Title 17 › Chapter 1— SUBJECT MATTER AND SCOPE OF COPYRIGHT › § 121
Authorized groups can make and share accessible copies of already-published books or printed music (when the words or notes are written down) in the United States for use only by people with qualified disabilities. Those copies must be given out only in accessible formats for eligible users, must carry a notice saying further sharing in a non-accessible form would violate copyright, and must show who owns the copyright and the original publication date. The notice and copyright rules do not apply to standardized or secure tests, or to computer programs except for the ordinary written text shown to users. Publishers of K–12 print textbooks may give electronic NIMAS files to the National Instructional Materials Access Center when a school agency requires it, if the publisher had the right to publish the books and the files are used only to make accessible versions. Accessible format — an alternative form that lets an eligible person use the work about as well as someone without the disability. Authorized entity — a nonprofit or government group whose main job is helping people with reading or access needs. Eligible person — someone who is blind, has a visual or reading disability that won’t be fixed enough to read print, or has a physical problem that prevents holding or focusing on a book. Print instructional materials — textbooks and similar school materials as defined under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act.
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Copyrights — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
17 U.S.C. § 121
Title 17 — Copyrights
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60