For copyright, author rights, and Creative Commons questions, please contact the University Libraries Data and Publishing Services team.
Anytime you want to screen a film on campus, Public Performance Rights (PPR) need to be obtained. Copyright law (USC 17§101) defines a public performance as occurring in a public space or if it is in any place if "a substantial number of persons outside of a normal circle of a family and its acquaintances" is gathered there. This would include classrooms, meeting rooms, auditoriums, dorm lounges, etc. However, copyright law (USC 17§110) also provides an exception for face-to-face teaching activities in a nonprofit educational institution.
Yes | No |
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if the screening is open to the public, such as showing a foreign-language film to the community for cultural enrichment | if privately viewing the film in your room with friends |
if the screening is in a public space where access is not restricted, such as an instructor showing a film to a class for curriculum-related purposes in a public or unrestricted-access location | if an instructor is showing the film to officially registered students in a classroom, where content of film directly relates to course* |
if persons attending are outside the normal circle of family and acquaintances, such as showing a film to a club or organization, or showing a film for class but inviting others to attend | if the film explicitly comes with PPR (some in CMU streaming video databases do by default) |
If the video you wish to screen is not available through the CMU Libraries' resources, you first must follow these steps to acquire PPR
Determine who the Copyright Holder is
Some films, normally older ones, are not owned and therefore aren't subject to copyright laws. These can be publicly screened without purchasing PPR. You may be able to find them using these resources: