Title 2 › Chapter CHAPTER 5— - LIBRARY OF CONGRESS › § 179m
The Librarian of Congress must keep running a national program to save and care for movies. Working with the National Film Preservation Board and others, the Librarian must coordinate preservation work, raise public awareness and support, make films easier to use for education and research, study preservation methods and new technology, set rules for which films can join the National Film Registry, and allow the public to recommend films. A film cannot be added until 10 years after its first publication, and the Librarian may add no more than 25 films each year. The Librarian must publish the name of every film chosen in the Federal Register. The Librarian must create and control an official seal showing a film is the Registry version. The seal may only go on approved copies of the Registry version. For copyrighted, widely distributed works, only the copyright owner or their authorized licensee may place the seal, and the Library may put the seal on copies it keeps. People allowed to use the seal may include a short statement saying the film was selected for its cultural, historical, or artistic importance. The Librarian must also update the preservation plan for new formats, widen access to Registry films, and support efforts to preserve film, videotape, television, and born-digital moving images, including work by the National Audio-Visual Conservation Center and other nonprofit archives.
Full Legal Text
The Congress — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
2 U.S.C. § 179m
Title 2 — The Congress
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73