs (h) and (i).
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 203.3 Organization.
* * * * *
(h) The Copyright Modernization Office (``CMO'') is headed by the
Director, who is the Register's top advisor on Copyright Office
modernization and oversees the development and implementation of
technology initiatives affecting registration and recordation. This
Office directs and coordinates all modernization activities on behalf
of the
[[Page 63065]]
U.S. Copyright Office, including resources, communications, stakeholder
engagement, and business project management. The CMO ensures that
modernization activities are continuously aligned with the Office's and
the Library of Congress's strategic goals, and collaborates with the
Office and the Library to drive modernization efforts. The CMO provides
project management, data management/analytics, and business analysis.
It also serves as the primary liaison with the Library of Congress's
Office and Chief Information Officer (``OCIO'') and serves in a
leadership function on the Office's Modernization Governance Board.
(i) The Chief Financial Officer (``CFO'') is a senior staff
position that serves under the Register and oversees all fiscal,
financial, and budgetary activities for the Copyright Office. The CFO
also oversees the Licensing Division, which administers certain
statutory licenses set forth in the Copyright Act. The Division
collects royalty payments and examines statements of account for the
cable statutory license (17 U.S.C. 111), the satellite statutory
license for retransmission of distant television broadcast stations (17
U.S.C. 119), and the statutory license for digital audio recording
technology (17 U.S.C. chapter 10). The Division also accepts and
records certain documents associated with the use of the mechanical
statutory license for making and distributing phonorecords of
nondramatic musical works (17 U.S.C. 115) and the statutory licenses
for publicly performing sound recordings by means of digital audio
transmission (17 U.S.C. 112, 114).
* * * * *
PART 210--COMPULSORY LICENSE FOR MAKING AND DISTRIBUTING PHYSICAL
AND DIGITAL PHONORECORDS OF NONDRAMATIC MUSICAL WORKS
0
5. The authority citation for part 210 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 17 U.S.C. 115, 702.
0
6. Amend subpart B by revising the heading to read as follows:
Subpart B--Royalties and Statements of Account Under Non-Blanket
Compulsory License
0
7. Amend Sec. 210.11 by adding a sentence at the end of the paragraph
to read as follows:
Sec. 210.11 General.
* * * On and after the license availability date, this subpart
shall not apply with respect to any digital phonorecord delivery made
pursuant to the compulsory license unless such digital phonorecord
delivery is made by a record company under an individual download
license under 17 U.S.C. 115(b)(3), which must be reported and paid for
in accordance with Sec. 210.21; that is, this subpart shall not apply
where a digital music provider reports and pays royalties under a
blanket license under 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(4)(A)(i).
Sec. 210.12 [Amended]
0
8. Amend Sec. 210.12 as follows:
0
a. In paragraphs (a) and (b), remove ``115(c)(5)'' and add in its place
``115(c)(2)(I)''.
0
b. In paragraph (c):
0
i. Remove ``is each'' and add in its place ``means each''.
0
ii. Remove ``which results'' and add in its place ``that results''.
0
iii. Remove ``nondramatic''.
0
iv. Add two sentences at the end of the paragraph.
0
c. Add paragraphs (k) through (o).
The additions read as follows:
Sec. 210.12 Definitions.
(c) * * * Notwithstanding the foregoing, a permanent download, a
limited download, or an interactive stream, as defined in 17 U.S.C.
115(e), is a digital phonorecord delivery. A digital phonorecord
delivery does not include the digital transmission of sounds
accompanying a motion picture or other audiovisual work as defined in
17 U.S.C. 101.
* * * * *
(k) The term license availability date shall have the meaning given
in 17 U.S.C. 115(e)(15).
(l) The term digital music provider shall have the meaning given in
17 U.S.C. 115(e)(8).
(m) The term blanket license shall have the meaning given in 17
U.S.C. 115(e)(5).
(n) The term record company shall have the meaning given in 17
U.S.C. 115(e)(26).
(o) The term individual download license shall have the meaning
given in 17 U.S.C. 115(e)(12).
Sec. 210.16 [Amended]
0
9. Amend Sec. 210.16(d)(3) by removing ``115(c)(5)'' and adding in its
place ``115(c)(2)(I)''.
Sec. 210.19 [Amended]
0
10. Amend Sec. 210.19 by removing ``115(c)(6)'' and adding in its
place ``115(c)(2)(J)''.
0
11. Add Sec. Sec. 210.20 and 210.21 to read as follows:
Sec. 210.20 Statements required for limitation on liability for
digital music providers for the transition period prior to the license
availability date.
This section specifies the requirements for a digital music
provider to report and pay royalties for purposes of being eligible for
the limitation on liability described in 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(10). Terms
used in this section that are defined in 17 U.S.C. 115(e) shall have
the meaning given those terms in 17 U.S.C. 115(e).
(a) If the required matching efforts are successful in identifying
and locating a copyright owner of a musical work (or share thereof) by
the end of the calendar month in which the digital music provider first
makes use of the work, the digital music provider shall provide
statements of account and pay royalties to such copyright owner as a
compulsory licensee in accordance with this subpart.
(b) If the copyright owner is not identified or located by the end
of the calendar month in which the digital music provider first makes
use of the work, the digital music provider shall accrue and hold
royalties calculated under the applicable statutory rate in accordance
with usage of the work, from initial use of the work until the accrued
royalties can be paid to the copyright owner or are required to be
transferred to the mechanical licensing collective, as follows:
(1) Accrued royalties shall be maintained by the digital music
provider in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles.
(2) If a copyright owner of an unmatched musical work (or share
thereof) is identified and located by or to the digital music provider
before the license availability date, the digital music provider
shall--
(i) Not later than 45 calendar days after the end of the calendar
month during which the copyright owner was identified and located, pay
the copyright owner all accrued royalties, such payment to be
accompanied by a cumulative statement of account that includes all of
the information that would have been provided to the copyright owner
had the digital music provider been providing Monthly Statements of
Account as a compulsory licensee in accordance with this subpart to the
copyright owner from initial use of the work, and including, in
addition to the information and certification required by Sec. 210.16,
a clear identification of the total period covered by the cumulative
statement and the total royalty payable for the period;
(ii) Beginning with the accounting period following the calendar
month in
[[Page 63066]]
which the copyright owner was identified and located, and for all other
accounting periods prior to the license availability date, provide
Monthly Statements of Account and pay royalties to the copyright owner
as a compulsory licensee in accordance with this subpart; and
(iii) Beginning with the monthly royalty reporting period
commencing on the license availability date, report usage and pay
royalties for such musical work (or share thereof) for such reporting
period and reporting periods thereafter to the mechanical licensing
collective, as required under 17 U.S.C. 115(d) and applicable
regulations.
(3) If a copyright owner of an unmatched musical work (or share
thereof) is not identified and located by the license availability
date, the digital music provider shall--
(i) Not later than 45 calendar days after the license availability
date, transfer all accrued royalties to the mechanical licensing
collective, such payment to be accompanied by a cumulative statement of
account that includes all of the information that would have been
provided to the copyright owner had the digital music provider been
serving Monthly Statements of Account as a compulsory licensee in
accordance with this subpart on the copyright owner from initial use of
the work, accompanied by a certification by a duly authorized officer
of the digital music provider that the digital music provider has
fulfilled the requirements of 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(10)(B)(i) and (ii) but
has not been successful in locating or identifying the copyright owner,
and further including, in addition to the information and certification
required by Sec. 210.16, a clear identification of the total period
covered by the cumulative statement and the total royalty payable for
the period; and
(ii) Beginning with the monthly royalty reporting period commencing
on the license availability date, report usage and pay royalties for
such musical work (or share thereof) for such period and reporting
periods thereafter to the mechanical licensing collective, as required
under 17 U.S.C. 115(d) and applicable regulations.
Sec. 210.21 Record companies using individual download licenses.
A record company that obtains an individual download license under
17 U.S.C. 115(b)(3) shall provide statements of account and pay
royalties as a compulsory licensee in accordance with this subpart.
Dated: November 30, 2018.
Karyn A. Temple,
Acting Register of Copyrights and Director of the U.S. Copyright
Office.
Approved by:
Carla D. Hayden,
Librarian of Congress.
[FR Doc. 2018-26579 Filed 12-6-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 1410-30-P