Title 17 › Chapter CHAPTER 1— - SUBJECT MATTER AND SCOPE OF COPYRIGHT › § 104A
Restores copyright in certain foreign works that had been in the public domain in the United States. The restored copyright starts automatically on the date of restoration and lasts for whatever copyright term the work would have kept if it had never fallen into the U.S. public domain. Works once handled by the Alien Property Custodian that would be owned by a foreign government are not restored. The first owner is the author or initial rightholder under the law of the work’s source country. After restoration, an owner can file a notice with the Copyright Office or serve a notice on anyone who used the work while it was free (“reliance parties”). For people who did not rely on the work, full legal remedies apply for infringements that begin on or after restoration. For reliance parties, remedies only become available if the owner files within 24 months after restoration and then waits 12 months after the notice is published in the Federal Register (or serves notice and waits 12 months after service), or if copies or sound recordings are made after that publication or service. Derivative works made before certain dates may remain usable by reliance parties but the owner may seek fair compensation; courts decide the amount if the parties don’t agree. False statements in notices void the owner’s claims. Warranties or duties made before January 1, 1995 are not made unlawful by restoration. The Copyright Office must issue rules at least 90 days before the WTO agreement takes effect for the United States, may set reasonable fees, and the Register will publish lists of filed notices in the Federal Register every 4 months for 2 years and keep a public list for inspection. Defined terms in one line each: “date of restoration” (when restored rights begin, usually January 1, 1996 or the country’s date of adherence/proclamation), “eligible country” (a foreign nation that meets certain treaty or proclamation criteria), “reliance party” (someone who used or copied the work before it became eligible and who continues to do so), “restored copyright” (the copyright returned under these rules), “restored work” (a foreign original work that meets the rule’s conditions, including certain publication limits such as a 30-day rule), “rightholder” (the person who fixed or later acquired rights in a sound recording), and “source country” (the foreign nation tied to the work for these rules).
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Copyrights — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Reference
Citation
17 U.S.C. § 104A
Title 17 — Copyrights
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73