Author
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Topic: Public Performance Rights
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Steve Klare
Film Guy
Posts: 7016
From: Long Island, NY, USA
Registered: Jun 2003
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posted December 17, 2016 04:48 PM
Generally speaking, your public performance rights are pretty much zero, but there are degrees of public performance that bring you more and more under the radar.
All public performance of copyrighted material without permission is illegal, but if for example you show a film to a bunch of friends at some kind of organization, the odds are excellent you'll never have any trouble.
You start publicizing the same event, you are getting into deeper water.
You start charging admission, you may see a fin break the surface near the horizon.
You do all this in a context of a business establishment, suits and briefcases will be there soon.
It's something like the Highway Patrol: as soon as you get to 56 MPH you are speeding, but in order to get the real bad guys, the law leaves the 65 MPH crowd alone and concentrates on the ones doing 80 and 90.
-------------------- All I ask is a wide screen and a projector to light her by...
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Maurice Leakey
Film God
Posts: 5895
From: Bristol. United Kingdom
Registered: Oct 2007
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posted December 21, 2016 10:00 AM
In the UK any exhibition of a 16mm film to an audience who pay a fee for entrance requires a public performance entertainment licence from the local council, unless the premises are already so licenced for public performances.
And, of course, the film renter must also give approval for such a hire subject to their fees/terms for public exhibition.
In addition, a music licence will also probably be required, but, as above, any premises which are regularly used may already have such a licence.
I, of course, do not know if the above would also apply to the US.
-------------------- Maurice
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