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Subchapter A - Definitions
§ 1001. Definitions
As used in this chapter, the following terms have the following
meanings:
(1) A "digital audio copied recording" is a reproduction
in a digital recording format of a digital musical recording,
whether that reproduction is made directly from another digital
musical recording or indirectly from a transmission.
(2) A "digital audio interface device" is any machine or
device that is designed specifically to communicate digital
audio information and related interface data to a digital
audio recording device through a nonprofessional interface.
(3) A "digital audio recording device" is any machine or
device of a type commonly distributed to individuals for use
by individuals, whether or not included with or as part of
some other machine or device, the digital recording function
of which is designed or marketed for the primary purpose of,
and that is capable of, making a digital audio copied recording
for private use, except for -
(A) professional model products, and
(B) dictation machines, answering machines, and other audio
recording equipment that is designed and marketed primarily
for the creation of sound recordings resulting from the fixation
of nonmusical sounds.
(4)(A) A "digital audio recording medium" is any material
object in a form commonly distributed for use by individuals,
that is primarily marketed or most commonly used by consumers
for the purpose of making digital audio copied recordings
by use of a digital audio recording device.
(B) Such term does not include any material object -
(i) that embodies a sound recording at the time it is first
distributed by the importer or manufacturer; or
(ii) that is primarily marketed and most commonly used by
consumers either for the purpose of making copies of motion
pictures or other audiovisual works or for the purpose of
making copies of nonmusical literary works, including computer
programs or data bases.
(5)(A) A "digital musical recording" is a material object
-
(i) in which are fixed, in a digital recording format, only
sounds, and material, statements, or instructions incidental
to those fixed sounds, if any, and
(ii) from which the sounds and material can be perceived,
reproduced, or otherwise communicated, either directly or
with the aid of a machine or device.
(B) A "digital musical recording" does not include a material
object -
(i) in which the fixed sounds consist entirely of spoken
word recordings, or
(ii) in which one or more computer programs are fixed, except
that a digital musical recording may contain statements or
instructions constituting the fixed sounds and incidental
material, and statements or instructions to be used directly
or indirectly in order to bring about the perception, reproduction,
or communication of the fixed sounds and incidental material.
(C) For purposes of this paragraph -
(i) a "spoken word recording" is a sound recording in which
are fixed only a series of spoken words, except that the spoken
words may be accompanied by incidental musical or other sounds,
and
(ii) the term "incidental" means related to and relatively
minor by comparison.
(6) "Distribute" means to sell, lease, or assign a product
to consumers in the United States, or to sell, lease, or assign
a product in the United States for ultimate transfer to consumers
in the United States.
(7) An "interested copyright party" is -
(A) the owner of the exclusive right under section
106(1) of this title to reproduce a sound recording of
a musical work that has been embodied in a digital musical
recording or analog musical recording lawfully made under
this title that has been distributed;
(B) the legal or beneficial owner of, or the person that
controls, the right to reproduce in a digital musical recording
or analog musical recording a musical work that has been embodied
in a digital musical recording or analog musical recording
lawfully made under this title that has been distributed;
(C) a featured recording artist who performs on a sound recording
that has been distributed; or
(D) any association or other organization -
(i) representing persons specified in subparagraph (A), (B),
or (C), or
(ii) engaged in licensing rights in musical works to music
users on behalf of writers and publishers.
(8) To "manufacture" means to produce or assemble a product
in the United States. A "manufacturer" is a person who manufactures.
(9) A "music publisher" is a person that is authorized to
license the reproduction of a particular musical work in a
sound recording.
(10) A "professional model product" is an audio recording
device that is designed, manufactured, marketed, and intended
for use by recording professionals in the ordinary course
of a lawful business, in accordance with such requirements
as the Secretary of Commerce shall establish by regulation.
(11) The term "serial copying" means the duplication in a
digital format of a copyrighted musical work or sound recording
from a digital reproduction of a digital musical recording.
The term "digital reproduction of a digital musical recording"
does not include a digital musical recording as distributed,
by authority of the copyright owner, for ultimate sale to
consumers.
(12) The "transfer price" of a digital audio recording device
or a digital audio recording medium -
(A) is, subject to subparagraph (B) -
(i) in the case of an imported product, the actual entered
value at United States Customs (exclusive of any freight,
insurance, and applicable duty), and
(ii) in the case of a domestic product, the manufacturer's
transfer price (FOB the manufacturer, and exclusive of any
direct sales taxes or excise taxes incurred in connection
with the sale); and
(B) shall, in a case in which the transferor and transferee
are related entities or within a single entity, not be less
than a reasonable arms-length price under the principles of
the regulations adopted pursuant to section 482 of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, or any successor provision to such section.
(13) A "writer" is the composer or lyricist of a particular
musical work.
Subchapter B - Copying Controls
§ 1002. Incorporation of copying controls
(a) Prohibition on Importation, Manufacture, and Distribution.
- No person shall import, manufacture, or distribute any digital
audio recording device or digital audio interface device that
does not conform to -
(1) the Serial Copy Management System;
(2) a system that has the same functional characteristics
as the Serial Copy Management System and requires that copyright
and generation status information be accurately sent, received,
and acted upon between devices using the system's method of
serial copying regulation and devices using the Serial Copy
Management System; or
(3) any other system certified by the Secretary of Commerce
as prohibiting unauthorized serial copying.
(b) Development of Verification Procedure. -
The Secretary of Commerce shall establish a procedure to verify,
upon the petition of an interested party, that a system meets
the standards set forth in subsection (a)(2).
(c) Prohibition on Circumvention of the System.
- No person shall import, manufacture, or distribute any device,
or offer or perform any service, the primary purpose or effect
of which is to avoid, bypass, remove, deactivate, or otherwise
circumvent any program or circuit which implements, in whole
or in part, a system described in subsection (a).
(d) Encoding of Information on Digital Musical Recordings.
-
(1) Prohibition on encoding inaccurate information.
- No person shall encode a digital musical recording of a
sound recording with inaccurate information relating to the
category code, copyright status, or generation status of the
source material for the recording.
(2) Encoding of copyright status not required.
- Nothing in this chapter requires any person engaged in the
importation or manufacture of digital musical recordings to
encode any such digital musical recording with respect to
its copyright status.
(e) Information Accompanying Transmission in Digital
Format. - Any person who transmits or otherwise communicates
to the public any sound recording in digital format is not
required under this chapter to transmit or otherwise communicate
the information relating to the copyright status of the sound
recording. Any such person who does transmit or otherwise
communicate such copyright status information shall transmit
or communicate such information accurately.
Subchapter C - Royalty Payments
§ 1003. Obligation to make royalty
payments
(a) Prohibition on Importation and Manufacture.
- No person shall import into and distribute, or manufacture
and distribute, any digital audio recording device or digital
audio recording medium unless such person records the notice
specified by this section and subsequently deposits the statements
of account and applicable royalty payments for such device
or medium specified in section
1004.
(b) Filing of Notice. - The importer or manufacturer
of any digital audio recording device or digital audio recording
medium, within a product category or utilizing a technology
with respect to which such manufacturer or importer has not
previously filed a notice under this subsection, shall file
with the Register of Copyrights a notice with respect to such
device or medium, in such form and content as the Register
shall prescribe by regulation.
(c) Filing of Quarterly and Annual Statements of Account.
-
(1) Generally. - Any importer or manufacturer
that distributes any digital audio recording device or digital
audio recording medium that it manufactured or imported shall
file with the Register of Copyrights, in such form and content
as the Register shall prescribe by regulation, such quarterly
and annual statements of account with respect to such distribution
as the Register shall prescribe by regulation.
(2) Certification, verification, and confidentiality.
- Each such statement shall be certified as accurate by an
authorized officer or principal of the importer or manufacturer.
The Register shall issue regulations to provide for the verification
and audit of such statements and to protect the confidentiality
of the information contained in such statements. Such regulations
shall provide for the disclosure, in confidence, of such statements
to interested copyright parties.
(3) Royalty payments. - Each such statement
shall be accompanied by the royalty payments specified in
section 1004.
§ 1004. Royalty payments2
(a) Digital Audio Recording Devices. -
(1) Amount of payment. - The royalty payment
due under section 1003 for
each digital audio recording device imported into and distributed
in the United States, or manufactured and distributed in the
United States, shall be 2 percent of the transfer price. Only
the first person to manufacture and distribute or import and
distribute such device shall be required to pay the royalty
with respect to such device.
(2) Calculation for devices distributed with other
devices. - With respect to a digital audio recording
device first distributed in combination with one or more devices,
either as a physically integrated unit or as separate components,
the royalty payment shall be calculated as follows:
(A) If the digital audio recording device and such other
devices are part of a physically integrated unit, the royalty
payment shall be based on the transfer price of the unit,
but shall be reduced by any royalty payment made on any digital
audio recording device included within the unit that was not
first distributed in combination with the unit.
(B) If the digital audio recording device is not part of
a physically integrated unit and substantially similar devices
have been distributed separately at any time during the preceding
4 calendar quarters, the royalty payment shall be based on
the average transfer price of such devices during those 4
quarters.
(C) If the digital audio recording device is not part of
a physically integrated unit and substantially similar devices
have not been distributed separately at any time during the
preceding 4 calendar quarters, the royalty payment shall be
based on a constructed price reflecting the proportional value
of such device to the combination as a whole.
(3) Limits on royalties. - Notwithstanding paragraph
(1) or (2), the amount of the royalty payment for each digital
audio recording device shall not be less than $1 nor more
than the royalty maximum. The royalty maximum shall be $8
per device, except that in the case of a physically integrated
unit containing more than 1 digital audio recording device,
the royalty maximum for such unit shall be $12. During the
6th year after the effective date of this chapter, and not
more than once each year thereafter, any interested copyright
party may petition the Librarian of Congress to increase the
royalty maximum and, if more than 20 percent of the royalty
payments are at the relevant royalty maximum, the Librarian
of Congress shall prospectively increase such royalty maximum
with the goal of having no more than 10 percent of such payments
at the new royalty maximum; however the amount of any such
increase as a percentage of the royalty maximum shall in no
event exceed the percentage increase in the Consumer Price
Index during the period under review.
(b) Digital Audio Recording Media. - The royalty payment
due under section 1003 for
each digital audio recording medium imported into and distributed
in the United States, or manufactured and distributed in the
United States, shall be 3 percent of the transfer price. Only
the first person to manufacture and distribute or import and
distribute such medium shall be required to pay the royalty
with respect to such medium.
§ 1005. Deposit of royalty payments and
deduction of expenses3
The Register of Copyrights shall receive all royalty payments
deposited under this chapter and, after deducting the reasonable
costs incurred by the Copyright Office under this chapter,
shall deposit the balance in the Treasury of the United States
as offsetting receipts, in such manner as the Secretary of
the Treasury directs. All funds held by the Secretary of the
Treasury shall be invested in interest-bearing United States
securities for later distribution with interest under section
1007. The Register may, in the Register's discretion,
4 years after the close of any calendar year, close out the
royalty payments account for that calendar year, and may treat
any funds remaining in such account and any subsequent deposits
that would otherwise be attributable to that calendar year
as attributable to the succeeding calendar year.
§ 1006. Entitlement to royalty payments4
(a) Interested Copyright Parties. - The royalty
payments deposited pursuant to section
1005 shall, in accordance with the procedures specified
in section 1007, be distributed
to any interested copyright party -
(1) whose musical work or sound recording has been -
(A) embodied in a digital musical recording or an analog
musical recording lawfully made under this title that has
been distributed, and
(B) distributed in the form of digital musical recordings
or analog musical recordings or disseminated to the public
in transmissions, during the period to which such payments
pertain; and
(2) who has filed a claim under section
1007.
(b) Allocation of Royalty Payments to Groups.
- The royalty payments shall be divided into 2 funds as follows:
(1) The sound recordings fund. - 66 2/3 percent
of the royalty payments shall be allocated to the Sound Recordings
Fund. 2 5/8 percent of the royalty payments allocated to the
Sound Recordings Fund shall be placed in an escrow account
managed by an independent administrator jointly appointed
by the interested copyright parties described in section
1001(7)(A) and the American Federation of Musicians (or
any successor entity) to be distributed to nonfeatured musicians
(whether or not members of the American Federation of Musicians
or any successor entity) who have performed on sound recordings
distributed in the United States. 1 3/8 percent of the royalty
payments allocated to the Sound Recordings Fund shall be placed
in an escrow account managed by an independent administrator
jointly appointed by the interested copyright parties described
in section 1001(7)(A) and
the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (or
any successor entity) to be distributed to nonfeatured vocalists
(whether or not members of the American Federation of Television
and Radio Artists or any successor entity) who have performed
on sound recordings distributed in the United States. 40 percent
of the remaining royalty payments in the Sound Recordings
Fund shall be distributed to the interested copyright parties
described in section 1001(7)(C),
and 60 percent of such remaining royalty payments shall be
distributed to the interested copyright parties described
in section 1001(7)(A).
(2) The Musical Works Fund. -
(A) 33 1/3 percent of the royalty payments shall be allocated
to the Musical Works Fund for distribution to interested copyright
parties described in section
1001(7)(B).
(B)(i) Music publishers shall be entitled to 50 percent of
the royalty payments allocated to the Musical Works Fund.
(ii) Writers shall be entitled to the other 50 percent of
the royalty payments allocated to the Musical Works Fund.
(c) Allocation of Royalty Payments Within Groups.
- If all interested copyright parties within a group specified
in subsection (b) do not agree on a voluntary proposal for
the distribution of the royalty payments within each group,
the Librarian of Congress shall convene a copyright arbitration
royalty panel which shall, pursuant to the procedures specified
under section 1007(c), allocate
royalty payments under this section based on the extent to
which, during the relevant period -
(1) for the Sound Recordings Fund, each sound recording was
distributed in the form of digital musical recordings or analog
musical recordings; and
(2) for the Musical Works Fund, each musical work was distributed
in the form of digital musical recordings or analog musical
recordings or disseminated to the public in transmissions.
§ 1007. Procedures for distributing royalty
payments5
(a) Filing of Claims and Negotiations. -
(1) Filing of claims. - During the first 2 months
of each calendar year after calendar year 1992, every interested
copyright party seeking to receive royalty payments to which
such party is entitled under section
1006 shall file with the Librarian of Congress a claim
for payments collected during the preceding year in such form
and manner as the Librarian of Congress shall prescribe by
regulation.
(2) Negotiations. - Notwithstanding any provision
of the antitrust laws, for purposes of this section interested
copyright parties within each group specified in section
1006(b) may agree among themselves to the proportionate
division of royalty payments, may lump their claims together
and file them jointly or as a single claim, or may designate
a common agent, including any organization described in section
1001(7)(D), to negotiate or receive payment on their behalf;
except that no agreement under this subsection may modify
the allocation of royalties specified in section
1006(b).
(b) Distribution of Payments in the Absence of a Dispute.
- After the period established for the filing of claims under
subsection (a), in each year after 1992, the Librarian of
Congress shall determine whether there exists a controversy
concerning the distribution of royalty payments under section
1006(c). If the Librarian of Congress determines that
no such controversy exists, the Librarian of Congress shall,
within 30 days after such determination, authorize the distribution
of the royalty payments as set forth in the agreements regarding
the distribution of royalty payments entered into pursuant
to subsection (a), after deducting its reasonable administrative
costs under this section.
(c) Resolution of Disputes. - If the Librarian
of Congress finds the existence of a controversy, the Librarian
shall, pursuant to chapter 8 of
this title, convene a copyright arbitration royalty panel
to determine the distribution of royalty payments. During
the pendency of such a proceeding, the Librarian of Congress
shall withhold from distribution an amount sufficient to satisfy
all claims with respect to which a controversy exists, but
shall, to the extent feasible, authorize the distribution
of any amounts that are not in controversy. The Librarian
of Congress shall, before authorizing the distribution of
such royalty payments, deduct the reasonable administrative
costs incurred by the Librarian under this section.
Subchapter D - Prohibition on Certain
Infringement Actions, Remedies, and Arbitration
§ 1008. Prohibition on certain infringement
actions
No action may be brought under this title alleging infringement
of copyright based on the manufacture, importation, or distribution
of a digital audio recording device, a digital audio recording
medium, an analog recording device, or an analog recording
medium, or based on the noncommercial use by a consumer of
such a device or medium for making digital musical recordings
or analog musical recordings.
§ 1009. Civil remedies
(a) Civil Actions. - Any interested copyright
party injured by a violation of section
1002 or 1003 may bring
a civil action in an appropriate United States district court
against any person for such violation.
(b) Other Civil Actions. - Any person injured
by a violation of this chapter may bring a civil action in
an appropriate United States district court for actual damages
incurred as a result of such violation.
(c) Powers of the Court. - In an action brought
under subsection (a), the court -
(1) may grant temporary and permanent injunctions on such
terms as it deems reasonable to prevent or restrain such violation;
(2) in the case of a violation of section
1002, or in the case of an injury resulting from a failure
to make royalty payments required by section
1003, shall award damages under subsection (d);
(3) in its discretion may allow the recovery of costs by
or against any party other than the United States or an officer
thereof; and
(4) in its discretion may award a reasonable attorney's fee
to the prevailing party.
(d) Award of Damages. -
(1) Damages for section
1002 or 1003 violations.
-
(A) Actual damages. -
(i) In an action brought under subsection (a), if the court
finds that a violation of section
1002 or 1003 has occurred,
the court shall award to the complaining party its actual
damages if the complaining party elects such damages at any
time before final judgment is entered.
(ii) In the case of section
1003, actual damages shall constitute the royalty payments
that should have been paid under section
1004 and deposited under section
1005. In such a case, the court, in its discretion, may
award an additional amount of not to exceed 50 percent of
the actual damages.
(B) Statutory damages for section
1002 violations. -
(i) Device. - A complaining party may recover
an award of statutory damages for each violation of section
1002(a) or (c) in the sum of not more than $2,500 per
device involved in such violation or per device on which a
service prohibited by section
1002(c) has been performed, as the court considers just.
(ii) Digital musical recording. - A complaining
party may recover an award of statutory damages for each violation
of section 1002(d) in the
sum of not more than $25 per digital musical recording involved
in such violation, as the court considers just.
(iii) Transmission. - A complaining party may
recover an award of damages for each transmission or communication
that violates section 1002(e)
in the sum of not more than $10,000, as the court considers
just.
(2) Repeated violations. - In any case in which
the court finds that a person has violated section
1002 or 1003 within 3
years after a final judgment against that person for another
such violation was entered, the court may increase the award
of damages to not more than double the amounts that would
otherwise be awarded under paragraph (1), as the court considers
just.
(3) Innocent violations of section
1002. - The court in its discretion may reduce
the total award of damages against a person violating section
1002 to a sum of not less than $250 in any case in which
the court finds that the violator was not aware and had no
reason to believe that its acts constituted a violation of
section 1002.
(e) Payment of Damages. - Any award of damages
under subsection (d) shall be deposited with the Register
pursuant to section 1005
for distribution to interested copyright parties as though
such funds were royalty payments made pursuant to section
1003.
(f) Impounding of Articles. - At any time while
an action under subsection (a) is pending, the court may order
the impounding, on such terms as it deems reasonable, of any
digital audio recording device, digital musical recording,
or device specified in section
1002(c) that is in the custody or control of the alleged
violator and that the court has reasonable cause to believe
does not comply with, or was involved in a violation of, section
1002.
(g) Remedial Modification and Destruction of Articles.
- In an action brought under subsection (a), the court may,
as part of a final judgment or decree finding a violation
of section 1002, order the
remedial modification or the destruction of any digital audio
recording device, digital musical recording, or device specified
in section 1002(c) that -
(1) does not comply with, or was involved in a violation
of, section 1002, and
(2) is in the custody or control of the violator or has been
impounded under subsection (f).
§ 1010. Arbitration of certain disputes6
(a) Scope of Arbitration. - Before the date
of first distribution in the United States of a digital audio
recording device or a digital audio interface device, any
party manufacturing, importing, or distributing such device,
and any interested copyright party may mutually agree to binding
arbitration for the purpose of determining whether such device
is subject to section 1002,
or the basis on which royalty payments for such device are
to be made under section 1003.
(b) Initiation of Arbitration Proceedings. -
Parties agreeing to such arbitration shall file a petition
with the Librarian of Congress requesting the commencement
of an arbitration proceeding. The petition may include the
names and qualifications of potential arbitrators. Within
2 weeks after receiving such a petition, the Librarian of
Congress shall cause notice to be published in the Federal
Register of the initiation of an arbitration proceeding. Such
notice shall include the names and qualifications of 3 arbitrators
chosen by the Librarian of Congress from a list of available
arbitrators obtained from the American Arbitration Association
or such similar organization as the Librarian of Congress
shall select, and from potential arbitrators listed in the
parties' petition. The arbitrators selected under this subsection
shall constitute an Arbitration Panel.
(c) Stay of Judicial Proceedings. - Any civil
action brought under section
1009 against a party to arbitration under this section
shall, on application of one of the parties to the arbitration,
be stayed until completion of the arbitration proceeding.
(d) Arbitration Proceeding. - The Arbitration
Panel shall conduct an arbitration proceeding with respect
to the matter concerned, in accordance with such procedures
as it may adopt. The Panel shall act on the basis of a fully
documented written record. Any party to the arbitration may
submit relevant information and proposals to the Panel. The
parties to the proceeding shall bear the entire cost thereof
in such manner and proportion as the Panel shall direct.
(e) Report to the Librarian of Congress. - Not
later than 60 days after publication of the notice under subsection
(b) of the initiation of an arbitration proceeding, the Arbitration
Panel shall report to the Librarian of Congress its determination
concerning whether the device concerned is subject to section
1002, or the basis on which royalty payments for the device
are to be made under section
1003. Such report shall be accompanied by the written
record, and shall set forth the facts that the Panel found
relevant to its determination.
(f) Action by the Librarian of Congress. - Within
60 days after receiving the report of the Arbitration Panel
under subsection (e), the Librarian of Congress shall adopt
or reject the determination of the Panel. The Librarian of
Congress shall adopt the determination of the Panel unless
the Librarian of Congress finds that the determination is
clearly erroneous. If the Librarian of Congress rejects the
determination of the Panel, the Librarian of Congress shall,
before the end of that 60-day period, and after full examination
of the record created in the arbitration proceeding, issue
an order setting forth the Librarian's decision and the reasons
therefor. The Librarian of Congress shall cause to be published
in the Federal Register the determination of the Panel and
the decision of the Librarian of Congress under this subsection
with respect to the determination (including any order issued
under the preceding sentence).
(g) Judicial Review. - Any decision of the Librarian
of Congress under subsection (f) with respect to a determination
of the Arbitration Panel may be appealed, by a party to the
arbitration, to the United States Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia Circuit, within 30 days after the publication
of the decision in the Federal Register. The pendency of an
appeal under this subsection shall not stay the decision of
the Librarian of Congress. The court shall have jurisdiction
to modify or vacate a decision of the Librarian of Congress
only if it finds, on the basis of the record before the Librarian
of Congress, that the Arbitration Panel or the Librarian of
Congress acted in an arbitrary manner. If the court modifies
the decision of the Librarian of Congress, the court shall
have jurisdiction to enter its own decision in accordance
with its final judgment. The court may further vacate the
decision of the Librarian of Congress and remand the case
for arbitration proceedings as provided in this section.
Chapter 10 Endnotes
1The Audio Home Recording Act
of 1992 added chapter 10, entitled "Digital Audio Recording
Devices and Media," to title 17. Pub. L. No. 102-563, 106
Stat. 4237.
2The Copyright Royalty Tribunal
Reform Act of 1993 amended section
1004(a)(3) by substituting "Librarian of Congress" in
lieu of "Copyright Royalty Tribunal," where appropriate. Pub.
L. No. 103-198, 107 Stat. 2304, 2312.
3The Copyright Royalty Tribunal
Reform Act of 1993 amended section
1005 by striking the last sentence which began "The Register
shall submit to the Copyright Royalty Tribunal." Pub. L. No.
103-198, 107 Stat. 2304, 2312.
4The Copyright Royalty Tribunal
Reform Act of 1993 amended section
1006(c) by substituting "Librarian of Congress" in lieu
of "Copyright Royalty Tribunal," where appropriate. Pub. L.
No. 103-198, 107 Stat. 2304, 2312. In 1997, section 1006(b)(1)
was amended to insert "Federation of Television" in lieu of
"Federation Television" wherever it appeared. Pub. L. No.
105-80, 111 Stat. 1529, 1535.
5The Copyright Royalty Tribunal
Reform Act of 1993 amended section
1007 by substituting "Librarian of Congress" in lieu of
"Copyright Royalty Tribunal" or "Tribunal," where appropriate,
by amending the first sentence in subsection (c) and by inserting
"the reasonable administrative costs incurred by the Librarian"
in the last sentence of subsection (c), in lieu of "its reasonable
administrative costs." Pub. L. No. 103-198, 107 Stat. 2304,
2312.
In 1997, section 1007 was
amended, in subsection (a)(1), by inserting "calendar year
1992" in lieu of "the calendar year in which this chapter
takes effect" and, in subsection (b), by inserting "1992"
in lieu of "the year in which this section takes effect,"
and also in subsection (b), by inserting "After" in lieu of
"Within 30 days after." Pub. L. No. 105-80, 111 Stat. 1529,
1534 and 1535.
6The Copyright Royalty Tribunal
Reform Act of 1993 amended section
1010 by substituting "Librarian of Congress" in lieu of
"Copyright Royalty Tribunal" or "Tribunal," where appropriate,
and by inserting "Librarian's" in lieu of "its." Pub. L. No.
103-198, 107 Stat. 2304, 2312. That Act, which established
copyright arbitration royalty panels, states that "[a]ll royalty
rates and all determinations with respect to the proportionate
division of compulsory license fees among copyright claimants,
whether made by the Copyright Royalty Tribunal, or by voluntary
agreement, before the effective date set forth in subsection
(a) [December 17, 1993] shall remain in effect until modified
by voluntary agreement or pursuant to the amendments made
by this Act." Pub. L. No. 103-198, 107 Stat. 2304, 2313.
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