Music Modernization Act Transition Period Transfer and Reporting of Royalties to the Mechanical Licensing Collective, 43517-43526 [2020-15591]
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 138 / Friday, July 17, 2020 / Proposed Rules
Signed at Washington, DC, this 6th day of
July, 2020.
Cheryl M. Stanton,
Administrator, Wage and Hour Division.
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
Associate Register of Copyrights, by
email at regans@copyright.gov, John R.
Riley, Assistant General Counsel, by
email at jril@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:
U.S. Copyright Office
I. Background
[FR Doc. 2020–14873 Filed 7–16–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–27–P
37 CFR Part 210
[Docket No. 2020–12]
Music Modernization Act Transition
Period Transfer and Reporting of
Royalties to the Mechanical Licensing
Collective
U.S. Copyright Office, Library
of Congress.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
The U.S. Copyright Office is
issuing a notice of proposed rulemaking
regarding digital music providers’
obligations to transfer and report
accrued royalties for unmatched
musical works (or shares) to the
mechanical licensing collective for
purposes of being eligible for the
limitation on liability for prior
unlicensed uses under title I of the
Orrin G. Hatch–Bob Goodlatte Music
Modernization Act. Having solicited
public comments through multiple prior
notices, the Office is now proposing an
update to regulations concerning the
transfer and reporting of such royalties,
namely the content, format, and
delivery of cumulative statements of
account to be submitted by digital music
providers to the mechanical licensing
collective at the conclusion of the
statutory transition period.
DATES: Written comments must be
received no later than 11:59 p.m.
Eastern Time on August 17, 2020.
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/mmatransition-reporting. 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
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SUMMARY:
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This notice of proposed rulemaking
(‘‘NPRM’’) is being issued subsequent to
a notification of inquiry, published in
the Federal Register on September 24,
2019, that describes in detail the
legislative background and regulatory
scope of the present rulemaking
proceeding.1 The Copyright Office
assumes familiarity with that document,
and encourages anyone reading this
NPRM who has not reviewed that notice
to do so before continuing here.
On October 11, 2018, the president
signed into law the Orrin G. Hatch–Bob
Goodlatte Music Modernization Act
(‘‘MMA’’) which, among other things,
substantially modifies the compulsory
‘‘mechanical’’ license for making and
distributing phonorecords of
nondramatic musical works under 17
U.S.C. 115.2 It does so by switching
from a song-by-song licensing system to
a blanket licensing regime that will
become available on January 1, 2021
(the ‘‘license availability date’’), and be
administered by a mechanical licensing
collective (‘‘MLC’’) designated by the
Copyright Office. Digital music
providers (‘‘DMPs’’) will be able to
obtain the new compulsory blanket
license to make digital phonorecord
deliveries (‘‘DPDs’’) of musical works,
including in the form of permanent
downloads, limited downloads, or
interactive streams (referred to in the
statute as ‘‘covered activity,’’ where
such activity qualifies for a compulsory
license), subject to compliance with
various requirements.3
1 84 FR 49966 (Sept. 24, 2019). All rulemaking
activity, including public comments, as well as
legislative history and educational material
regarding the Music Modernization Act, can
currently be accessed via navigation from https://
www.copyright.gov/music-modernization/.
Comments received in response to the September
2019 notification of inquiry are available at https://
www.regulations.gov/docketBrowser?
rpp=25&po=0&dct=PS&D=COLC-20190002&refD=COLC-2019-0002-0001. Related ex parte
letters are available at https://www.copyright.gov/
rulemaking/mma-implementation/ex-partecommunications.html. References to these
comments and letters are by party name
(abbreviated where appropriate), followed by
‘‘Initial,’’ ‘‘Reply,’’ or ‘‘Ex Parte Letter’’ as
appropriate.
2 Public Law 115–264, 132 Stat. 3676 (2018).
3 As permitted under the MMA, the Office
designated a digital licensee coordinator (‘‘DLC’’) to
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Prior to the MMA, DMPs obtained a
section 115 compulsory license on a
per-work, song-by-song basis, by serving
a notice of intention to obtain a
compulsory license (‘‘NOI’’) on the
copyright owner (or filing it with the
Copyright Office if the Office’s public
records did not identify the copyright
owner) and then paying applicable
royalties accompanied by accounting
statements.4 The MMA includes a
‘‘transition period’’ for the period
following the new law’s enactment,
before the blanket license becomes
available.5 During this 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.6
If the musical work copyright owner is
unknown, a DMP may no longer file an
NOI with the Copyright Office, but
instead may rely on a limitation on
liability that requires the DMP to
‘‘continue[ ] to search for the musical
work copyright owner’’ using goodfaith, commercially reasonable efforts
and bulk electronic matching
processes.7 The DMP 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.8 Congress believed that the
liability limitation, which limits
recovery in lawsuits commenced on or
after January 1, 2018 to the statutory
royalty due, would ‘‘ensure that more
artist royalties will be paid than
otherwise would be the case through
continual litigation’’ 9 and viewed this
provision as a ‘‘key component that was
represent licensees in proceedings before the
Copyright Royalty Judges (‘‘CRJs’’) and the
Copyright Office, to serve as a non-voting member
of the MLC, and to carry out other functions. 17
U.S.C. 115(d)(5)(B); 84 FR 32274 (July 8, 2019); see
also 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(3)(D)(i)(IV), (d)(5)(C).
4 See 17 U.S.C. 115(b)(1), (c)(5) (2017).
5 H.R. Rep. No. 115–651, at 10 (2018); S. Rep. No.
115–339, at 10 (2018).
6 17 U.S.C. 115(b)(2)(A), (c)(2)(I); see H.R. Rep.
No. 115–651, at 4; S. Rep. No. 115–339, at 3.
7 17 U.S.C. 115(b)(2)(A), (d)(9)(D)(i), (d)(10)(A)–
(B); see H.R. Rep. No. 115–651, at 4, 10; S. Rep. No.
115–339, at 3, 10, 22.
8 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.
9 H.R. Rep. No. 115–651, at 14; S. Rep. No. 115–
339, at 14–15; Report and Section-by-Section
Analysis of H.R. 1551 by the Chairmen and Ranking
Members of Senate and House Judiciary
Committees, at 12 (2018), https://
www.copyright.gov/legislation/mma_conference_
report.pdf (‘‘Conf. Rep.’’).
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necessary’’ to ensure support for
legislative change.10
With respect to the specific reporting
and payment requirements to be eligible
for the limitation on liability, the statute
details three scenarios. First, if the
matching efforts are successful in
identifying and locating a copyright
owner of a musical work (or share) by
the end of the calendar month in which
the DMP first makes use of the work, the
DMP must provide statements of
account and pay royalties to that
copyright owner in accordance with
section 115 and applicable
regulations.11 The second and third
scenarios apply if the copyright owner
is not identified or located by the end
of the calendar month in which the
DMP first makes use of the work.12 In
such cases, the DMP must accrue and
hold applicable statutory royalties in
accordance with usage of the work, from
the initial use of the work until these
royalties can be paid to the copyright
owner or are required to be transferred
to the MLC.13 If a copyright owner of an
unmatched musical work (or share) is
identified and located by or to the DMP
before the license availability date, the
DMP must, among other things, pay the
copyright owner all accrued royalties
accompanied by a cumulative statement
of account that includes the information
that would have been provided to the
copyright owner had the DMP been
providing monthly statements of
account to the copyright owner from
initial use of the work in accordance
with section 115 and applicable
regulations.14 If a copyright owner of an
unmatched musical work (or share) is
not identified and located by the license
availability date, the DMP must, among
other things, transfer, no later than 45
calendar days after the license
availability date, all accrued royalties to
the MLC accompanied by a cumulative
statement of account that includes the
information that would have been
provided to the copyright owner had the
DMP been serving monthly statements
of account on the copyright owner
‘‘from initial use of the work in
accordance with [section 115] and
applicable regulations,’’ including the
certification that would have been
provided to an identified copyright
owner as well as an additional
certification attesting to the DMP’s
matching efforts during the transition
period.15
In December 2018, the Office
published an interim rule and requested
comments to address the current
transition period.16 With respect to the
payment and reporting obligations to be
eligible for the limitation on liability,
the Office adopted regulations
specifying that DMPs must pay royalties
and provide cumulative statements of
account to copyright owners and the
MLC in compliance with the Office’s
preexisting monthly statement of
account regulations in 37 CFR 210.16.17
The Office required that cumulative
statements of account include ‘‘a clear
identification of the total period covered
by the cumulative statement and the
total royalty payable for the period.’’ 18
The Office did not receive any
comments in response to this public
rulemaking and finalized the rule in
March 2019.19 In promulgating the rule,
the Office observed that ‘‘[t]he 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.’’ 20 But the
rule did separate provisions regarding
the reporting of cumulative statements
of account and payment of royalties for
matched works provided to copyright
owners on the one hand from the
reporting of cumulative unmatched
usages and transfer of associated
royalties to the MLC on the other. This
approach includes the extra step of
statutorily required certifications for
reports provided to the MLC.21
Following the adoption of this rule, in
September 2019, the Office issued a
notification of inquiry regarding
multiple topics related to MMA
implementation.22 Noting the
‘‘persistent concern about the ‘black
box’ of unclaimed royalties, including
its amount and treatment by digital
music providers and the MLC,’’ the
Office provided another opportunity for
the public to comment on the
regulations governing the reporting of
cumulative statements of account and
generally on ‘‘any issues that should be
considered relating to the transfer and
reporting of unclaimed royalties by
digital music providers to the MLC.’’ 23
In response to this later inquiry, both
the MLC and the DLC provided
10 H.R. Rep. No. 115–651, at 13; S. Rep. No. 115–
339, at 14; Conf. Rep. at 12.
11 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(10)(B)(iii).
12 Id. at 115(d)(10)(B)(iv).
13 Id.
14 Id. at 115(d)(10)(B)(iv)(II).
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15 Id.
at 115(d)(10)(B)(iv)(III).
FR 63061 (Dec. 7, 2018).
17 37 CFR 210.20.
18 Id. at 210.20(b)(2)(i), (3)(i).
19 See 84 FR 10685 (Mar. 22, 2019).
20 83 FR at 63062.
21 See 83 FR at 63065–66; 37 CFR 210.16, 210.20.
22 84 FR 49966 (Sept. 24, 2019).
23 Id. at 49971.
16 83
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comments. The MLC proposed that the
cumulative statements of account to be
delivered to the MLC at the end of the
transition period, instead of complying
with the Office’s preexisting monthly
statement of account regulations in 37
CFR 210.16, should include the same
information and be in the same format
as required for monthly reports of usage
under the blanket license.24 The MLC
also proposed requiring these
cumulative statements to include: (1)
Per-play allocations or other applicable
rates and amounts allocated to
identified usage, and perpetually unique
DMP transaction identifiers for usage;
(2) information about matched shares of
a musical work where unmatched
shares for the work are reported; (3)
information about any applicable earned
interest; and (4) information about any
claimed or applied deductions or
adjustments to the aggregate accrued
royalties payable.25 The DLC proposed
that DMPs not be ‘‘required to accrue
any royalties that are required to be paid
to copyright owners of musical works
pursuant to any agreements entered into
prior to the effective date of the [MMA]’’
and that those royalties not be treated as
‘‘accrued royalties’’ under the statute.26
Having reviewed and carefully
considered all relevant comments, the
Office now issues a proposed rule and
invites further public comment. While
all public comments are welcome, as
applicable, should commenters disagree
with language in the proposed rule, the
Office encourages commenters to offer
alternate potential regulatory language.
II. Proposed Rule
A. Cumulative Statement of Account
Content and Format
General. The MLC proposed requiring
cumulative statements of account to
‘‘include[ ] all of the information, and
[be] in the same format, as required to
be provided in the monthly usage
reports pursuant to [section]
115(d)(4)(A)(i)–(iii), as supplemented by
[the reports of usage regulations].’’ 27
The MLC explained that it needs the
additional information to properly
administer the transferred royalties.28
In response, the DLC suggested that
the Copyright Office is restricted in its
ability to require DMPs to provide
24 MLC Reply App. D at 19; see also MLC Initial
at 23; MLC Reply at 27–28; MLC Ex Parte Letter at
2 (June 17, 2020).
25 MLC Reply App. D at 19; see also MLC Initial
at 22–23; MLC Reply at 27–28; MLC Ex Parte Letter
at 3–4 (June 17, 2020).
26 DLC Reply App. at A–24; see also DLC Initial
at 18–19.
27 MLC Reply App. D at 19.
28 MLC Initial at 22; see also MLC Ex Parte Letter
at 2 & n.1 (June 17, 2020).
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additional information in a different
format than what was required by the
Office’s preexisting monthly statement
of account regulations, because doing so
‘‘is contrary to the MMA, which
requires the digital music provider to
only provide ‘the information that
would have been provided to the
copyright owner had the digital music
provider been serving monthly
statements of account on the copyright
owner.’ ’’ 29 The DLC further claimed
that the MLC’s proposal was
‘‘impractical,’’ explaining that ‘‘digital
music providers have maintained usage
information . . . with the existing
statement of account regulations in
mind.’’ 30
The MLC noted that the cited clause
‘‘does not imply that DMPs should not
report anything additional or otherwise
limit the Copyright Office’s general
authority under [s]ection 115(d)(12)(A)
to adopt regulations necessary or
appropriate to effectuate the provisions
of [s]ection 115(d)’’ and that regulations
to ‘‘effectuate the proper disposition of
accrued unclaimed royalties’’ are
‘‘necessary or appropriate’’ for the MLC
to execute its functions under section
115(d).31
After considering the issue, the Office
tentatively concludes that it would be
within its regulatory authority and in
clear furtherance of the statute’s goals
and the legislative intent to update the
rule concerning cumulative statements
of account as proposed below. In the
course of analyzing these public
comments and promulgating a related
rule concerning post-blanket license
monthly reporting of usage information,
the Office’s review indicates that
updating certain requirements related to
the content and delivery of cumulative
statements may help the MLC more
effectively identify and locate the
copyright owners of unmatched works
to ensure they are paid the royalties due
to them. Congress has signaled this is a
core task of the MLC.32 Where
statements of account provided to
copyright owners have historically been
29 DLC Reply at 24 (quoting 17 U.S.C.
115(d)(10)(B)(iv)(III)(aa)).
30 Id. at 24.
31 MLC Ex Parte Letter at 2 n.1 (June 17, 2020).
32 See H.R. Rep. No. 115–651, at 9 (The MLC’s
duty to ‘‘identify the musical works embodied in
particular sound recordings, as well as to identify
and locate the copyright owners of such works’’ is
its ‘‘highest responsibility’’ next to the ‘‘efficient
and accurate collection and distribution of
royalties.’’); S. Rep. No. 115–339, at 9 (same); Conf.
Rep. at 7 (same); see also Letter from Lindsey
Graham, Chairman, Senate Judiciary Committee, to
Karyn Temple, Register of Copyrights 1 (Nov. 1,
2019) (on file with Copyright Office) (‘‘Reducing
unmatched funds is the measure by which the
success of this important legislation should be
measured.’’).
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intended to ‘‘increase the protection of
copyright proprietors against economic
harm from companies which might
refuse or fail to pay their just
obligations,’’ 33 cumulative statement
reporting to the MLC is meant to
facilitate the additional critical function
of matching DMP usage to musical
works and their owners—a task already
accomplished where a statement is
being served by the DMP directly on the
copyright owner.34 The legislative
history of the MMA is in accord,
providing that reporting accompanying
unmatched royalties transferred to the
MLC at the end of the transition period
should contain ‘‘as much information
about usage and ownership information
as possible.’’ 35 The present rule for
cumulative statements of account
differentiates between reports provided
to copyright owners and reports
provided to the MLC by requiring DMPs
to certify to the MLC that they have
engaged in good faith efforts to obtain a
variety of statutorily mandated
categories of sound recording and
musical work information.36 The
current rule also separately addresses
transfer of royalties and reporting to the
MLC. To some extent, then, the MLC’s
request for additional information
related to partially matched works (not
least, when partial payments have
occurred) and the identity of these
unmatched works may be viewed as an
extension of these provisions regarding
transfer and certification of efforts to
obtain additional information about
these works.37
Accordingly, to effectuate the
provisions of section 115(d)(10), and
against that provision’s specific
reference to ‘‘regulations’’ as well as the
MMA’s broad grant of regulatory
authority to the Copyright Office, the
Office tentatively concludes that it is
necessary and appropriate to require
DMPs to provide additional information
to aid the MLC in fulfilling its statutory
duty to identify and locate the copyright
owners of unmatched works and pay the
royalties due to them.38 The proposed
rule employs the MLC’s preferred
approach of generally importing the
requirements that are eventually
adopted for monthly reports of usage
under the blanket license. While those
regulations are still under consideration
Rep. No. 94–1476, at 111 (1976).
U.S.C. 115(d)(3)(C)(i)(II)–(III).
35 H.R. Rep. No. 115–651, at 29 (emphasis added);
S. Rep. No. 115–339, at 26 (same); Conf. Rep. at 22
(same).
36 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(B)(i)(I)(aa)–(bb).
37 See id.
38 See id. at 115(d)(10)(B)(iv)(III); id. at
115(d)(12)(A).
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34 17
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in a separate proceeding,39 it seems
reasonable to harmonize these rules in
places, since the MLC is tasked with the
same mission of matching works and
distributing royalties, and DMPs, too,
may benefit from consistency in
reporting usage information in a similar
manner (to the extent they have
acquired such information).40
Accordingly, the Office is proposing
adjustments to requirements, such as
those addressing format, royalty
payment and accounting information,
and sound recording and musical work
information, that largely mirror the
requirements proposed for reports of
usage.41 Notably, several categories of
sound recording and musical work
information proposed to be imported
from the reports of usage regulations are
already required under the current
rule,42 including artist,43 playing time,44
ISRC,45 ISWC,46 songwriter,47 ISNI,48
and ownership share.49 In other
respects, the proposed rule reorganizes
and clarifies preexisting requirements,
generally by replacing cross references
to section 210.16 with the relevant
regulatory language.50 For example,
while the current provision incorporates
by reference section 210.16’s provision
with respect to performance royalty
estimates, the proposed rule specifically
addresses use of such estimates in the
context of cumulative statements, which
unlike monthly statements delivered to
copyright owners, are not reconciled via
annual statements of account.51
Additionally, recognizing the function
served by the cumulative statements,
the proposed rule requires reporting of
data related to partially paid shares of
musical works and information needed
to reconcile any deviation between
royalty statements and the amounts
transferred to the MLC.
Regarding the DLC’s assertion that
DMPs have been maintaining certain
39 See
generally 85 FR 22518 (Apr. 22, 2020).
fact, cumulative statements of account will
be due around the same time as the first monthly
reports of usage begin to come in, and so it may
create some efficiencies for DMPs, as well as the
MLC, if these reports follow similar requirements.
41 See 85 FR at 22540–46.
42 See 37 CFR 210.20(b)(3)(i) (referring to ‘‘the
information and certification required by
§ 210.16’’).
43 See id. at 210.16(c)(3)(iv).
44 See id. at 210.16(c)(3)(v).
45 See id. at 210.16(c)(3)(iii).
46 See id. at 210.16(c)(3)(viii).
47 See id. at 210.16(c)(3)(vii).
48 See id.
49 See id. at 210.16(c)(3)(vi).
50 See, e.g., id. at 210.16(e) (‘‘clear statements’’
requirement); id. at 210.16(d)(3)(i) (performance
royalty estimates); id. at 210.16(d)(3)(ii) (NOI
reference number); id. at 210.16(f) (certification
requirement).
51 See id. at 210.16(d)(3)(i).
40 In
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information with only the preexisting
statement of account regulations in
mind, under the proposed rule, required
information is generally limited to items
that are either equivalent to the
information required by section 210.16
or otherwise ‘‘to the extent acquired’’ by
a DMP.52 The Office believes that this
qualification reasonably addresses the
DLC’s concern.
Where the NPRM imports the
proposed reports of usage requirements,
the Office’s intent is for both rules to
remain largely harmonized when
finalized. After considering the MLC’s
suggestion, the Office declines to simply
cross reference the reports of usage
regulations because they may change
over time after becoming effective
(especially if adopted on an interim
basis as has been proposed); 53 whereas
the cumulative statement of account
requirements, tied to the license
availability date, will not change. To
minimize duplication, commenters may
cross reference or incorporate by
reference comments submitted in the
separate reports of usage proceeding as
appropriate, and focus their comments
here on items uniquely relevant to
cumulative statements of account. To
the extent commenters believe a
separate approach is appropriate for
cumulative statements of account
compared to the proposed rule
regarding reports of usage, they are
encouraged to identify those areas of
differentiation and explain their
position.
Format. While the rule adopted in
December 2018 was silent as to method
of delivery, now that the MLC has been
designated and is further along in its
operational activities, the Office
proposes to carry over the proposed
reports of usage format provision, which
would require delivery to the MLC in a
machine-readable format that is
compatible with its information
technology systems, as reasonably
determined by the MLC and taking into
consideration relevant industry
standards. If a large amount of musical
works remain unmatched after the
transition period, the MLC may be
required to ingest a significant amount
of cumulative statements of account
from DMPs. As the MLC explains, using
the same format will ensure efficient
processing and ultimately support
‘‘efficient and accurate reporting.’’ 54
52 Compare
id. at 210.16(c) with 85 FR at 22541–
42.
53 See 85 FR at 22519 (noting that an interim rule
would offer ‘‘more flexibly to make necessary
modifications in response to new evidence,
unforeseen issues, or where something is otherwise
not functioning as intended’’).
54 MLC Initial at 20.
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Further, as the MLC points out, ‘‘a
workflow will already have to be
developed by the DMPs and the MLC for
reporting in this format’’ to process
reports of usage,55 and the MLC is
‘‘mindful of the varying data formats
used by DMPs with varying resources
and intends to coordinate with the DMP
community to ensure the most
appropriate version of data standards is
selected.’’ 56 The Office notes that
current monthly statement of account
regulations already allow a copyright
owner to ‘‘demand that Monthly
Statements of Account be submitted in
a readily accessible electronic format
consistent with prevailing industry
practices applicable to comparable
electronic delivery of comparable
financial information.’’ 57
Certifications and clear statements.
The Office does not propose any
substantive changes to the certifications
required under the previously adopted
rule for cumulative statements of
account.58 The rule proposes a technical
change to include the actual language
for clarity (with appropriate conforming
edits), rather than merely referring to
the ‘‘certification required by § 210.16.’’
The Office has moved the other required
certification—‘‘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’’—to be
in the same paragraph as the language
from section 210.16. The proposed rule
also imports the ‘‘clear statements’’
requirement from the preexisting
regulations.59
Estimates and adjustments. Under the
previously adopted cumulative
statement of account regulation, DMPs
could make estimates to the extent
currently permitted by 37 CFR
210.16(d)(3)(i) (covering where the final
public performance royalty has not yet
been determined), and there would be
no adjustments mechanism. The Office
proposes to retain this status quo rather
than conform to the estimates and
adjustments provisions proposed for
reports of usage, given the one-time
nature of the cumulative statements,
compared to the proposed regulatory
structure designed for ongoing
Ex Parte Letter at 2 (June 17, 2020).
Initial at 20.
57 37 CFR 210.16(g)(2).
58 See id. at 210.20(b)(3)(i). As noted, to the extent
the proposed rule would obligate DMPs to engage
in reporting additional sound recording and
musical works information, the statute requires
DMPs to certify that they have attempted to acquire
much of this information, and so an alternate
method of providing this information to the MLC
may be to require reporting the fruits of these
inquiries in the certification.
59 Id. at 210.16(e).
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55 MLC
56 MLC
Frm 00028
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reporting. The Office does propose,
however, that any overpayment
(whether resulting from an estimate or
otherwise) should be credited to the
DMP’s account, or refunded upon
request.
Response files and invoices. In light of
the DLC’s comments concerning the
value of receiving invoices and response
files,60 the proposed rule allows a DMP
to request and obtain a response file
and/or invoice from the MLC. Because
the MLC will be ingesting a large
amount of data all around the same
time, the rule proposes that any
requested invoices and/or response files
be delivered to DMPs within a
‘‘reasonable’’ period of time in lieu of
imposing a strict deadline.
NOI reference numbers. The proposed
rule restates a provision currently
incorporated by reference to section
210.16(c)(3)(ii), which requires a DMP
to provide a reference number or code
identifying the relevant NOI if it, or its
agent, provided such a number or code
on its relevant NOI. The Office proposes
to retain this provision because records
of past NOIs issued may be helpful
inputs for the MLC in identifying
unmatched works (or shares).
Sound recording and musical work
information. As noted, the proposed
rule generally harmonizes with the
reporting requirements proposed for
DMPs’ monthly reports of usage to be
delivered to the MLC following the
transition to the blanket license. In
many cases, this information is already
required to be reported under the
current rule, and in others, DMPs must
certify that they have tried to obtain this
information to receive the limitation on
liability.61 In some cases, additional
fields are proposed to be required,
including certain categories pertaining
to identifying information for the sound
recording that embodies a particular
musical work.62 As noted below, the
obligation to report these additional
fields is generally cabined by the extent
the DMP has acquired this information,
60 See DLC Comments at 12–13, Music
Modernization Act Notices of License, Notices of
Nonblanket Activity, Data Collection and Delivery
Efforts, and Reports of Usage and Payment, Docket
No. 2020–5, https://www.regulations.gov/
contentStreamer?documentId=COLC-2020-00050012&attachmentNumber=1&contentType=pdf
(‘‘Invoices and response files are critically
important to licensees and their accounting
processes.’’); see also 85 FR at 22528.
61 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(10)(B)(i)(I)(aa)–(bb),
(iv)(III)(aa); see 37 CFR 210.20(b)(3)(i) (referring to
‘‘the information and certification required by
§ 210.16’’); id. at 210.16(c)(3) (addressing e.g., artist,
playing time, ISRC, ISWC, songwriter, ISNI, and
ownership share).
62 For example, sound recording name(s),
producer(s), version(s), release date(s), album
title(s), and distributor(s).
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and, in some instances, is further
limited by whether the DMP is already
reporting this information.
Altered data and practicability of
reporting. For sound recording and
musical work information, the rule
proposes to require identifying whether
the reported data has been modified by
the DMP, compared to being passed
through in its original, as-received form.
This concept was suggested by the MLC
and others.63 As noted above, the Office
is still considering comments in the
reports of usage rulemaking and
incorporation of the MLC’s suggestion
here should not indicate that the Office
has made any conclusions in either this
rulemaking or the reports of usage
rulemaking on this subject. The Office
also proposes to import the
practicability limitation concerning the
reporting of sound recording and
musical work information that was
proposed in the reports of usage
proceeding.64 Under that proposal,
much of the enumerated sound
recording and musical work information
would only need to be reported by a
DMP ‘‘to the extent practicable,’’ which
is defined in reference to categories of
information that are statutorily required,
required by a data standard used by the
DMP, or were otherwise already being
reported by the relevant DMP.65 As with
altered data, the inclusion of this
limitation in the proposed rule should
not indicate that the Office has finalized
its approach with respect to this aspect
of the reports of usage rulemaking. The
63 MLC Comments at 26, Music Modernization
Act Notices of License, Notices of Nonblanket
Activity, Data Collection and Delivery Efforts, and
Reports of Usage and Payment, Docket No. 2020–
5, https://www.regulations.gov/
contentStreamer?documentId=COLC-2020-00050014&attachmentNumber=1&contentType=pdf;
A2IM & RIAA Initial at 2–3 (noting provenance
issues with using DMP-sourced sound recording
data); Paul Jessop Initial at 2–3 (same);
SoundExchange Comments at 4–5, Music
Modernization Act Notices of License, Notices of
Nonblanket Activity, Data Collection and Delivery
Efforts, and Reports of Usage and Payment, Docket
No. 2020–5, https://www.regulations.gov/
contentStreamer?documentId=COLC-2020-00050006&attachmentNumber=1&contentType=pdf
(same).
64 See 85 FR at 22541–42.
65 See id.; see also id. at 22531–32. As proposed,
it would be ‘‘practicable’’ to provide the
enumerated information if: (1) it belongs to a
category of information expressly required by the
enumerated list of information contained in 17
U.S.C. 115(d)(4)(A)(ii)(I)(aa) or (bb); (2) where the
MLC has adopted a particular nationally or
internationally recognized reporting or data
standard or format (e.g., DDEX) that is being used
by the particular DMP, it belongs to a category of
information required to be reported under such
standard or format; (3) it belongs to a category of
information that is reported by the particular DMP
pursuant to any voluntary license or individual
download license; or (4) it belongs to a category of
information that was periodically reported by the
particular DMP prior to the license availability date.
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Office recognizes that these are potential
areas where it may make sense to
consider whether the monthly and
cumulative reporting rules should
diverge, and invites comment on these
issues.66
Partially matched works. The MLC
requested that cumulative statements of
account include information about
matched shares of a musical work where
unmatched shares for the work are
reported, by proposing the following
regulatory language:
for each track for which a share of a musical
work has been matched and for which
accrued royalties have been paid in
accordance with section [210.20(b)(2)], but
for which one or more shares of a musical
work remains unmatched, identification of
[the total period covered by the cumulative
statement and the per-play allocation and
unique DMP transaction identifier], and a
clear identification of the share(s) that have
been matched, the owner(s) of such matched
shares, and the amount of such accrued
royalties paid in accordance with section
[210.20(b)(2)].67
The MLC explained that, in practice,
a DMP may have paid one copyright
owner their royalty share, and held
accrued royalties for any remaining
unmatched share(s).68 The MLC is
concerned that upon transfer of such
unmatched royalties, if the paid share is
not properly identified, there is a risk
that a paid co-owner would be able to
collect a portion of an unpaid coowner’s share.69
The DLC does not appear to disagree
with the MLC’s description of the issue,
but stated that ‘‘[t]his sort of operational
detail should be worked out between
the MLC and individual digital music
providers.’’ 70 The DLC suggested that
DMPs’ third-party vendors, who are
66 For example, the Office has inquired whether
a reasonable transition period may be appropriate
with respect to certain monthly usage reporting
requirements. See Letter from Copyright Office to
Alliance for Recorded Music, DLC, MLC, and
SoundExchange, Inc., at 3–4 (June 30, 2020),
https://www.copyright.gov/rulemaking/mmaimplementation/copyright-office-letters/2020-5june-30-2020.pdf. Since cumulative statements of
account are reported only once, shortly after the
license availability date, such a period would make
less sense for this proposed rule, and reporting
obligations for cumulative statements may need to
be cognizant of the time period within which DMPs
will ready such statements.
67 MLC Reply App. D at 19.
68 MLC Ex Parte Letter at 3 (June 17, 2020) (giving
the example of an identified 50% co-owner being
paid their 50% share by a DMP, and then
subsequently being paid half of the remaining share
by the MLC due to lack of record of the first
payment; stating that ‘‘reporting on partiallymatched works and the respective shares that the
DMP already paid is essential to allow the MLC to
properly credit share owners who have been paid
and avoid double payments’’).
69 MLC Ex Parte Letter at 3 (June 17, 2020).
70 DLC Reply at 25.
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43521
subject to ‘‘strict contractual
confidentiality restrictions,’’ may have
this information and not the DMPs
themselves.71 Although it did not
propose suggested language, it asked the
Office to ‘‘account for these
[confidentiality] restrictions and protect
digital music providers from any
liability related to their breach,’’ were it
to promulgate a regulation.72 The MLC
presumed that the DLC’s confidentiality
concern ‘‘relates to the amounts of
royalties paid under voluntary licenses’’
and offered to amend their proposal to
limit share reporting ‘‘to the share
percentage and the owner of the share
that was paid, [and] omitting the precise
amount of royalties paid under the
voluntary license terms.’’ 73
The Copyright Office finds the MLC’s
proposal to be reasonable in light of the
statutory function of cumulative
statements of account. Current
regulations already allow a compulsory
licensee to elect to allocate monthly
royalty payments between co-owners
and serve statements on each co-owner
reflecting the percentage share paid to
that co-owner.74 Further, the MMA
contemplates that if a DMP’s matching
efforts are successful during the
transition period as to a share of a work,
it will pay royalties to the owner of that
share, while holding the unmatched
remainder for further matching efforts
and, if ultimately unsuccessful, eventual
transfer to the MLC.75 Thus, the
situation the MLC anticipates seems
likely to occur, and having the matched
share information will be important.
The proposed rule largely follows the
MLC’s language, although it does not
include the MLC’s proposed limitation
to instances where royalty shares are
paid in accordance with § 210.20(b)(2),
which concerns payments related to
musical works matched during the
transition period. It seems that all
instances of partial payment of royalty
interests may be relevant to the MLC’s
identification and royalty distribution
functions for the remaining unmatched
share(s). The Office welcomes
comments on all aspects of this
proposed rule, and is interested in
whether the MLC’s suggestion to omit a
requirement to report the amount of
royalties paid to matched shares under
voluntary licenses adequately addresses
the DLC’s concerns. To that end, the
Office solicits comments regarding
whether the rule should also permit the
MLC and individual DMPs to enter into
71 Id.
72 Id.
73 MLC
Ex Parte Letter at 4 (June 17, 2020).
CFR 210.16(g)(1).
75 See 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(10)(B).
74 37
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agreements to alter this process,
provided that any such change does not
materially prejudice the MLC’s efforts
with respect to locating and identifying
copyright owners owed a portion of
these accrued royalties. The Office has
proposed a similar provision with
respect to monthly reports of usage.76
Reconciliation. The MLC requested
reporting of information concerning any
applicable interest earned by DMPs on
accrued royalties, and also ‘‘any claimed
or applied deductions or adjustments’’
to applicable royalties ‘‘with a
description of the nature of, and basis
for, such claimed deduction or
adjustment.’’ 77 The DLC responded that
interest ‘‘was purposefully not included
in the statute’’ and ‘‘was specifically
negotiated out of the draft
legislation.’’ 78 In particular, the DLC
objected to the inclusion of deductions
or adjustments because it ‘‘is not aware
of any deductions or adjustments that
would be made to accrued royalties.’’ 79
The MLC subsequently clarified that
it ‘‘does not purport to dictate where
interest must be applied or what would
be applicable interest,’’ but wished to
‘‘ensure[] that any such interest paid
over is also reported, so that the MLC
can know to which copyright owners
those moneys should ultimately be
paid.’’ 80 Similarly, for deductions or
adjustments, the MLC explained that it
does not ‘‘intend to approve or condone
of applying deductions, but merely
wants to ensure that any such changes
are properly reported, again so that the
MLC can understand and exactly match
the reporting to the payments.’’ 81 The
MLC contended that these provisions
are needed because ‘‘it is essential that
the reporting on unclaimed accrued
royalties match the accompanying
royalty payments to the penny.’’ 82
Recognizing the DLC’s comments
regarding specific references to interest,
adjustments, and deductions, the
Copyright Office also appreciates the
broader principle advanced by the MLC
that it has an operational need for
royalty statements to match the royalties
transferred to the MLC, or at least
minimize unexplained deviations.
While not adopting the MLC’s proposed
language, the rule proposes that if the
total royalties turned over to the MLC
do not reconcile with the corresponding
cumulative statement of account (for
whatever reason), the DMP should
76 See
85 FR 22546 (proposed 37 CFR 210.27(n)).
77 MLC Reply App. D at 19.
78 DLC Reply at 24.
79 Id. at 25.
80 MLC Ex Parte Letter at 4 (June 17, 2020).
81 Id.
82 Id.
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include a clear and detailed explanation
of the deviation. The Office has
previously adopted a similar rule in the
context of annual statements of
account.83
Per-play allocation and unique
transaction identifiers. The MLC
proposed that cumulative statements of
account be required to include ‘‘[t]he
per-play allocation or any other
applicable rates and amounts allocated
to the identified usage, and a
perpetually unique DMP transaction
identifier for the usage.’’ 84 During a
subsequent ex parte meeting, the MLC
explained that while the proposed
reports of usage requirements do not
explicitly include references to these
items, this information would
nonetheless be adequately captured if
the Office applied those proposed
requirements.85 As a result, the Office
has not included the MLC’s proposed
language.86
B. Treatment of Negotiated Agreements
As described above, in addition to the
MLC’s request for additional reporting,
the DLC asked for a ‘‘regulatory
clarification’’ related to negotiated
agreements that predate the MMA’s
enactment.87 In its words, certain music
publishers ‘‘negotiated agreements with
several of the major digital music
providers to liquidate accrued royalties
for unmatched works through payments
based on market share, or other
mechanisms not based on matching to
specific compositions that generated the
royalties,’’ and some of these
agreements have continued in force
through the MMA’s enactment date
such that ‘‘some digital music providers
will continue to be obligated to pay
some amount of accrued unmatched
royalties to publishers with whom they
have direct deals.’’ 88 According to the
DLC, ‘‘[t]his creates a conflict between
the terms of those preexisting
agreements and the MMA’s directions in
section 115(d)(10) regarding the accrual
of unmatched royalties.’’ 89 To address
this, and the DLC’s overarching concern
that ‘‘[i]n no event should digital music
providers be made to pay double,’’ 90 the
DLC proposed adding the following
regulatory language:
Notwithstanding anything in this section to
the contrary, digital music providers are not
required to accrue any royalties that are
required to be paid to copyright owners of
musical works pursuant to any agreements
entered into prior to the effective date of the
Music Modernization Act, and such royalties
shall not be treated as ‘‘accrued royalties’’ for
purposes of this section or 17 U.S.C.
115(d)(10).91
The MLC objected, stating that this
proposed regulation would both
‘‘conflict[] with the statute’s
requirement that all royalties accrued
from initial use of the unmatched work
be transferred’’ to the MLC and ‘‘exceed
the Copyright Office’s authority.’’ 92 The
MLC stated that ‘‘[w]hile prior to the
enactment of the MMA, certain DMPs
entered into settlement agreements with
certain music publishers in connection
with disputes arising from their failure
to license, match and/or pay royalties
due, such settlement payments were
definitively not the proper payment of
royalties to copyright owners of
unmatched uses,’’ and were ‘‘more
likely consideration for releases from
liability for copyright infringement or
covenants not to sue.’’ 93 The MLC
further argued that royalties lose their
‘‘unclaimed’’ status only when they are
matched.94
The proposed rule does not include
regulatory language specifically
addressing the relationship between
private settlement agreements and
whether works are required to be
reported on cumulative statements of
account (with accompanying payment
of accrued royalties). The statute is
somewhat instructive to this issue.
Provisions regarding the treatment of
voluntary licenses and accrued,
unclaimed royalties were carefully
negotiated during the legislative
process.95 To maintain eligibility for the
limitation on liability, when making
available a sound recording of a musical
work via a covered activity, a digital
music provider must accrue and hold
royalties for each musical work for
which a copyright owner has not been
identified or located.96 At the end of
this current holding period, all accrued
royalties for which ‘‘a copyright owner
of an unmatched musical work (or share
thereof) is not identified and located’’
must be transferred to the MLC along
with associated reporting.97 Works are
91 Id.
37 CFR 210.17(d)(2)(ii).
84 MLC Reply App. D at 19.
85 See MLC Ex Parte Letter at 3 (June 17, 2020).
86 The proposed rule adopts the same approach
with respect to reporting of partially matched
works. See MLC Reply App. D at 19.
87 DLC Initial at 18.
88 Id. at 18–19.
89 Id. at 18.
90 Id. at 19.
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92 MLC
93 Id.
Reply at 27–30.
at 29.
94 Id.
95 See H.R. Rep. No. 115–651, at 9–10, 24; S. Rep.
No. 115–339, at 10–11, 33–34.
96 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(10).
97 Id. at 115(d)(10)(B)(iv)(III); see id. at 115(e)(2)
(‘‘The term ‘accrued royalties’ means royalties
accrued for the reproduction or distribution of a
musical work (or share thereof) in a covered
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considered ‘‘matched’’ when ‘‘the
copyright owner of such work (or share
thereof) has been identified and
located.’’ 98 The law further states that
‘‘[v]oluntary license[s]’’ will ‘‘remain in
effect’’ by their respective terms
notwithstanding the license availability
date, and by implication, DMPs would
not retain accrued royalties (as defined
in the MMA) for works licensed under
private agreements.99
The Office understands the DLC’s
concerns to center around whether
payments made pursuant to various
private settlement agreements can
extinguish the obligation to deliver
accrued royalties to the MLC. In light of
the statutory language, these questions
may be best resolved by determining
whether a given agreement constitutes a
valid license to the work(s) at issue (and
if so, the scope of the license).100 In
such cases, the work(s) licensed under
such agreements could be considered
‘‘matched’’ and may not need to be
reported at the close of the transition
period. In the case of jointly authored
works, a further potential wrinkle may
be determining whether any license
extended pursuant to a settlement
agreement was conveyed to the entirety
of the work, or only to a partial interest
in a co-owned work.101
activity, calculated in accordance with the
applicable royalty rate under this section.’’).
98 Id. at 115(e)(17); see also id. at 115(e)(35)
(defining ‘‘unmatched’’).
99 Id. at 115(e)(36) (‘‘The term ‘voluntary license’
means a license for use of a musical work (or share
thereof) other than a compulsory license obtained
under this section.’’); id. at 115(d)(9)(C) (describing
transition to blanket license). The MLC will
‘‘confirm uses of musical works subject to voluntary
licenses and individual download licenses, and the
corresponding pro rata amounts to be deducted
from royalties that would otherwise be due under
the blanket license.’’ Id. at 115(d)(3)(G)(i)(I)(bb). The
Office has proposed a rule that would require DMPs
to provide a description (including the start and
end dates, the musical work copyright owner, and
either a list of all covered musical works or an
identification of any applicable catalog exclusions)
of any applicable voluntary licenses to the MLC so
that the MLC can confirm such uses for DMPs. See
85 FR 22537, 22541.
100 While in some cases, the terms of a settlement
agreement may provide continuing license
authority, the Second Circuit has opined that,
‘‘absent clear language to the contrary, they are not
licenses for future use.’’ Compare Davis v. Blige 505
F.3d 90, 102–04 (2d Cir. 2007) (holding that ‘‘a
license or assignment in copyright can only act
prospectively,’’ and that a co-owner cannot convey
‘‘his co-owners’ right to prosecute past
infringements’’) with Jacobs v. Nintendo of Am.,
Inc., 370 F.3d 1097, 1101 (Fed. Cir. 2004) (holding
that a settlement with an unrestricted grant to
engage in patented activities carried with it an
implied sublicense); see also United States v.
Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co., 171 F.2d 103, 111
(6th Cir. 1948) (‘‘A release for wrongs done in the
past is not the equivalent of a license to do
rightfully the same thing in the future.’’).
101 For a background discussion on
considerations related to licensing co-owned works
in the performance royalty context, see U.S.
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The Office appreciates the DMP’s
motivation for further guidance on this
important issue, but must be careful to
avoid speaking over either the statue or
private transactions. It would seem that
the specific terms of each agreement
would be highly relevant to addressing
this issue, and that questions regarding
the interpretation of various private
contracts may be better resolved by the
relevant parties rather than a blanket
rule by the Copyright Office.102 To the
extent that preexisting settlement
agreements may be, as the DLC asserts,
in ‘‘conflict’’ with ‘‘the MMA’s
directions in section 115(d)(10)
regarding the accrual of unmatched
royalties,’’ 103 the statutory directive
could not yield to such agreements, but
the Office offers no opinion as to
whether this is indeed the case.
Additionally, if a DMP is unsure about
its obligations under the statute vis-a-vis
a given agreement (or with respect to a
particular musical work or share of a
work) and inadvertently transfers
royalties later determined to have
indeed been properly matched and paid
by the DMP, the Office has proposed a
provision that, as noted, would require
the MLC to credit or refund any
overpayment back to the DMP. For these
reasons, based on the current record, the
Office tentatively declines the DLC’s
suggestion to offer regulatory language
regarding the interaction of preexisting
settlement agreements and cumulative
reporting obligations.104 The Office
recognizes that the DLC’s comments
arise out of a complicated and nuanced
treatment of private transactions and
remains available to dialogue further, in
Copyright Office, Views of the United States
Copyright Office Concerning PRO Licensing of
Jointly Owned Works (Jan. 2016), https://
www.copyright.gov/policy/pro-licensing.pdf. As a
starting point, ‘‘[j]oint authors co-owning copyright
in a work . . . ‘each hav[e] an independent right
to use or [non-exclusively] license the copyright,
subject only to a duty to account to the other coowner for any profits earned thereby.’ ’’ Cmty. for
Creative Non-Violence v. Reid, 846 F.2d 1485, 1498
(DC Cir. 1988). Collaborators can and sometimes do
‘‘alter this statutory allocation of rights and
liabilities by contract,’’ including with respect to
licensing. Paul Goldstein, 1 Goldstein on Copyright
sec. 4.2 (3d. ed. 2020); see, e.g., Corbello v. DeVito,
832 F. Supp. 2d 1231, 1244 (D. Nev. 2011).
102 The Office has not been provided copies of
these settlement agreements.
103 DLC Initial at 18.
104 Further, while the Office appreciates the
DLC’s view that enactment of the MMA was not
intended to result in services ‘‘pay[ing] double’’ to
the same parties for the same activities, id. at 19,
its specific proposed regulatory language may
conflict with the statutory definition of ‘‘accrued
royalties’’ and lack precision with respect to
scenarios where a payment does not extinguish
royalty entitlements for all copyright owners for the
relevant works; that is, where usage remains fully
or partially ‘‘unmatched’’ within the meaning of the
statute.
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43523
accordance with the public process for
written comments and/or ex parte
meetings.
III. Subjects of Inquiry
The proposed rule is designed to
reasonably implement regulatory duties
assigned to the Copyright Office under
the MMA and facilitate the
administration of the compulsory
licensing system. The Office solicits
additional public comment on all
aspects of the proposed rule.
List of Subjects in 37 CFR Part 210
Copyright, Phonorecords, Recordings.
Proposed Regulations
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Copyright Office proposes
amending 37 CFR part 210 as follows:
PART 210—COMPULSORY LICENSE
FOR MAKING AND DISTRIBUTING
PHYSICAL AND DIGITAL
PHONORECORDS OF NONDRAMATIC
MUSICAL WORKS
1. The authority citation for part 210
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 17 U.S.C. 115, 702.
2. Amend § 210.12 by revising
paragraph (k) and removing paragraphs
(i) through (o).
The revision reads as follows:
■
§ 210.12
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
(k) Any terms not otherwise defined
in this section shall have the meanings
set forth in 17 U.S.C. 115(e).
■ 3. Amend § 210.20 by revising
paragraph (b)(3)(i) and adding
paragraphs (c) through (j) to read as
follows:
§ 210.20 Statements required for limitation
on liability for digital music providers for
the transition period prior to the license
availability date.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(3) * * *
(i) Not later than 45 calendar days
after the license availability date,
transfer all accrued royalties to the
mechanical licensing collective (as
required by paragraph (i)(2) of this
section), such payment to be
accompanied by a cumulative statement
of account that:
(A) Includes all of the information
required by paragraphs (c) through (e) of
this section covering the period starting
from initial use of the work;
(B) Is delivered to the mechanical
licensing collective as required by
paragraph (i)(1) of this section; and
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(C) Is certified as required by
paragraph (j) of this section; and
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Each cumulative statement of
account delivered to the mechanical
licensing collective under paragraph
(b)(3)(i) of this section shall be clearly
and prominently identified as a
‘‘Cumulative Statement of Account for
Making and Distributing Phonorecords,’’
and shall include a clear statement of
the following information:
(1) The period (months and years)
covered by the cumulative statement of
account.
(2) The full legal name of the digital
music provider and, if different, the
trade or consumer-facing brand name(s)
of the service(s), including any specific
offering(s), through which the digital
music provider engages, or has engaged
at any time during the period identified
in paragraph (c)(1) of this section, in
covered activities. If the digital music
provider has a unique DDEX identifier
number, it must also be provided.
(3) The full address, including a
specific number and street name or rural
route, of the place of business of the
digital music provider. A post office box
or similar designation will not be
sufficient except where it is the only
address that can be used in that
geographic location.
(4) For each sound recording
embodying a musical work for which
accrued royalties must be transferred to
the mechanical licensing collective
under paragraph (b)(3)(i) of this section,
a detailed cumulative statement, from
which the mechanical licensing
collective may separate reported
information for each month and year for
each applicable activity or offering
including as may be defined in part 385
of this title, of all of:
(i) The royalty payment and
accounting information required by
paragraph (d) of this section; and
(ii) The sound recording and musical
work information required by paragraph
(e) of this section.
(5) The total royalty payable by the
digital music provider for the period
identified in paragraph (c)(1) of this
section for the sound recordings
embodying musical works identified in
paragraph (c)(4) of this section,
computed in accordance with the
requirements of this section and part
385 of this title, and including detailed
information regarding how the royalty
was computed, with such total royalty
payable broken down by month and
year and by each applicable activity or
offering including as may be defined in
part 385 of this title.
(6) If the total royalty payable under
paragraph (c)(5) of this section does not
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reconcile with the royalties actually
transferred to the mechanical licensing
collective, a clear and detailed
explanation of the difference and the
basis for it.
(d) The royalty payment and
accounting information called for by
paragraph (c)(4)(i) of this section shall
consist of the following:
(1) A detailed and step-by-step
accounting of the calculation of
royalties payable by the digital music
provider under applicable provisions of
this section and part 385 of this title,
sufficient to allow the mechanical
licensing collective to assess the manner
in which the digital music provider
determined the royalty owed and the
accuracy of the royalty calculations,
including but not limited to the number
of payable units, including, as
applicable, permanent downloads,
plays, and constructive plays, for each
reported sound recording.
(2) A digital music provider may, in
cases where the final public
performance royalty has not yet been
determined, compute the public
performance royalty component based
on the interim public performance
royalty rate, if established; or
alternatively, on a reasonable estimation
of the expected royalties to be paid in
accordance with GAAP.
(3) All information and calculations
provided pursuant to paragraph (d) of
this section shall be made in good faith
and on the basis of the best knowledge,
information, and belief of the digital
music provider at the time the
cumulative statement of account is
delivered to the mechanical licensing
collective, and subject to any additional
accounting and certification
requirements under 17 U.S.C. 115 and
this section.
(e)(1) The following information must
be provided for each sound recording
embodying a musical work required to
be reported under paragraph (c)(4)(ii) of
this section:
(i) Identifying information for the
sound recording, including but not
limited to:
(A) Sound recording name(s),
including, to the extent practicable, all
known alternative and parenthetical
titles for the sound recording;
(B) Featured artist(s);
(C) Unique identifier(s) assigned by
the digital music provider, if any,
including any code(s) that can be used
to locate and listen to the sound
recording through the digital music
provider’s public-facing service;
(D) Playing time; and
(E) To the extent acquired by the
digital music provider in connection
with its use of sound recordings of
PO 00000
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Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
musical works to engage in covered
activities, and to the extent practicable:
(1) Sound recording copyright
owner(s);
(2) Producer(s);
(3) International standard recording
code(s) (ISRC);
(4) Any other unique identifier(s) for
or associated with the sound recording,
including any unique identifier(s) for
any associated album, including but not
limited to:
(i) Catalog number(s);
(ii) Universal product code(s) (UPC);
and
(iii) Unique identifier(s) assigned by
any distributor;
(5) Version(s);
(6) Release date(s);
(7) Album title(s);
(8) Label name(s);
(9) Distributor(s); and
(10) Other information commonly
used in the industry to identify sound
recordings and match them to the
musical works the sound recordings
embody.
(ii) Identifying information for the
musical work embodied in the reported
sound recording, to the extent acquired
by the digital music provider in the
metadata provided by sound recording
copyright owners or other licensors of
sound recordings in connection with the
use of sound recordings of musical
works to engage in covered activities,
and to the extent practicable:
(A) Information concerning
authorship and ownership of the
applicable rights in the musical work
embodied in the sound recording,
including but not limited to:
(1) Songwriter(s);
(2) Publisher(s) with applicable U.S.
rights;
(3) Musical work copyright owner(s);
(4) International standard name
identifier(s) (ISNI) and interested parties
information code(s) (IPI) for each such
songwriter, publisher, and musical work
copyright owner; and
(5) Respective ownership shares of
each such musical work copyright
owner;
(B) International standard musical
work code(s) (ISWC) for the musical
work embodied in the sound recording;
and
(C) Musical work name(s) for the
musical work embodied in the sound
recording, including any alternative or
parenthetical titles for the musical work.
(iii) Whether the digital music
provider, or any corporate parent or
subsidiary of the digital music provider,
is a copyright owner of the musical
work embodied in the sound recording.
(iv) A reference number or code
identifying the relevant Notice of
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Intention, if the digital music provider,
or its agent, chose to include such a
number or code on its relevant Notice of
Intention for the compulsory license.
(2) Subject to paragraph (e)(3) of this
section, where any of the information
called for by paragraph (e)(1) of this
section is acquired by the digital music
provider from sound recording
copyright owners or other licensors of
sound recordings (or their
representatives), and the digital music
provider revises, re-titles, or otherwise
edits or modifies the information, it
shall be sufficient for the digital music
provider to report either the originally
acquired version or the modified
version of such information (but any
modified information must be identified
as such) to satisfy its obligations under
paragraph (e)(1) of this section, unless
one or more of the following scenarios
apply, in which case either the
unaltered version or both versions must
be reported:
(i) If the mechanical licensing
collective has adopted a particular
nationally or internationally recognized
reporting or data standard or format
(e.g., DDEX) that is being used by the
particular digital music provider, and
either the unaltered version or both
versions are required to be reported
under such standard or format.
(ii) Either the unaltered version or
both versions are reported by the
particular digital music provider
pursuant to any voluntary license or
individual download license.
(iii) Either the unaltered version or
both versions were periodically reported
by the particular digital music provider
prior to the license availability date.
(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (e)(2)
of this section, a digital music provider
shall not be able to satisfy its obligations
under paragraph (e)(1) of this section by
reporting a modified version of any
information belonging to a category of
information that was not periodically
revised, re-titled, or otherwise edited or
modified by the particular digital music
provider prior to the license availability
date, and in no case shall a modified
version of any unique identifier
(including but not limited to ISRC and
ISWC), playing time, or release date be
sufficient to satisfy the digital music
provider’s obligations under paragraph
(e)(1) of this section.
(4) Any obligation under paragraph
(e)(1) of this section concerning
information about sound recording
copyright owners may be satisfied by
reporting the information for applicable
sound recordings provided to the digital
music provider by sound recording
copyright owners or other licensors of
sound recordings (or their
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16:50 Jul 16, 2020
Jkt 250001
representatives) contained in each of the
following DDEX fields: DDEX Party
Identifier (DPID), LabelName, and
PLine. Where a digital music provider
acquires this information in addition to
other information identifying a relevant
sound recording copyright owner, all
such information must be reported to
the extent practicable.
(5) As used in this paragraph (e), it is
practicable to provide the enumerated
information if:
(i) It belongs to a category of
information expressly required by the
enumerated list of information
contained in 17 U.S.C.
115(d)(4)(A)(ii)(I)(aa) or (bb);
(ii) Where the mechanical licensing
collective has adopted a particular
nationally or internationally recognized
reporting or data standard or format
(e.g., DDEX) that is being used by the
particular digital music provider, it
belongs to a category of information
required to be reported under such
standard or format;
(iii) It belongs to a category of
information that is reported by the
particular digital music provider
pursuant to any voluntary license or
individual download license; or
(iv) It belongs to a category of
information that was periodically
reported by the particular digital music
provider prior to the license availability
date.
(6) Notwithstanding any information
reported under paragraph (e)(1)(ii)(A)(5)
of this section, for each track for which
a share of a musical work has been
matched and for which accrued
royalties for such share have been paid,
but for which one or more shares of the
musical work remains unmatched and
unpaid, the digital music provider must
provide a clear identification of the
share(s) that have been matched, the
owner(s) of such matched shares, and,
for shares other than those paid
pursuant to a voluntary license, the
amount of such accrued royalties paid.
(f) The information required by
paragraphs (c) through (e) of this section
requires intelligible, legible, and
unambiguous statements in the
cumulative statements of account,
without incorporation by reference of
facts or information contained in other
documents or records.
(g) References to part 385 of this title,
as used in paragraphs (c) and (d) of this
section, refer to the rates and terms of
royalty payments as in effect as to each
particular reported use based on when
the use occurred.
(h) If requested by a digital music
provider, the mechanical licensing
collective shall deliver an invoice and/
or a response file to the digital music
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Frm 00033
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
43525
provider within a reasonable period of
time after the cumulative statement of
account and related royalties are
received. The response file shall contain
such information as is common in the
industry to be reported in response files,
backup files, and any other similar such
files provided to digital music providers
by applicable third-party administrators.
(i)(1) Each cumulative statement of
account delivered to the mechanical
licensing collective under paragraph
(b)(3)(i) of this section shall be delivered
in a machine-readable format that is
compatible with the information
technology systems of the mechanical
licensing collective as reasonably
determined by the mechanical licensing
collective and set forth on its website,
taking into consideration relevant
industry standards and the potential for
different degrees of sophistication
among digital music providers. The
mechanical licensing collective must
offer at least two options, where one is
dedicated to smaller digital music
providers that may not be reasonably
capable of complying with the
requirements of a reporting or data
standard or format that the mechanical
licensing collective may see fit to adopt
for larger digital music providers with
more sophisticated operations. Nothing
in this section shall be construed as
prohibiting the mechanical licensing
collective from adopting more than two
reporting or data standards or formats.
(2) Royalty payments shall be
delivered to the mechanical licensing
collective in such manner and form as
the mechanical licensing collective may
reasonably determine and set forth on
its website. A cumulative statement of
account and its related royalty payment
may be delivered together or separately,
but if delivered separately, the payment
must include information reasonably
sufficient to allow the mechanical
licensing collective to match the
cumulative statement of account to the
payment.
(3) In the case of an overpayment of
royalties, the mechanical licensing
collective shall appropriately credit or
offset the excess payment amount and
apply it to the digital music provider’s
account. As an alternative to a credit, a
digital music provider may request a
refund for an overpayment of royalties,
which the mechanical licensing
collective shall pay within a reasonable
period of time.
(j) Each cumulative statement of
account delivered to the mechanical
licensing collective under paragraph
(b)(3)(i) of this section shall be
accompanied by:
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(1) The name of the person who is
signing and certifying the cumulative
statement of account.
(2) A signature, which in the case of
a digital music provider that is a
corporation or partnership, shall be the
signature of a duly authorized officer of
the corporation or of a partner.
(3) The date of signature and
certification.
(4) If the digital music provider is a
corporation or partnership, the title or
official position held in the partnership
or corporation by the person who is
signing and certifying the cumulative
statement of account.
(5) One of the following statements:
(i) Statement one:
I certify that (1) I am duly authorized to sign
this cumulative statement of account on
behalf of the digital music provider; (2) I
have examined this cumulative statement of
account; and (3) 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.
(ii) Statement two:
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS
I certify that (1) I am duly authorized to sign
this cumulative statement of account on
behalf of the digital music provider, (2) I
have prepared or supervised the preparation
of the data used by the digital music provider
and/or its agent to generate this cumulative
statement of account, and (3) such data is
true, complete, and correct to the best of my
knowledge, information, and belief, and was
prepared in good faith, and (4) this
cumulative statement of account was
prepared by the digital music provider and/
or its agent using processes and internal
controls that were subject to an examination,
during the past year, by a licensed certified
public accountant in accordance with the
attestation standards established by the
American Institute of Certified Public
Accountants, the opinion of whom was that
the processes and internal controls were
suitably designed to generate monthly reports
of usage that accurately reflect, in all material
respects, the digital music provider’s usage of
musical works, the statutory royalties
applicable thereto, and any other data that is
necessary for the proper calculation of the
statutory royalties in accordance with 17
U.S.C. 115 and applicable regulations.
(6) 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.
Regan A. Smith,
General Counsel and Associate Register of
Copyrights.
[FR Doc. 2020–15591 Filed 7–16–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 1410–30–P
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
VI. What action is the EPA taking?
VII. Incorporation by Reference
VIII. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
40 CFR Part 52
I. Written Comments
Submit your comments, identified by
Docket ID No. EPA–R07–OAR–2020–
0331 at https://www.regulations.gov.
Once submitted, comments cannot be
edited or removed from Regulations.gov.
The EPA may publish any comment
received to its public docket. Do not
submit electronically any information
you consider to be Confidential
Business Information (CBI) or other
information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Multimedia
submissions (audio, video, etc.) must be
accompanied by a written comment.
The written comment is considered the
official comment and should include
discussion of all points you wish to
make. The EPA will generally not
consider comments or comment
contents located outside of the primary
submission (i.e., on the web, cloud, or
other file sharing system). For
additional submission methods, the full
EPA public comment policy,
information about CBI or multimedia
submissions, and general guidance on
making effective comments, please visit
https://www.epa.gov/dockets/
commenting-epa-dockets.
[EPA–R07–OAR–2020–0331; FRL–10011–
37–Region 7]
Air Plan Approval; Missouri; Removal
of Control of Emissions From
Manufacture of Polystyrene Resin
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is proposing approval of
a State Implementation Plan (SIP)
revision submitted by the State of
Missouri on January 15, 2019, and
supplemented by letter on July 11, 2019.
Missouri requests that the EPA remove
a rule related to the control of emissions
from the manufacture of polystyrene
resin in the St. Louis, Missouri area
from its SIP. This removal does not have
an adverse effect on air quality. The
EPA’s proposed approval of this rule
revision is in accordance with the
requirements of the Clean Air Act
(CAA).
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before August 17, 2020.
ADDRESSES: You may send comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–R07–
OAR–2020–0331 to https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the online
instructions for submitting comments.
Instructions: All submissions received
must include the Docket ID No. for this
rulemaking. Comments received will be
posted without change to https://
www.regulations.gov/, including any
personal information provided. For
detailed instructions on sending
comments and additional information
on the rulemaking process, see the
‘‘Written Comments’’ heading of the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of
this document.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
David Peter, Environmental Protection
Agency, Region 7 Office, Air Permitting
and Standards Branch, 11201 Renner
Boulevard, Lenexa, Kansas 66219;
telephone number (913) 551–7397;
email address peter.david@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document ‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us,’’
and ‘‘our’’ refer to the EPA.
SUMMARY:
Table of Contents
I. Written Comments
II. What is being addressed in this document?
III. Background
IV. What is the EPA’s analysis of Missouri’s
SIP revision request?
V. Have the requirements for approval of a
SIP revision been met?
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II. What is being addressed in this
document?
The EPA is proposing to approve the
removal of 10 Code of State Regulations
(CSR) 10–5.410, Control of Emissions
from Manufacture of Polystyrene Resin,
from the Missouri SIP.
According to the July 11, 2019 letter
from the Missouri Department of
Natural Resources, available in the
docket for this proposed action,
Missouri rescinded the rule because the
only source subject to the rule ceased
manufacturing polystyrene resin in
2009,1 and the rule is no longer
necessary for attainment and
maintenance of the 1979, 1997, 2008, or
2015 National Ambient Air Quality
Standards (NAAQS) for Ozone.
III. Background
The EPA established a 1-hour ozone
NAAQS in 1971. 36 FR 8186 (April 30,
1971). On March 3, 1978, the entire St.
Louis Air Quality Control Region
(AQCR) (070) was identified as being in
nonattainment of the 1971 1-hour ozone
NAAQS, as required by the CAA
Amendments of 1977. 43 FR 8962
1 The Part 70 Permit to Operate issued by
Missouri to The Dow Chemical Company, Riverside
Plant on September 22, 2010 describes the specific
emissions units that ceased operation and the date
the cessation occurred.
E:\FR\FM\17JYP1.SGM
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Agencies
- Library of Congress
- U.S. Copyright Office
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 138 (Friday, July 17, 2020)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 43517-43526]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-15591]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
U.S. Copyright Office
37 CFR Part 210
[Docket No. 2020-12]
Music Modernization Act Transition Period Transfer and Reporting
of Royalties to the Mechanical Licensing Collective
AGENCY: U.S. Copyright Office, Library of Congress.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The U.S. Copyright Office is issuing a notice of proposed
rulemaking regarding digital music providers' obligations to transfer
and report accrued royalties for unmatched musical works (or shares) to
the mechanical licensing collective for purposes of being eligible for
the limitation on liability for prior unlicensed uses under title I of
the Orrin G. Hatch-Bob Goodlatte Music Modernization Act. Having
solicited public comments through multiple prior notices, the Office is
now proposing an update to regulations concerning the transfer and
reporting of such royalties, namely the content, format, and delivery
of cumulative statements of account to be submitted by digital music
providers to the mechanical licensing collective at the conclusion of
the statutory transition period.
DATES: Written comments must be received no later than 11:59 p.m.
Eastern Time on August 17, 2020.
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-transition-reporting. 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],
John R. Riley, 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
This notice of proposed rulemaking (``NPRM'') is being issued
subsequent to a notification of inquiry, published in the Federal
Register on September 24, 2019, that describes in detail the
legislative background and regulatory scope of the present rulemaking
proceeding.\1\ The Copyright Office assumes familiarity with that
document, and encourages anyone reading this NPRM who has not reviewed
that notice to do so before continuing here.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 84 FR 49966 (Sept. 24, 2019). All rulemaking activity,
including public comments, as well as legislative history and
educational material regarding the Music Modernization Act, can
currently be accessed via navigation from https://www.copyright.gov/music-modernization/. Comments received in response to the September
2019 notification of inquiry are available at https://www.regulations.gov/docketBrowser?rpp=25&po=0&dct=PS&D=COLC-2019-0002&refD=COLC-2019-0002-0001. Related ex parte letters are
available at https://www.copyright.gov/rulemaking/mma-implementation/ex-parte-communications.html. References to these
comments and letters are by party name (abbreviated where
appropriate), followed by ``Initial,'' ``Reply,'' or ``Ex Parte
Letter'' as appropriate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On October 11, 2018, the president signed into law the Orrin G.
Hatch-Bob Goodlatte Music Modernization Act (``MMA'') which, among
other things, substantially modifies the compulsory ``mechanical''
license for making and distributing phonorecords of nondramatic musical
works under 17 U.S.C. 115.\2\ It does so by switching from a song-by-
song licensing system to a blanket licensing regime that will become
available on January 1, 2021 (the ``license availability date''), and
be administered by a mechanical licensing collective (``MLC'')
designated by the Copyright Office. Digital music providers (``DMPs'')
will be able to obtain the new compulsory blanket license to make
digital phonorecord deliveries (``DPDs'') of musical works, including
in the form of permanent downloads, limited downloads, or interactive
streams (referred to in the statute as ``covered activity,'' where such
activity qualifies for a compulsory license), subject to compliance
with various requirements.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Public Law 115-264, 132 Stat. 3676 (2018).
\3\ As permitted under the MMA, the Office designated a digital
licensee coordinator (``DLC'') to represent licensees in proceedings
before the Copyright Royalty Judges (``CRJs'') and the Copyright
Office, to serve as a non-voting member of the MLC, and to carry out
other functions. 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(5)(B); 84 FR 32274 (July 8, 2019);
see also 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(3)(D)(i)(IV), (d)(5)(C).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Prior to the MMA, DMPs obtained a section 115 compulsory license on
a per-work, song-by-song basis, by serving a notice of intention to
obtain a compulsory license (``NOI'') on the copyright owner (or filing
it with the Copyright Office if the Office's public records did not
identify the copyright owner) and then paying applicable royalties
accompanied by accounting statements.\4\ The MMA includes a
``transition period'' for the period following the new law's enactment,
before the blanket license becomes available.\5\ During this 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.\6\ If the musical work copyright owner is
unknown, a DMP may no longer file an NOI with the Copyright Office, but
instead may rely on a limitation on liability that requires the DMP to
``continue[ ] to search for the musical work copyright owner'' using
good-faith, commercially reasonable efforts and bulk electronic
matching processes.\7\ The DMP 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.\8\ Congress believed that the liability limitation, which limits
recovery in lawsuits commenced on or after January 1, 2018 to the
statutory royalty due, would ``ensure that more artist royalties will
be paid than otherwise would be the case through continual litigation''
\9\ and viewed this provision as a ``key component that was
[[Page 43518]]
necessary'' to ensure support for legislative change.\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ See 17 U.S.C. 115(b)(1), (c)(5) (2017).
\5\ H.R. Rep. No. 115-651, at 10 (2018); S. Rep. No. 115-339, at
10 (2018).
\6\ 17 U.S.C. 115(b)(2)(A), (c)(2)(I); see H.R. Rep. No. 115-
651, at 4; S. Rep. No. 115-339, at 3.
\7\ 17 U.S.C. 115(b)(2)(A), (d)(9)(D)(i), (d)(10)(A)-(B); see
H.R. Rep. No. 115-651, at 4, 10; S. Rep. No. 115-339, at 3, 10, 22.
\8\ 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.
\9\ H.R. Rep. No. 115-651, at 14; S. Rep. No. 115-339, at 14-15;
Report and Section-by-Section Analysis of H.R. 1551 by the Chairmen
and Ranking Members of Senate and House Judiciary Committees, at 12
(2018), https://www.copyright.gov/legislation/mma_conference_report.pdf (``Conf. Rep.'').
\10\ H.R. Rep. No. 115-651, at 13; S. Rep. No. 115-339, at 14;
Conf. Rep. at 12.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
With respect to the specific reporting and payment requirements to
be eligible for the limitation on liability, the statute details three
scenarios. First, if the matching efforts are successful in identifying
and locating a copyright owner of a musical work (or share) by the end
of the calendar month in which the DMP first makes use of the work, the
DMP must provide statements of account and pay royalties to that
copyright owner in accordance with section 115 and applicable
regulations.\11\ The second and third scenarios apply if the copyright
owner is not identified or located by the end of the calendar month in
which the DMP first makes use of the work.\12\ In such cases, the DMP
must accrue and hold applicable statutory royalties in accordance with
usage of the work, from the initial use of the work until these
royalties can be paid to the copyright owner or are required to be
transferred to the MLC.\13\ If a copyright owner of an unmatched
musical work (or share) is identified and located by or to the DMP
before the license availability date, the DMP must, among other things,
pay the copyright owner all accrued royalties accompanied by a
cumulative statement of account that includes the information that
would have been provided to the copyright owner had the DMP been
providing monthly statements of account to the copyright owner from
initial use of the work in accordance with section 115 and applicable
regulations.\14\ If a copyright owner of an unmatched musical work (or
share) is not identified and located by the license availability date,
the DMP must, among other things, transfer, no later than 45 calendar
days after the license availability date, all accrued royalties to the
MLC accompanied by a cumulative statement of account that includes the
information that would have been provided to the copyright owner had
the DMP been serving monthly statements of account on the copyright
owner ``from initial use of the work in accordance with [section 115]
and applicable regulations,'' including the certification that would
have been provided to an identified copyright owner as well as an
additional certification attesting to the DMP's matching efforts during
the transition period.\15\
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\11\ 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(10)(B)(iii).
\12\ Id. at 115(d)(10)(B)(iv).
\13\ Id.
\14\ Id. at 115(d)(10)(B)(iv)(II).
\15\ Id. at 115(d)(10)(B)(iv)(III).
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In December 2018, the Office published an interim rule and
requested comments to address the current transition period.\16\ With
respect to the payment and reporting obligations to be eligible for the
limitation on liability, the Office adopted regulations specifying that
DMPs must pay royalties and provide cumulative statements of account to
copyright owners and the MLC in compliance with the Office's
preexisting monthly statement of account regulations in 37 CFR
210.16.\17\ The Office required that cumulative statements of account
include ``a clear identification of the total period covered by the
cumulative statement and the total royalty payable for the period.''
\18\ The Office did not receive any comments in response to this public
rulemaking and finalized the rule in March 2019.\19\ In promulgating
the rule, the Office observed that ``[t]he 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.'' \20\ But the rule did separate provisions
regarding the reporting of cumulative statements of account and payment
of royalties for matched works provided to copyright owners on the one
hand from the reporting of cumulative unmatched usages and transfer of
associated royalties to the MLC on the other. This approach includes
the extra step of statutorily required certifications for reports
provided to the MLC.\21\
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\16\ 83 FR 63061 (Dec. 7, 2018).
\17\ 37 CFR 210.20.
\18\ Id. at 210.20(b)(2)(i), (3)(i).
\19\ See 84 FR 10685 (Mar. 22, 2019).
\20\ 83 FR at 63062.
\21\ See 83 FR at 63065-66; 37 CFR 210.16, 210.20.
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Following the adoption of this rule, in September 2019, the Office
issued a notification of inquiry regarding multiple topics related to
MMA implementation.\22\ Noting the ``persistent concern about the
`black box' of unclaimed royalties, including its amount and treatment
by digital music providers and the MLC,'' the Office provided another
opportunity for the public to comment on the regulations governing the
reporting of cumulative statements of account and generally on ``any
issues that should be considered relating to the transfer and reporting
of unclaimed royalties by digital music providers to the MLC.'' \23\
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\22\ 84 FR 49966 (Sept. 24, 2019).
\23\ Id. at 49971.
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In response to this later inquiry, both the MLC and the DLC
provided comments. The MLC proposed that the cumulative statements of
account to be delivered to the MLC at the end of the transition period,
instead of complying with the Office's preexisting monthly statement of
account regulations in 37 CFR 210.16, should include the same
information and be in the same format as required for monthly reports
of usage under the blanket license.\24\ The MLC also proposed requiring
these cumulative statements to include: (1) Per-play allocations or
other applicable rates and amounts allocated to identified usage, and
perpetually unique DMP transaction identifiers for usage; (2)
information about matched shares of a musical work where unmatched
shares for the work are reported; (3) information about any applicable
earned interest; and (4) information about any claimed or applied
deductions or adjustments to the aggregate accrued royalties
payable.\25\ The DLC proposed that DMPs not be ``required to accrue any
royalties that are required to be paid to copyright owners of musical
works pursuant to any agreements entered into prior to the effective
date of the [MMA]'' and that those royalties not be treated as
``accrued royalties'' under the statute.\26\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ MLC Reply App. D at 19; see also MLC Initial at 23; MLC
Reply at 27-28; MLC Ex Parte Letter at 2 (June 17, 2020).
\25\ MLC Reply App. D at 19; see also MLC Initial at 22-23; MLC
Reply at 27-28; MLC Ex Parte Letter at 3-4 (June 17, 2020).
\26\ DLC Reply App. at A-24; see also DLC Initial at 18-19.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Having reviewed and carefully considered all relevant comments, the
Office now issues a proposed rule and invites further public comment.
While all public comments are welcome, as applicable, should commenters
disagree with language in the proposed rule, the Office encourages
commenters to offer alternate potential regulatory language.
II. Proposed Rule
A. Cumulative Statement of Account Content and Format
General. The MLC proposed requiring cumulative statements of
account to ``include[ ] all of the information, and [be] in the same
format, as required to be provided in the monthly usage reports
pursuant to [section] 115(d)(4)(A)(i)-(iii), as supplemented by [the
reports of usage regulations].'' \27\ The MLC explained that it needs
the additional information to properly administer the transferred
royalties.\28\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ MLC Reply App. D at 19.
\28\ MLC Initial at 22; see also MLC Ex Parte Letter at 2 & n.1
(June 17, 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In response, the DLC suggested that the Copyright Office is
restricted in its ability to require DMPs to provide
[[Page 43519]]
additional information in a different format than what was required by
the Office's preexisting monthly statement of account regulations,
because doing so ``is contrary to the MMA, which requires the digital
music provider to only provide `the information that would have been
provided to the copyright owner had the digital music provider been
serving monthly statements of account on the copyright owner.' '' \29\
The DLC further claimed that the MLC's proposal was ``impractical,''
explaining that ``digital music providers have maintained usage
information . . . with the existing statement of account regulations in
mind.'' \30\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ DLC Reply at 24 (quoting 17 U.S.C.
115(d)(10)(B)(iv)(III)(aa)).
\30\ Id. at 24.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The MLC noted that the cited clause ``does not imply that DMPs
should not report anything additional or otherwise limit the Copyright
Office's general authority under [s]ection 115(d)(12)(A) to adopt
regulations necessary or appropriate to effectuate the provisions of
[s]ection 115(d)'' and that regulations to ``effectuate the proper
disposition of accrued unclaimed royalties'' are ``necessary or
appropriate'' for the MLC to execute its functions under section
115(d).\31\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ MLC Ex Parte Letter at 2 n.1 (June 17, 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After considering the issue, the Office tentatively concludes that
it would be within its regulatory authority and in clear furtherance of
the statute's goals and the legislative intent to update the rule
concerning cumulative statements of account as proposed below. In the
course of analyzing these public comments and promulgating a related
rule concerning post-blanket license monthly reporting of usage
information, the Office's review indicates that updating certain
requirements related to the content and delivery of cumulative
statements may help the MLC more effectively identify and locate the
copyright owners of unmatched works to ensure they are paid the
royalties due to them. Congress has signaled this is a core task of the
MLC.\32\ Where statements of account provided to copyright owners have
historically been intended to ``increase the protection of copyright
proprietors against economic harm from companies which might refuse or
fail to pay their just obligations,'' \33\ cumulative statement
reporting to the MLC is meant to facilitate the additional critical
function of matching DMP usage to musical works and their owners--a
task already accomplished where a statement is being served by the DMP
directly on the copyright owner.\34\ The legislative history of the MMA
is in accord, providing that reporting accompanying unmatched royalties
transferred to the MLC at the end of the transition period should
contain ``as much information about usage and ownership information as
possible.'' \35\ The present rule for cumulative statements of account
differentiates between reports provided to copyright owners and reports
provided to the MLC by requiring DMPs to certify to the MLC that they
have engaged in good faith efforts to obtain a variety of statutorily
mandated categories of sound recording and musical work
information.\36\ The current rule also separately addresses transfer of
royalties and reporting to the MLC. To some extent, then, the MLC's
request for additional information related to partially matched works
(not least, when partial payments have occurred) and the identity of
these unmatched works may be viewed as an extension of these provisions
regarding transfer and certification of efforts to obtain additional
information about these works.\37\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ See H.R. Rep. No. 115-651, at 9 (The MLC's duty to
``identify the musical works embodied in particular sound
recordings, as well as to identify and locate the copyright owners
of such works'' is its ``highest responsibility'' next to the
``efficient and accurate collection and distribution of
royalties.''); S. Rep. No. 115-339, at 9 (same); Conf. Rep. at 7
(same); see also Letter from Lindsey Graham, Chairman, Senate
Judiciary Committee, to Karyn Temple, Register of Copyrights 1 (Nov.
1, 2019) (on file with Copyright Office) (``Reducing unmatched funds
is the measure by which the success of this important legislation
should be measured.'').
\33\ H.R. Rep. No. 94-1476, at 111 (1976).
\34\ 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(3)(C)(i)(II)-(III).
\35\ H.R. Rep. No. 115-651, at 29 (emphasis added); S. Rep. No.
115-339, at 26 (same); Conf. Rep. at 22 (same).
\36\ 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(B)(i)(I)(aa)-(bb).
\37\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Accordingly, to effectuate the provisions of section 115(d)(10),
and against that provision's specific reference to ``regulations'' as
well as the MMA's broad grant of regulatory authority to the Copyright
Office, the Office tentatively concludes that it is necessary and
appropriate to require DMPs to provide additional information to aid
the MLC in fulfilling its statutory duty to identify and locate the
copyright owners of unmatched works and pay the royalties due to
them.\38\ The proposed rule employs the MLC's preferred approach of
generally importing the requirements that are eventually adopted for
monthly reports of usage under the blanket license. While those
regulations are still under consideration in a separate proceeding,\39\
it seems reasonable to harmonize these rules in places, since the MLC
is tasked with the same mission of matching works and distributing
royalties, and DMPs, too, may benefit from consistency in reporting
usage information in a similar manner (to the extent they have acquired
such information).\40\ Accordingly, the Office is proposing adjustments
to requirements, such as those addressing format, royalty payment and
accounting information, and sound recording and musical work
information, that largely mirror the requirements proposed for reports
of usage.\41\ Notably, several categories of sound recording and
musical work information proposed to be imported from the reports of
usage regulations are already required under the current rule,\42\
including artist,\43\ playing time,\44\ ISRC,\45\ ISWC,\46\
songwriter,\47\ ISNI,\48\ and ownership share.\49\ In other respects,
the proposed rule reorganizes and clarifies preexisting requirements,
generally by replacing cross references to section 210.16 with the
relevant regulatory language.\50\ For example, while the current
provision incorporates by reference section 210.16's provision with
respect to performance royalty estimates, the proposed rule
specifically addresses use of such estimates in the context of
cumulative statements, which unlike monthly statements delivered to
copyright owners, are not reconciled via annual statements of
account.\51\ Additionally, recognizing the function served by the
cumulative statements, the proposed rule requires reporting of data
related to partially paid shares of musical works and information
needed to reconcile any deviation between royalty statements and the
amounts transferred to the MLC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ See id. at 115(d)(10)(B)(iv)(III); id. at 115(d)(12)(A).
\39\ See generally 85 FR 22518 (Apr. 22, 2020).
\40\ In fact, cumulative statements of account will be due
around the same time as the first monthly reports of usage begin to
come in, and so it may create some efficiencies for DMPs, as well as
the MLC, if these reports follow similar requirements.
\41\ See 85 FR at 22540-46.
\42\ See 37 CFR 210.20(b)(3)(i) (referring to ``the information
and certification required by Sec. 210.16'').
\43\ See id. at 210.16(c)(3)(iv).
\44\ See id. at 210.16(c)(3)(v).
\45\ See id. at 210.16(c)(3)(iii).
\46\ See id. at 210.16(c)(3)(viii).
\47\ See id. at 210.16(c)(3)(vii).
\48\ See id.
\49\ See id. at 210.16(c)(3)(vi).
\50\ See, e.g., id. at 210.16(e) (``clear statements''
requirement); id. at 210.16(d)(3)(i) (performance royalty
estimates); id. at 210.16(d)(3)(ii) (NOI reference number); id. at
210.16(f) (certification requirement).
\51\ See id. at 210.16(d)(3)(i).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Regarding the DLC's assertion that DMPs have been maintaining
certain
[[Page 43520]]
information with only the preexisting statement of account regulations
in mind, under the proposed rule, required information is generally
limited to items that are either equivalent to the information required
by section 210.16 or otherwise ``to the extent acquired'' by a DMP.\52\
The Office believes that this qualification reasonably addresses the
DLC's concern.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\52\ Compare id. at 210.16(c) with 85 FR at 22541-42.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Where the NPRM imports the proposed reports of usage requirements,
the Office's intent is for both rules to remain largely harmonized when
finalized. After considering the MLC's suggestion, the Office declines
to simply cross reference the reports of usage regulations because they
may change over time after becoming effective (especially if adopted on
an interim basis as has been proposed); \53\ whereas the cumulative
statement of account requirements, tied to the license availability
date, will not change. To minimize duplication, commenters may cross
reference or incorporate by reference comments submitted in the
separate reports of usage proceeding as appropriate, and focus their
comments here on items uniquely relevant to cumulative statements of
account. To the extent commenters believe a separate approach is
appropriate for cumulative statements of account compared to the
proposed rule regarding reports of usage, they are encouraged to
identify those areas of differentiation and explain their position.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\53\ See 85 FR at 22519 (noting that an interim rule would offer
``more flexibly to make necessary modifications in response to new
evidence, unforeseen issues, or where something is otherwise not
functioning as intended'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Format. While the rule adopted in December 2018 was silent as to
method of delivery, now that the MLC has been designated and is further
along in its operational activities, the Office proposes to carry over
the proposed reports of usage format provision, which would require
delivery to the MLC in a machine-readable format that is compatible
with its information technology systems, as reasonably determined by
the MLC and taking into consideration relevant industry standards. If a
large amount of musical works remain unmatched after the transition
period, the MLC may be required to ingest a significant amount of
cumulative statements of account from DMPs. As the MLC explains, using
the same format will ensure efficient processing and ultimately support
``efficient and accurate reporting.'' \54\ Further, as the MLC points
out, ``a workflow will already have to be developed by the DMPs and the
MLC for reporting in this format'' to process reports of usage,\55\ and
the MLC is ``mindful of the varying data formats used by DMPs with
varying resources and intends to coordinate with the DMP community to
ensure the most appropriate version of data standards is selected.''
\56\ The Office notes that current monthly statement of account
regulations already allow a copyright owner to ``demand that Monthly
Statements of Account be submitted in a readily accessible electronic
format consistent with prevailing industry practices applicable to
comparable electronic delivery of comparable financial information.''
\57\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\54\ MLC Initial at 20.
\55\ MLC Ex Parte Letter at 2 (June 17, 2020).
\56\ MLC Initial at 20.
\57\ 37 CFR 210.16(g)(2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Certifications and clear statements. The Office does not propose
any substantive changes to the certifications required under the
previously adopted rule for cumulative statements of account.\58\ The
rule proposes a technical change to include the actual language for
clarity (with appropriate conforming edits), rather than merely
referring to the ``certification required by Sec. 210.16.'' The Office
has moved the other required certification--``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''--to be in the same paragraph as the language from
section 210.16. The proposed rule also imports the ``clear statements''
requirement from the preexisting regulations.\59\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\58\ See id. at 210.20(b)(3)(i). As noted, to the extent the
proposed rule would obligate DMPs to engage in reporting additional
sound recording and musical works information, the statute requires
DMPs to certify that they have attempted to acquire much of this
information, and so an alternate method of providing this
information to the MLC may be to require reporting the fruits of
these inquiries in the certification.
\59\ Id. at 210.16(e).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Estimates and adjustments. Under the previously adopted cumulative
statement of account regulation, DMPs could make estimates to the
extent currently permitted by 37 CFR 210.16(d)(3)(i) (covering where
the final public performance royalty has not yet been determined), and
there would be no adjustments mechanism. The Office proposes to retain
this status quo rather than conform to the estimates and adjustments
provisions proposed for reports of usage, given the one-time nature of
the cumulative statements, compared to the proposed regulatory
structure designed for ongoing reporting. The Office does propose,
however, that any overpayment (whether resulting from an estimate or
otherwise) should be credited to the DMP's account, or refunded upon
request.
Response files and invoices. In light of the DLC's comments
concerning the value of receiving invoices and response files,\60\ the
proposed rule allows a DMP to request and obtain a response file and/or
invoice from the MLC. Because the MLC will be ingesting a large amount
of data all around the same time, the rule proposes that any requested
invoices and/or response files be delivered to DMPs within a
``reasonable'' period of time in lieu of imposing a strict deadline.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\60\ See DLC Comments at 12-13, Music Modernization Act Notices
of License, Notices of Nonblanket Activity, Data Collection and
Delivery Efforts, and Reports of Usage and Payment, Docket No. 2020-
5, https://www.regulations.gov/contentStreamer?documentId=COLC-2020-0005-0012&attachmentNumber=1&contentType=pdf (``Invoices and
response files are critically important to licensees and their
accounting processes.''); see also 85 FR at 22528.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
NOI reference numbers. The proposed rule restates a provision
currently incorporated by reference to section 210.16(c)(3)(ii), which
requires a DMP to provide a reference number or code identifying the
relevant NOI if it, or its agent, provided such a number or code on its
relevant NOI. The Office proposes to retain this provision because
records of past NOIs issued may be helpful inputs for the MLC in
identifying unmatched works (or shares).
Sound recording and musical work information. As noted, the
proposed rule generally harmonizes with the reporting requirements
proposed for DMPs' monthly reports of usage to be delivered to the MLC
following the transition to the blanket license. In many cases, this
information is already required to be reported under the current rule,
and in others, DMPs must certify that they have tried to obtain this
information to receive the limitation on liability.\61\ In some cases,
additional fields are proposed to be required, including certain
categories pertaining to identifying information for the sound
recording that embodies a particular musical work.\62\ As noted below,
the obligation to report these additional fields is generally cabined
by the extent the DMP has acquired this information,
[[Page 43521]]
and, in some instances, is further limited by whether the DMP is
already reporting this information.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\61\ 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(10)(B)(i)(I)(aa)-(bb), (iv)(III)(aa); see
37 CFR 210.20(b)(3)(i) (referring to ``the information and
certification required by Sec. 210.16''); id. at 210.16(c)(3)
(addressing e.g., artist, playing time, ISRC, ISWC, songwriter,
ISNI, and ownership share).
\62\ For example, sound recording name(s), producer(s),
version(s), release date(s), album title(s), and distributor(s).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Altered data and practicability of reporting. For sound recording
and musical work information, the rule proposes to require identifying
whether the reported data has been modified by the DMP, compared to
being passed through in its original, as-received form. This concept
was suggested by the MLC and others.\63\ As noted above, the Office is
still considering comments in the reports of usage rulemaking and
incorporation of the MLC's suggestion here should not indicate that the
Office has made any conclusions in either this rulemaking or the
reports of usage rulemaking on this subject. The Office also proposes
to import the practicability limitation concerning the reporting of
sound recording and musical work information that was proposed in the
reports of usage proceeding.\64\ Under that proposal, much of the
enumerated sound recording and musical work information would only need
to be reported by a DMP ``to the extent practicable,'' which is defined
in reference to categories of information that are statutorily
required, required by a data standard used by the DMP, or were
otherwise already being reported by the relevant DMP.\65\ As with
altered data, the inclusion of this limitation in the proposed rule
should not indicate that the Office has finalized its approach with
respect to this aspect of the reports of usage rulemaking. The Office
recognizes that these are potential areas where it may make sense to
consider whether the monthly and cumulative reporting rules should
diverge, and invites comment on these issues.\66\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\63\ MLC Comments at 26, Music Modernization Act Notices of
License, Notices of Nonblanket Activity, Data Collection and
Delivery Efforts, and Reports of Usage and Payment, Docket No. 2020-
5, https://www.regulations.gov/contentStreamer?documentId=COLC-2020-0005-0014&attachmentNumber=1&contentType=pdf; A2IM & RIAA Initial at
2-3 (noting provenance issues with using DMP-sourced sound recording
data); Paul Jessop Initial at 2-3 (same); SoundExchange Comments at
4-5, Music Modernization Act Notices of License, Notices of
Nonblanket Activity, Data Collection and Delivery Efforts, and
Reports of Usage and Payment, Docket No. 2020-5, https://www.regulations.gov/contentStreamer?documentId=COLC-2020-0005-0006&attachmentNumber=1&contentType=pdf (same).
\64\ See 85 FR at 22541-42.
\65\ See id.; see also id. at 22531-32. As proposed, it would be
``practicable'' to provide the enumerated information if: (1) it
belongs to a category of information expressly required by the
enumerated list of information contained in 17 U.S.C.
115(d)(4)(A)(ii)(I)(aa) or (bb); (2) where the MLC has adopted a
particular nationally or internationally recognized reporting or
data standard or format (e.g., DDEX) that is being used by the
particular DMP, it belongs to a category of information required to
be reported under such standard or format; (3) it belongs to a
category of information that is reported by the particular DMP
pursuant to any voluntary license or individual download license; or
(4) it belongs to a category of information that was periodically
reported by the particular DMP prior to the license availability
date.
\66\ For example, the Office has inquired whether a reasonable
transition period may be appropriate with respect to certain monthly
usage reporting requirements. See Letter from Copyright Office to
Alliance for Recorded Music, DLC, MLC, and SoundExchange, Inc., at
3-4 (June 30, 2020), https://www.copyright.gov/rulemaking/mma-implementation/copyright-office-letters/2020-5-june-30-2020.pdf.
Since cumulative statements of account are reported only once,
shortly after the license availability date, such a period would
make less sense for this proposed rule, and reporting obligations
for cumulative statements may need to be cognizant of the time
period within which DMPs will ready such statements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Partially matched works. The MLC requested that cumulative
statements of account include information about matched shares of a
musical work where unmatched shares for the work are reported, by
proposing the following regulatory language:
for each track for which a share of a musical work has been matched
and for which accrued royalties have been paid in accordance with
section [210.20(b)(2)], but for which one or more shares of a
musical work remains unmatched, identification of [the total period
covered by the cumulative statement and the per-play allocation and
unique DMP transaction identifier], and a clear identification of
the share(s) that have been matched, the owner(s) of such matched
shares, and the amount of such accrued royalties paid in accordance
with section [210.20(b)(2)].\67\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\67\ MLC Reply App. D at 19.
The MLC explained that, in practice, a DMP may have paid one
copyright owner their royalty share, and held accrued royalties for any
remaining unmatched share(s).\68\ The MLC is concerned that upon
transfer of such unmatched royalties, if the paid share is not properly
identified, there is a risk that a paid co-owner would be able to
collect a portion of an unpaid co-owner's share.\69\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\68\ MLC Ex Parte Letter at 3 (June 17, 2020) (giving the
example of an identified 50% co-owner being paid their 50% share by
a DMP, and then subsequently being paid half of the remaining share
by the MLC due to lack of record of the first payment; stating that
``reporting on partially-matched works and the respective shares
that the DMP already paid is essential to allow the MLC to properly
credit share owners who have been paid and avoid double payments'').
\69\ MLC Ex Parte Letter at 3 (June 17, 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The DLC does not appear to disagree with the MLC's description of
the issue, but stated that ``[t]his sort of operational detail should
be worked out between the MLC and individual digital music providers.''
\70\ The DLC suggested that DMPs' third-party vendors, who are subject
to ``strict contractual confidentiality restrictions,'' may have this
information and not the DMPs themselves.\71\ Although it did not
propose suggested language, it asked the Office to ``account for these
[confidentiality] restrictions and protect digital music providers from
any liability related to their breach,'' were it to promulgate a
regulation.\72\ The MLC presumed that the DLC's confidentiality concern
``relates to the amounts of royalties paid under voluntary licenses''
and offered to amend their proposal to limit share reporting ``to the
share percentage and the owner of the share that was paid, [and]
omitting the precise amount of royalties paid under the voluntary
license terms.'' \73\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\70\ DLC Reply at 25.
\71\ Id.
\72\ Id.
\73\ MLC Ex Parte Letter at 4 (June 17, 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Copyright Office finds the MLC's proposal to be reasonable in
light of the statutory function of cumulative statements of account.
Current regulations already allow a compulsory licensee to elect to
allocate monthly royalty payments between co-owners and serve
statements on each co-owner reflecting the percentage share paid to
that co-owner.\74\ Further, the MMA contemplates that if a DMP's
matching efforts are successful during the transition period as to a
share of a work, it will pay royalties to the owner of that share,
while holding the unmatched remainder for further matching efforts and,
if ultimately unsuccessful, eventual transfer to the MLC.\75\ Thus, the
situation the MLC anticipates seems likely to occur, and having the
matched share information will be important. The proposed rule largely
follows the MLC's language, although it does not include the MLC's
proposed limitation to instances where royalty shares are paid in
accordance with Sec. 210.20(b)(2), which concerns payments related to
musical works matched during the transition period. It seems that all
instances of partial payment of royalty interests may be relevant to
the MLC's identification and royalty distribution functions for the
remaining unmatched share(s). The Office welcomes comments on all
aspects of this proposed rule, and is interested in whether the MLC's
suggestion to omit a requirement to report the amount of royalties paid
to matched shares under voluntary licenses adequately addresses the
DLC's concerns. To that end, the Office solicits comments regarding
whether the rule should also permit the MLC and individual DMPs to
enter into
[[Page 43522]]
agreements to alter this process, provided that any such change does
not materially prejudice the MLC's efforts with respect to locating and
identifying copyright owners owed a portion of these accrued royalties.
The Office has proposed a similar provision with respect to monthly
reports of usage.\76\
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\74\ 37 CFR 210.16(g)(1).
\75\ See 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(10)(B).
\76\ See 85 FR 22546 (proposed 37 CFR 210.27(n)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Reconciliation. The MLC requested reporting of information
concerning any applicable interest earned by DMPs on accrued royalties,
and also ``any claimed or applied deductions or adjustments'' to
applicable royalties ``with a description of the nature of, and basis
for, such claimed deduction or adjustment.'' \77\ The DLC responded
that interest ``was purposefully not included in the statute'' and
``was specifically negotiated out of the draft legislation.'' \78\ In
particular, the DLC objected to the inclusion of deductions or
adjustments because it ``is not aware of any deductions or adjustments
that would be made to accrued royalties.'' \79\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\77\ MLC Reply App. D at 19.
\78\ DLC Reply at 24.
\79\ Id. at 25.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The MLC subsequently clarified that it ``does not purport to
dictate where interest must be applied or what would be applicable
interest,'' but wished to ``ensure[] that any such interest paid over
is also reported, so that the MLC can know to which copyright owners
those moneys should ultimately be paid.'' \80\ Similarly, for
deductions or adjustments, the MLC explained that it does not ``intend
to approve or condone of applying deductions, but merely wants to
ensure that any such changes are properly reported, again so that the
MLC can understand and exactly match the reporting to the payments.''
\81\ The MLC contended that these provisions are needed because ``it is
essential that the reporting on unclaimed accrued royalties match the
accompanying royalty payments to the penny.'' \82\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\80\ MLC Ex Parte Letter at 4 (June 17, 2020).
\81\ Id.
\82\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Recognizing the DLC's comments regarding specific references to
interest, adjustments, and deductions, the Copyright Office also
appreciates the broader principle advanced by the MLC that it has an
operational need for royalty statements to match the royalties
transferred to the MLC, or at least minimize unexplained deviations.
While not adopting the MLC's proposed language, the rule proposes that
if the total royalties turned over to the MLC do not reconcile with the
corresponding cumulative statement of account (for whatever reason),
the DMP should include a clear and detailed explanation of the
deviation. The Office has previously adopted a similar rule in the
context of annual statements of account.\83\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\83\ See 37 CFR 210.17(d)(2)(ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Per-play allocation and unique transaction identifiers. The MLC
proposed that cumulative statements of account be required to include
``[t]he per-play allocation or any other applicable rates and amounts
allocated to the identified usage, and a perpetually unique DMP
transaction identifier for the usage.'' \84\ During a subsequent ex
parte meeting, the MLC explained that while the proposed reports of
usage requirements do not explicitly include references to these items,
this information would nonetheless be adequately captured if the Office
applied those proposed requirements.\85\ As a result, the Office has
not included the MLC's proposed language.\86\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\84\ MLC Reply App. D at 19.
\85\ See MLC Ex Parte Letter at 3 (June 17, 2020).
\86\ The proposed rule adopts the same approach with respect to
reporting of partially matched works. See MLC Reply App. D at 19.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Treatment of Negotiated Agreements
As described above, in addition to the MLC's request for additional
reporting, the DLC asked for a ``regulatory clarification'' related to
negotiated agreements that predate the MMA's enactment.\87\ In its
words, certain music publishers ``negotiated agreements with several of
the major digital music providers to liquidate accrued royalties for
unmatched works through payments based on market share, or other
mechanisms not based on matching to specific compositions that
generated the royalties,'' and some of these agreements have continued
in force through the MMA's enactment date such that ``some digital
music providers will continue to be obligated to pay some amount of
accrued unmatched royalties to publishers with whom they have direct
deals.'' \88\ According to the DLC, ``[t]his creates a conflict between
the terms of those preexisting agreements and the MMA's directions in
section 115(d)(10) regarding the accrual of unmatched royalties.'' \89\
To address this, and the DLC's overarching concern that ``[i]n no event
should digital music providers be made to pay double,'' \90\ the DLC
proposed adding the following regulatory language:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\87\ DLC Initial at 18.
\88\ Id. at 18-19.
\89\ Id. at 18.
\90\ Id. at 19.
Notwithstanding anything in this section to the contrary, digital
music providers are not required to accrue any royalties that are
required to be paid to copyright owners of musical works pursuant to
any agreements entered into prior to the effective date of the Music
Modernization Act, and such royalties shall not be treated as
``accrued royalties'' for purposes of this section or 17 U.S.C.
115(d)(10).\91\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\91\ Id.
The MLC objected, stating that this proposed regulation would both
``conflict[] with the statute's requirement that all royalties accrued
from initial use of the unmatched work be transferred'' to the MLC and
``exceed the Copyright Office's authority.'' \92\ The MLC stated that
``[w]hile prior to the enactment of the MMA, certain DMPs entered into
settlement agreements with certain music publishers in connection with
disputes arising from their failure to license, match and/or pay
royalties due, such settlement payments were definitively not the
proper payment of royalties to copyright owners of unmatched uses,''
and were ``more likely consideration for releases from liability for
copyright infringement or covenants not to sue.'' \93\ The MLC further
argued that royalties lose their ``unclaimed'' status only when they
are matched.\94\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\92\ MLC Reply at 27-30.
\93\ Id. at 29.
\94\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed rule does not include regulatory language specifically
addressing the relationship between private settlement agreements and
whether works are required to be reported on cumulative statements of
account (with accompanying payment of accrued royalties). The statute
is somewhat instructive to this issue. Provisions regarding the
treatment of voluntary licenses and accrued, unclaimed royalties were
carefully negotiated during the legislative process.\95\ To maintain
eligibility for the limitation on liability, when making available a
sound recording of a musical work via a covered activity, a digital
music provider must accrue and hold royalties for each musical work for
which a copyright owner has not been identified or located.\96\ At the
end of this current holding period, all accrued royalties for which ``a
copyright owner of an unmatched musical work (or share thereof) is not
identified and located'' must be transferred to the MLC along with
associated reporting.\97\ Works are
[[Page 43523]]
considered ``matched'' when ``the copyright owner of such work (or
share thereof) has been identified and located.'' \98\ The law further
states that ``[v]oluntary license[s]'' will ``remain in effect'' by
their respective terms notwithstanding the license availability date,
and by implication, DMPs would not retain accrued royalties (as defined
in the MMA) for works licensed under private agreements.\99\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\95\ See H.R. Rep. No. 115-651, at 9-10, 24; S. Rep. No. 115-
339, at 10-11, 33-34.
\96\ 17 U.S.C. 115(d)(10).
\97\ Id. at 115(d)(10)(B)(iv)(III); see id. at 115(e)(2) (``The
term `accrued royalties' means royalties accrued for the
reproduction or distribution of a musical work (or share thereof) in
a covered activity, calculated in accordance with the applicable
royalty rate under this section.'').
\98\ Id. at 115(e)(17); see also id. at 115(e)(35) (defining
``unmatched'').
\99\ Id. at 115(e)(36) (``The term `voluntary license' means a
license for use of a musical work (or share thereof) other than a
compulsory license obtained under this section.''); id. at
115(d)(9)(C) (describing transition to blanket license). The MLC
will ``confirm uses of musical works subject to voluntary licenses
and individual download licenses, and the corresponding pro rata
amounts to be deducted from royalties that would otherwise be due
under the blanket license.'' Id. at 115(d)(3)(G)(i)(I)(bb). The
Office has proposed a rule that would require DMPs to provide a
description (including the start and end dates, the musical work
copyright owner, and either a list of all covered musical works or
an identification of any applicable catalog exclusions) of any
applicable voluntary licenses to the MLC so that the MLC can confirm
such uses for DMPs. See 85 FR 22537, 22541.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Office understands the DLC's concerns to center around whether
payments made pursuant to various private settlement agreements can
extinguish the obligation to deliver accrued royalties to the MLC. In
light of the statutory language, these questions may be best resolved
by determining whether a given agreement constitutes a valid license to
the work(s) at issue (and if so, the scope of the license).\100\ In
such cases, the work(s) licensed under such agreements could be
considered ``matched'' and may not need to be reported at the close of
the transition period. In the case of jointly authored works, a further
potential wrinkle may be determining whether any license extended
pursuant to a settlement agreement was conveyed to the entirety of the
work, or only to a partial interest in a co-owned work.\101\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\100\ While in some cases, the terms of a settlement agreement
may provide continuing license authority, the Second Circuit has
opined that, ``absent clear language to the contrary, they are not
licenses for future use.'' Compare Davis v. Blige 505 F.3d 90, 102-
04 (2d Cir. 2007) (holding that ``a license or assignment in
copyright can only act prospectively,'' and that a co-owner cannot
convey ``his co-owners' right to prosecute past infringements'')
with Jacobs v. Nintendo of Am., Inc., 370 F.3d 1097, 1101 (Fed. Cir.
2004) (holding that a settlement with an unrestricted grant to
engage in patented activities carried with it an implied
sublicense); see also United States v. Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co.,
171 F.2d 103, 111 (6th Cir. 1948) (``A release for wrongs done in
the past is not the equivalent of a license to do rightfully the
same thing in the future.'').
\101\ For a background discussion on considerations related to
licensing co-owned works in the performance royalty context, see
U.S. Copyright Office, Views of the United States Copyright Office
Concerning PRO Licensing of Jointly Owned Works (Jan. 2016), https://www.copyright.gov/policy/pro-licensing.pdf. As a starting point,
``[j]oint authors co-owning copyright in a work . . . `each hav[e]
an independent right to use or [non-exclusively] license the
copyright, subject only to a duty to account to the other co-owner
for any profits earned thereby.' '' Cmty. for Creative Non-Violence
v. Reid, 846 F.2d 1485, 1498 (DC Cir. 1988). Collaborators can and
sometimes do ``alter this statutory allocation of rights and
liabilities by contract,'' including with respect to licensing. Paul
Goldstein, 1 Goldstein on Copyright sec. 4.2 (3d. ed. 2020); see,
e.g., Corbello v. DeVito, 832 F. Supp. 2d 1231, 1244 (D. Nev. 2011).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Office appreciates the DMP's motivation for further guidance on
this important issue, but must be careful to avoid speaking over either
the statue or private transactions. It would seem that the specific
terms of each agreement would be highly relevant to addressing this
issue, and that questions regarding the interpretation of various
private contracts may be better resolved by the relevant parties rather
than a blanket rule by the Copyright Office.\102\ To the extent that
preexisting settlement agreements may be, as the DLC asserts, in
``conflict'' with ``the MMA's directions in section 115(d)(10)
regarding the accrual of unmatched royalties,'' \103\ the statutory
directive could not yield to such agreements, but the Office offers no
opinion as to whether this is indeed the case. Additionally, if a DMP
is unsure about its obligations under the statute vis-a-vis a given
agreement (or with respect to a particular musical work or share of a
work) and inadvertently transfers royalties later determined to have
indeed been properly matched and paid by the DMP, the Office has
proposed a provision that, as noted, would require the MLC to credit or
refund any overpayment back to the DMP. For these reasons, based on the
current record, the Office tentatively declines the DLC's suggestion to
offer regulatory language regarding the interaction of preexisting
settlement agreements and cumulative reporting obligations.\104\ The
Office recognizes that the DLC's comments arise out of a complicated
and nuanced treatment of private transactions and remains available to
dialogue further, in accordance with the public process for written
comments and/or ex parte meetings.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\102\ The Office has not been provided copies of these
settlement agreements.
\103\ DLC Initial at 18.
\104\ Further, while the Office appreciates the DLC's view that
enactment of the MMA was not intended to result in services
``pay[ing] double'' to the same parties for the same activities, id.
at 19, its specific proposed regulatory language may conflict with
the statutory definition of ``accrued royalties'' and lack precision
with respect to scenarios where a payment does not extinguish
royalty entitlements for all copyright owners for the relevant
works; that is, where usage remains fully or partially ``unmatched''
within the meaning of the statute.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
III. Subjects of Inquiry
The proposed rule is designed to reasonably implement regulatory
duties assigned to the Copyright Office under the MMA and facilitate
the administration of the compulsory licensing system. The Office
solicits additional public comment on all aspects of the proposed rule.
List of Subjects in 37 CFR Part 210
Copyright, Phonorecords, Recordings.
Proposed Regulations
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Copyright Office
proposes amending 37 CFR part 210 as follows:
PART 210--COMPULSORY LICENSE FOR MAKING AND DISTRIBUTING PHYSICAL
AND DIGITAL PHONORECORDS OF NONDRAMATIC MUSICAL WORKS
0
1. The authority citation for part 210 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 17 U.S.C. 115, 702.
0
2. Amend Sec. 210.12 by revising paragraph (k) and removing paragraphs
(i) through (o).
The revision reads as follows:
Sec. 210.12 Definitions.
* * * * *
(k) Any terms not otherwise defined in this section shall have the
meanings set forth in 17 U.S.C. 115(e).
0
3. Amend Sec. 210.20 by revising paragraph (b)(3)(i) and adding
paragraphs (c) through (j) 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.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(3) * * *
(i) Not later than 45 calendar days after the license availability
date, transfer all accrued royalties to the mechanical licensing
collective (as required by paragraph (i)(2) of this section), such
payment to be accompanied by a cumulative statement of account that:
(A) Includes all of the information required by paragraphs (c)
through (e) of this section covering the period starting from initial
use of the work;
(B) Is delivered to the mechanical licensing collective as required
by paragraph (i)(1) of this section; and
[[Page 43524]]
(C) Is certified as required by paragraph (j) of this section; and
* * * * *
(c) Each cumulative statement of account delivered to the
mechanical licensing collective under paragraph (b)(3)(i) of this
section shall be clearly and prominently identified as a ``Cumulative
Statement of Account for Making and Distributing Phonorecords,'' and
shall include a clear statement of the following information:
(1) The period (months and years) covered by the cumulative
statement of account.
(2) The full legal name of the digital music provider and, if
different, the trade or consumer-facing brand name(s) of the
service(s), including any specific offering(s), through which the
digital music provider engages, or has engaged at any time during the
period identified in paragraph (c)(1) of this section, in covered
activities. If the digital music provider has a unique DDEX identifier
number, it must also be provided.
(3) The full address, including a specific number and street name
or rural route, of the place of business of the digital music provider.
A post office box or similar designation will not be sufficient except
where it is the only address that can be used in that geographic
location.
(4) For each sound recording embodying a musical work for which
accrued royalties must be transferred to the mechanical licensing
collective under paragraph (b)(3)(i) of this section, a detailed
cumulative statement, from which the mechanical licensing collective
may separate reported information for each month and year for each
applicable activity or offering including as may be defined in part 385
of this title, of all of:
(i) The royalty payment and accounting information required by
paragraph (d) of this section; and
(ii) The sound recording and musical work information required by
paragraph (e) of this section.
(5) The total royalty payable by the digital music provider for the
period identified in paragraph (c)(1) of this section for the sound
recordings embodying musical works identified in paragraph (c)(4) of
this section, computed in accordance with the requirements of this
section and part 385 of this title, and including detailed information
regarding how the royalty was computed, with such total royalty payable
broken down by month and year and by each applicable activity or
offering including as may be defined in part 385 of this title.
(6) If the total royalty payable under paragraph (c)(5) of this
section does not reconcile with the royalties actually transferred to
the mechanical licensing collective, a clear and detailed explanation
of the difference and the basis for it.
(d) The royalty payment and accounting information called for by
paragraph (c)(4)(i) of this section shall consist of the following:
(1) A detailed and step-by-step accounting of the calculation of
royalties payable by the digital music provider under applicable
provisions of this section and part 385 of this title, sufficient to
allow the mechanical licensing collective to assess the manner in which
the digital music provider determined the royalty owed and the accuracy
of the royalty calculations, including but not limited to the number of
payable units, including, as applicable, permanent downloads, plays,
and constructive plays, for each reported sound recording.
(2) A digital music provider may, in cases where the final public
performance royalty has not yet been determined, compute the public
performance royalty component based on the interim public performance
royalty rate, if established; or alternatively, on a reasonable
estimation of the expected royalties to be paid in accordance with
GAAP.
(3) All information and calculations provided pursuant to paragraph
(d) of this section shall be made in good faith and on the basis of the
best knowledge, information, and belief of the digital music provider
at the time the cumulative statement of account is delivered to the
mechanical licensing collective, and subject to any additional
accounting and certification requirements under 17 U.S.C. 115 and this
section.
(e)(1) The following information must be provided for each sound
recording embodying a musical work required to be reported under
paragraph (c)(4)(ii) of this section:
(i) Identifying information for the sound recording, including but
not limited to:
(A) Sound recording name(s), including, to the extent practicable,
all known alternative and parenthetical titles for the sound recording;
(B) Featured artist(s);
(C) Unique identifier(s) assigned by the digital music provider, if
any, including any code(s) that can be used to locate and listen to the
sound recording through the digital music provider's public-facing
service;
(D) Playing time; and
(E) To the extent acquired by the digital music provider in
connection with its use of sound recordings of musical works to engage
in covered activities, and to the extent practicable:
(1) Sound recording copyright owner(s);
(2) Producer(s);
(3) International standard recording code(s) (ISRC);
(4) Any other unique identifier(s) for or associated with the sound
recording, including any unique identifier(s) for any associated album,
including but not limited to:
(i) Catalog number(s);
(ii) Universal product code(s) (UPC); and
(iii) Unique identifier(s) assigned by any distributor;
(5) Version(s);
(6) Release date(s);
(7) Album title(s);
(8) Label name(s);
(9) Distributor(s); and
(10) Other information commonly used in the industry to identify
sound recordings and match them to the musical works the sound
recordings embody.
(ii) Identifying information for the musical work embodied in the
reported sound recording, to the extent acquired by the digital music
provider in the metadata provided by sound recording copyright owners
or other licensors of sound recordings in connection with the use of
sound recordings of musical works to engage in covered activities, and
to the extent practicable:
(A) Information concerning authorship and ownership of the
applicable rights in the musical work embodied in the sound recording,
including but not limited to:
(1) Songwriter(s);
(2) Publisher(s) with applicable U.S. rights;
(3) Musical work copyright owner(s);
(4) International standard name identifier(s) (ISNI) and interested
parties information code(s) (IPI) for each such songwriter, publisher,
and musical work copyright owner; and
(5) Respective ownership shares of each such musical work copyright
owner;
(B) International standard musical work code(s) (ISWC) for the
musical work embodied in the sound recording; and
(C) Musical work name(s) for the musical work embodied in the sound
recording, including any alternative or parenthetical titles for the
musical work.
(iii) Whether the digital music provider, or any corporate parent
or subsidiary of the digital music provider, is a copyright owner of
the musical work embodied in the sound recording.
(iv) A reference number or code identifying the relevant Notice of
[[Page 43525]]
Intention, if the digital music provider, or its agent, chose to
include such a number or code on its relevant Notice of Intention for
the compulsory license.
(2) Subject to paragraph (e)(3) of this section, where any of the
information called for by paragraph (e)(1) of this section is acquired
by the digital music provider from sound recording copyright owners or
other licensors of sound recordings (or their representatives), and the
digital music provider revises, re-titles, or otherwise edits or
modifies the information, it shall be sufficient for the digital music
provider to report either the originally acquired version or the
modified version of such information (but any modified information must
be identified as such) to satisfy its obligations under paragraph
(e)(1) of this section, unless one or more of the following scenarios
apply, in which case either the unaltered version or both versions must
be reported:
(i) If the mechanical licensing collective has adopted a particular
nationally or internationally recognized reporting or data standard or
format (e.g., DDEX) that is being used by the particular digital music
provider, and either the unaltered version or both versions are
required to be reported under such standard or format.
(ii) Either the unaltered version or both versions are reported by
the particular digital music provider pursuant to any voluntary license
or individual download license.
(iii) Either the unaltered version or both versions were
periodically reported by the particular digital music provider prior to
the license availability date.
(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (e)(2) of this section, a digital
music provider shall not be able to satisfy its obligations under
paragraph (e)(1) of this section by reporting a modified version of any
information belonging to a category of information that was not
periodically revised, re-titled, or otherwise edited or modified by the
particular digital music provider prior to the license availability
date, and in no case shall a modified version of any unique identifier
(including but not limited to ISRC and ISWC), playing time, or release
date be sufficient to satisfy the digital music provider's obligations
under paragraph (e)(1) of this section.
(4) Any obligation under paragraph (e)(1) of this section
concerning information about sound recording copyright owners may be
satisfied by reporting the information for applicable sound recordings
provided to the digital music provider by sound recording copyright
owners or other licensors of sound recordings (or their
representatives) contained in each of the following DDEX fields: DDEX
Party Identifier (DPID), LabelName, and PLine. Where a digital music
provider acquires this information in addition to other information
identifying a relevant sound recording copyright owner, all such
information must be reported to the extent practicable.
(5) As used in this paragraph (e), it is practicable to provide the
enumerated information if:
(i) It belongs to a category of information expressly required by
the enumerated list of information contained in 17 U.S.C.
115(d)(4)(A)(ii)(I)(aa) or (bb);
(ii) Where the mechanical licensing collective has adopted a
particular nationally or internationally recognized reporting or data
standard or format (e.g., DDEX) that is being used by the particular
digital music provider, it belongs to a category of information
required to be reported under such standard or format;
(iii) It belongs to a category of information that is reported by
the particular digital music provider pursuant to any voluntary license
or individual download license; or
(iv) It belongs to a category of information that was periodically
reported by the particular digital music provider prior to the license
availability date.
(6) Notwithstanding any information reported under paragraph
(e)(1)(ii)(A)(5) of this section, for each track for which a share of a
musical work has been matched and for which accrued royalties for such
share have been paid, but for which one or more shares of the musical
work remains unmatched and unpaid, the digital music provider must
provide a clear identification of the share(s) that have been matched,
the owner(s) of such matched shares, and, for shares other than those
paid pursuant to a voluntary license, the amount of such accrued
royalties paid.
(f) The information required by paragraphs (c) through (e) of this
section requires intelligible, legible, and unambiguous statements in
the cumulative statements of account, without incorporation by
reference of facts or information contained in other documents or
records.
(g) References to part 385 of this title, as used in paragraphs (c)
and (d) of this section, refer to the rates and terms of royalty
payments as in effect as to each particular reported use based on when
the use occurred.
(h) If requested by a digital music provider, the mechanical
licensing collective shall deliver an invoice and/or a response file to
the digital music provider within a reasonable period of time after the
cumulative statement of account and related royalties are received. The
response file shall contain such information as is common in the
industry to be reported in response files, backup files, and any other
similar such files provided to digital music providers by applicable
third-party administrators.
(i)(1) Each cumulative statement of account delivered to the
mechanical licensing collective under paragraph (b)(3)(i) of this
section shall be delivered in a machine-readable format that is
compatible with the information technology systems of the mechanical
licensing collective as reasonably determined by the mechanical
licensing collective and set forth on its website, taking into
consideration relevant industry standards and the potential for
different degrees of sophistication among digital music providers. The
mechanical licensing collective must offer at least two options, where
one is dedicated to smaller digital music providers that may not be
reasonably capable of complying with the requirements of a reporting or
data standard or format that the mechanical licensing collective may
see fit to adopt for larger digital music providers with more
sophisticated operations. Nothing in this section shall be construed as
prohibiting the mechanical licensing collective from adopting more than
two reporting or data standards or formats.
(2) Royalty payments shall be delivered to the mechanical licensing
collective in such manner and form as the mechanical licensing
collective may reasonably determine and set forth on its website. A
cumulative statement of account and its related royalty payment may be
delivered together or separately, but if delivered separately, the
payment must include information reasonably sufficient to allow the
mechanical licensing collective to match the cumulative statement of
account to the payment.
(3) In the case of an overpayment of royalties, the mechanical
licensing collective shall appropriately credit or offset the excess
payment amount and apply it to the digital music provider's account. As
an alternative to a credit, a digital music provider may request a
refund for an overpayment of royalties, which the mechanical licensing
collective shall pay within a reasonable period of time.
(j) Each cumulative statement of account delivered to the
mechanical licensing collective under paragraph (b)(3)(i) of this
section shall be accompanied by:
[[Page 43526]]
(1) The name of the person who is signing and certifying the
cumulative statement of account.
(2) A signature, which in the case of a digital music provider that
is a corporation or partnership, shall be the signature of a duly
authorized officer of the corporation or of a partner.
(3) The date of signature and certification.
(4) If the digital music provider is a corporation or partnership,
the title or official position held in the partnership or corporation
by the person who is signing and certifying the cumulative statement of
account.
(5) One of the following statements:
(i) Statement one:
I certify that (1) I am duly authorized to sign this cumulative
statement of account on behalf of the digital music provider; (2) I
have examined this cumulative statement of account; and (3) 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.
(ii) Statement two:
I certify that (1) I am duly authorized to sign this cumulative
statement of account on behalf of the digital music provider, (2) I
have prepared or supervised the preparation of the data used by the
digital music provider and/or its agent to generate this cumulative
statement of account, and (3) such data is true, complete, and
correct to the best of my knowledge, information, and belief, and
was prepared in good faith, and (4) this cumulative statement of
account was prepared by the digital music provider and/or its agent
using processes and internal controls that were subject to an
examination, during the past year, by a licensed certified public
accountant in accordance with the attestation standards established
by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, the
opinion of whom was that the processes and internal controls were
suitably designed to generate monthly reports of usage that
accurately reflect, in all material respects, the digital music
provider's usage of musical works, the statutory royalties
applicable thereto, and any other data that is necessary for the
proper calculation of the statutory royalties in accordance with 17
U.S.C. 115 and applicable regulations.
(6) 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.
Regan A. Smith,
General Counsel and Associate Register of Copyrights.
[FR Doc. 2020-15591 Filed 7-16-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 1410-30-P