Are Public Performance Rights included with the purchase price?
Yes, but only educational public performance rights. By educational public performance rights, we mean any noncommercial exhibition to a group for educational purposes. Showings where an admission fee is charged require a special license and, often, a licensing fee.Permitted screenings include face-to-face teaching in a setting where such teaching normally takes place. They also include library carrels and the like, so that a professor can put a video “on reserve” in the library for student viewing after class.In addition, noncommercial screenings of a physical videocassette or DVD are permitted at public places with or without the presence of instructors, even outside of regular, systematic instructional activity.
Yes, but only educational public performance rights. By educational public performance rights, we mean any noncommercial exhibition to a group for educational purposes. Showings where an admission fee is charged require a special license and, often, a licensing fee. Permitted screenings include face-to-face teaching in a setting where such teaching normally takes place. They also include library carrels and the like, so that a professor can put a video “on reserve” in the library for student viewing after class. In addition, noncommercial screenings of a physical videocassette or DVD are permitted at public places with or without the presence of instructors, even outside of regular, systematic instructional activity. However, educational public performance rights do not include the right to transmit videos by analog or digital means by broadcast, open-cable, direct-broadcast satellite, the internet, or any other “open to the general public” means, nor to any off-campus or distance-lear