Title 18 › Part I— CRIMES › Chapter 113— STOLEN PROPERTY › § 2319C
Makes it illegal for a person to knowingly offer or run an online service that mainly exists to stream copyrighted works to the public without permission, if they do it to make money or get a business advantage. The ban covers services that are built mainly for illegal streaming, have no real legal use other than illegal streaming, or are marketed to encourage illegal streaming. Some terms are used from federal copyright law (for example: audiovisual work, computer program, copies, copyright owner, digital transmission, financial gain, motion picture, motion picture exhibition facility, perform, phonorecords, publicly, sound recording, and transmit). "Digital transmission service" means a service whose main purpose is to publicly perform works by digital transmission. "Publicly perform" means the copyright owner’s public performance right. "Work being prepared for commercial public performance" means a work expected to be shown commercially but not yet sold for home viewing, or a movie not shown more than 24 hours earlier. Penalties include fines and up to 3 years in prison, up to 5 years if the crime involves a work being prepared for commercial public performance and the person knew or should have known, and up to 10 years for repeat offenses. The law does not change civil copyright rules like the safe harbors in section 512, and it does not stop authorities from enforcing cable-theft or theft-of-service laws that are not preempted.
Full Legal Text
Crimes and Criminal Procedure — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Reference
Citation
18 U.S.C. § 2319C
Title 18 — Crimes and Criminal Procedure
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60