Title 47 › Chapter 5— WIRE OR RADIO COMMUNICATION › Subchapter VI— MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS › § 605
Makes it a crime for anyone who handles interstate or foreign wire or radio messages to reveal or use those messages unless they have permission or are using approved channels. Only the addressee, the addressee’s agent or lawyer, people who forward the message, certain accounting or distribution officers, a ship’s master, a court subpoena, or other lawful authority may get or share the message. No one may intercept a radio message and tell others about it, or keep and use an intercepted radio message for personal gain. Public broadcasts meant for everyone, distress calls, amateur radio, and citizens band radio are not covered. For satellite cable programs, people may privately view unencrypted signals if no authorization system exists, or if they get authorization under a system. Programs in the Public Broadcasting Service’s National Program Service must not be encrypted unless at least one unencrypted feed is provided. Criminal penalties: willful violations can bring up to $2,000 fine or 6 months in jail, or both. Willful violations for commercial gain: first conviction up to $50,000 or 2 years; later convictions up to $100,000 or 5 years. Civil remedies let harmed parties sue, get injunctions, recover actual damages plus violator profits or statutory damages of $1,000–$10,000 per violation (and $10,000–$100,000 for certain device violations); courts may add up to $100,000 per violation for willful commercial gain or reduce awards to not less than $250 if the violator was unaware. Making or selling devices to help illegal decryption can bring fines up to $500,000 and/or 5 years per violation. States may pass their own equipment laws. The Federal Communications Commission must study a possible universal encryption standard and may make rules if it finds one is needed, considering consumer costs, technology, anti-piracy effect, impact on other users, competition, and timing. Defined terms (one line each): satellite cable programming — video sent by satellite mainly for cable operators; agent — includes employees; encrypt — alter a signal so only authorized gear can decode it; private viewing — watching at home with your own receiver; private financial gain — does not include personal home watching without authorization; any person aggrieved — anyone with ownership rights in the intercepted communication, including certain distributors and equipment makers.
Full Legal Text
Telegraphs, Telephones, and Radiotelegraphs — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
47 U.S.C. § 605
Title 47 — Telegraphs, Telephones, and Radiotelegraphs
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60