Copyright Guidelines for Showing Movies on UPPS No. 01.04.23
Campus Issue
No. 4
Effective Date: 1/15/2008
Review: December 1
E2Y
01. POLICY STATEMENTS
01.01
This
UPPS provides guidelines to both individuals as well as organizations for
complying with the federal Copyright Act insofar as it affects showing movies
on campus. Other policy statements that are relevant to other portions of the
Copyright Act include:
a. musical performances on campus (UPPS No. 01.04.20);
b. copying material for use in the University
Library (UPPS No.
01.04.21);
c. copyrighted software (UPPS No. 01.04.24);
and
d. appropriate use of copyrighted material (UPPS No. 01.04.07).
01.02 This UPPS only summarizes the applicable
portions of the Copyright Act. Persons may address questions regarding the
applicability of the Act to specific situations to the University Attorney. The
reference librarians in the Library can address general inquiries concerning
the Act.
02. DEFINITIONS
02.01 In this policy, the term “Act” refers to the
federal Copyright Act (Title 17 of the United States Code).
02.02 “Movie” means audiovisual works consisting of
a series of related images that, when shown in succession, create an impression
of motion, together with accompanying sound, if any. The term includes movies
on DVDs, videotapes, and other media.
03. GUIDELINES FOR SHOWING MOVIES ON CAMPUS
03.01 Purchasing, renting, or borrowing a movie
normally gives you only the copy rather than the copyright to the movie. While
you are free to watch the movie yourself, you need a license from the copyright
owner if you show the movie “to the public.”
03.02 There is no general educational, nonprofit, or
free of charge exception to the Act. Even if a performance meets all three of
these factors it will require a license if it constitutes a public performance
and does not fall within one of the exceptions listed in Section 03.04.
03.03 To determine whether you need such a license,
you must determine whether your proposed showing would constitute a “public
performance” as defined in the Act. The showing is a public performance if
either of the following is true:
a.
You
will be showing the movie to people other than members of your family or a
small group of your friends. Generally speaking, showing a movie in a residence
hall or apartment room is not a public performance if you limit attendance to
family and friends.
b. You will be showing the movie in a place that
is open to people other than members of your family or a small group of your
friends. Examples include classrooms,
lounges, recreation areas, auditoriums, and common areas of residence halls,
apartments, the LBJ Student Center, and similar buildings.
1) If you used publicity to invite your audience
to the showing (such as mass e-mails, flyers, or web postings) you will need a
license.
2) If you charge admission to the showing or to
an event in conjunction with the showing you will need a license.
03.04 Even if your proposed showing will constitute
a public performance you will not need a license if any of the following is
true:
a. Showing the movie in the course of
“face-to-face” teaching activities that take place in a classroom or similar
place devoted to instruction and you have a legitimate copy of the movie. A
‘legitimate copy of the movie’ includes a copy that you may have purchased or
rented from a video store, but does not include a copy that you may have taped
from a broadcast.
b. Showing
a movie that came with an express license authorizing the particular manner of
showing. Some educational movies come with licenses to show them for certain
noncommercial institutional purposes.
c. Showing a movie that is in the public domain.
The Public Domain Movie Database publishes a list of movies that it believes to
be in the public domain but it is not authoritative.
03.05 You can obtain a public performance license by
either renting the movie directly from a distributor that is authorized to
grant such licenses rather than from a video store or by contacting the
copyright holder directly.
a. SWANK Motion Pictures, Incorporated lists
films that it distributes on its web page (www.swank.com)
and adds new films daily. Its phone number is 800-876-5577.
b. Criterion is the other big distributor. Its
web site is www.criterionpic.com and
its phone number is 800-890-9494.
c. The Reference Library of the Motion Picture
Academy (310-247-3020) may help determine the film distributor.
04. REVIEWERS OF THIS UPPS
04.01 Reviewers of this UPPS include the following:
Position Date
University Attorney December 1
E2Y
Chair, Faculty Senate December 1 E2Y
05. CERTIFICATION STATEMENT
This UPPS has been approved by the following
individuals in their official capacities and represents Texas State policy and
procedure from the date of this document until superceded.
University Attorney; senior reviewer of this
UPPS
Special Assistant to the President
President