Page:Australian Copyright Act 1968 (63 of 1968).pdf/48

 1968 (6.) For the purposes of paragraph (c) of the last preceding sub-section, a supplying of records of a musical work shall be disregarded if the supplying was done otherwise than by, or with the licence of, the owner of the copyright in the work.

110.—(1.) Where the visual images forming part of a cinematograph film consist wholly or principally of images that, at the time when they were first embodied in an article or thing, were means of communicating news, the copyright in the film is not infringed by the causing of the film to be seen or heard, or to be both seen and heard, in public after the expiration of fifty years after the expiration of the calendar year in which the principal events depicted in the film occurred.

(2.) Where, by virtue of this Part, copyright has subsisted in a cinematograph film, a person who, after that copyright has expired, causes the film to be seen or heard, or to be seen and heard, in public does not, by so doing, infringe any copyright subsisting by virtue of Part III. in a literary, dramatic, musical or artistic work.

(3.) Where the sounds that are embodied in a sound-track associated with the visual images forming part of a cinematograph film are also embodied in a record, other than such a sound-track or a record derived directly or indirectly from such a sound-track, the copyright in the cinematograph film is not infringed by any use made of that record.

111.—(1.) The copyright in a television broadcast in so far as it consists of visual images is not infringed by the making of a cinematograph film of the broadcast, or a copy of such a film, for the private and domestic use of the person by whom it is made.

(2.) The copyright in a sound broadcast, or in a television broadcast in so far as it consists of sounds, is not infringed by the making of a sound recording of the broadcast, or a record embodying such a recording, for the private and domestic use of the person by whom it is made.

(3.) For the purposes of this section, a cinematograph film or a copy of such a film, or a sound recording or a record embodying such a recording, shall be deemed to be made otherwise than for the private and domestic use of the person by whom it is made if it is made for the purpose of—
 * (a) the sale or letting for hire of a copy of the film or of a record embodying the recording, as the case may be;
 * (b) broadcasting the film or recording; or
 * (c) causing the film or recording to be seen or heard in public.

112.—(1.) Subject to this section, the copyright in a published edition of a work or works is not infringed by the making by, or on behalf of, a librarian of a reproduction of part of the edition.