Download Annual Report as PDF here, and financial statements here.
1. Highlights
In 2015–16 Copyright Agency:
- enabled copying and sharing of content by millions of Australians without the individual copyright clearances otherwise required, including:
- more than 3.75 million school students in more than 9,400 schools,[1]
- nearly 300,000 teaching staff,
- one million university students,
- 100,000 university staff,[2]
- 2 million vocational education and training students,[3] and
- nearly 824,000 government employees[4]
- paid $115.5m to more than 9,600 content creators
- paid nearly $621,000 in artists’ resale royalties to 353 artists
- allocated $06m from its Cultural Fund (members’ contribution of 1.5% of licence revenue) to support 66 projects, 43 professional development grants and 8 fellowships
- licensed 146 new commercial clients and extended 60 licences to cover additional content and uses, resulting in a 11% increase in licence fees from the corporate sector
- licensed 75 new independently licensed education institutions
- increased licence fees from Viscopy direct licences for use of artworks by 7%
- processed nearly 79,000 survey records of copying in schools (comprising nearly 364,000 pages) and more than 10,000 survey records of copying in universities (comprising more than 350,000 pages)
- launched a new platform for LearningField (subscription to textbook chapters from multiple publishers) and increased participating publishers from 9 to 13
- launched a new platform for Reading Australia, increased subscribers by 70% to 6,246, and added 31 new children’s book titles, 77 new teacher resources for secondary students, 78 new essays for secondary schools, 39 new resources for primary schools, 2 new videos and 5 new essays for tertiary teaching
- submitted a joint proposal to government, with education representatives and Screenrights, for simplification of the statutory licence for education (reflected in draft amendments released by the government)
2. Copyright Agency at a glance
What we do: On behalf of creators of text and images, we negotiate, collect and distribute copyright fees and royalties. We are known as a ‘copyright management organisation’ or ‘collecting society’
Structure: We are a not-for-profit company limited by guarantee.
Members: We have more than 30,000 members, who include writers, artists and publishers.
Government appointments: We are appointed by the Australian Government to manage statutory licence schemes and the artists’ resale royalty scheme.
Statutory licence schemes: The statutory licence schemes allow educational and government use of content without the permissions usually required, but subject to fair compensation to content creators.[5]
Artists’ resale royalty scheme: The artists’ resale royalty scheme pays artists a percentage of the sale price from certain resales of artworks.
Agent for members: We also license our members’ works as their agent (e.g. for use in corporations, local governments and not-for-profit organisations).
Payments to content creators : We pay more than $100 million a year to content creators for the use of their works.
Cultural Fund: 1.5% of licence revenue[6] supports cultural projects through the Cultural Fund.
Viscopy services: Copyright Agency manages member services and artwork licensing for Viscopy’s 11,000 local members and international affiliates.
International affiliations: Copyright Agency and Viscopy are affiliated with more than 70 similar organisations in other countries. This enables use of Australian works in other countries, and use of foreign works in Australia.
Other Australian copyright management organisations : We coordinate with other Australian copyright management organisations that manage licensing for other types of content.[7]
Copyright Tribunal: The Copyright Tribunal can determine licensing and distribution arrangements that are not resolved by agreement (but determinations are rare).[8]
Code of Conduct: Copyright Agency and Viscopy are signatories to the Code of Conduct for Australian Collecting Societies (copyright management organisations).
3. About copyright
The objective of copyright law is ‘to give to the author of a creative work his just reward for the benefit he has bestowed on the community and also to encourage the making of further creative works’.[9]
Copyright rights are granted by the Copyright Act.[10] Copyright applies to designated ‘forms of expression’ such as writing, music and images. The ‘owner’ of a copyright has exclusive rights to do certain things such as copying, making available online, broadcasting and public performance. No registration is required for copyright: rights are granted ‘automatically’ on creation of a designated form of expression.
Copyright is a form of ‘intellectual property’: it is ‘owned’ and can be licensed and transferred to others.[11] The Copyright Act determines the first owner of copyright (usually the creator). Creators also have ‘moral rights’ in their work (relating to attribution and the ‘integrity’ of their work), even if they do not own copyright.[12]
The artists’ resale royalty right (artists’ entitlement to a share of the resale price for artworks) is often regarded as a copyright-related right, though it differs from copyright rights in a number of respects, and in Australia is granted by stand-alone legislation.[13]
Rights usually last for 70 years after the creator’s death.[14]
The Copyright Act contains a range of ‘exceptions’: activities that can be done without the copyright permissions usually required. The Act also contains a number of ‘statutory licences’ that allow copying and sharing of content (e.g. for education) without permission, but subject to fair compensation.
The copyright system is international, involving national legislation that conforms with standards in international treaties.[15]
3.1 About statutory licences
The Copyright Act contains a number of ‘statutory licences’, which allow uses of content for certain purposes without permission but subject to fair compensation to content creators.[16]
Statutory licences have been introduced for situations in which it was assumed ‘that, if left to themselves, the parties will be unable to reach a satisfactory resolution of the terms for the access desired’ for reasons that include ‘unacceptably high transaction costs in cases where individual uses would be too difficult to identify and control’ and ‘the user is in a powerful initial position and has been able to obtain a statutory solution in its favour’.[17]
Statutory licences are compulsory for content creators but not for licensees: users can choose to make alternative arrangements with copyright owners for uses covered by statutory licences, rather than relying on the statutory licence provisions.[18] Content creators have adjusted to the statutory licences, which were introduced a long time ago and enable efficient licensing solutions.
Copyright Agency is appointed (‘declared’) by the Australian Government to manage statutory licences for the use of text, images and print music by the educational and government sectors.[19]
A statutory licence for education was introduced in 1980 following the recommendations of an expert committee,[20] revised in 1989, and extensively amended in 2000 to enable digital uses of content (such as making content available on an intranet).[21] In 1990, the Attorney-General’s Department produced guidelines for ‘declared’ collecting societies, which are reflected in Copyright Agency’s Constitution.[22] The government intends to introduce legislation that would simplify the statutory licence for education, in accordance with a joint proposal from Copyright Agency, education representatives and Screenrights.
A statutory licence for people with a print disability was also introduced in 1980 and subsequently amended and extended; Copyright Agency’s board has decided, however, not to seek compensation under the statutory licences for people with disabilities. The Government intends to replace this statutory licence with an exception.
A statutory licence for governments was introduced in 1968 as part of the current Copyright Act, following the recommendation of an expert committee,[23] and was amended in 1998 to facilitate collective management.[24]
Statutory licences are consistent with Australia’s international treaty obligations, and exist in other countries, but are more prevalent in Australia than elsewhere.[25]
The Copyright Tribunal has power to determine a range of matters associated with statutory licensing, including the compensation payable, monitoring of usage, and distribution of compensation to content creators. References to the Tribunal are, however, rare: matters associated with the operation of statutory licences (including compensation and monitoring) are usually resolved through negotiation and agreement.
4. Our business: an overview
Our main business can be summarised as follows:
- Authority to Copyright Agency to manage copyright licensing arrangements, from the Copyright Act (statutory licences for education and government) and from members (other licences, such as those for corporations)
- People covered by the licensing arrangements can copy and share text and images
- Licensees pay licence fees to Copyright Agency for distribution to content creators
- Some licensees also provide data about their usage
- Copyright Agency identifies rightsholders whose content has been used, or is available for use, by licensees
- Copyright Agency apportions the licence fees among those rightsholders
- Rightsholders may have contractual obligations to share payments with others: e.g. publishers may be obliged to share payments with authors.
Copyright Agency is also appointed by the Government to manage the artists’ resale royalty scheme. People who resell artworks pay 5% of the sale price to Copyright Agency for the artists, and provide data about the artworks and sales.
In addition to its licensing business, Copyright Agency has also partnered with publishers to develop LearningField, an online subscription platform enabling use of textbook chapters from multiple publishers. See further 20. LearningField.
Members have authorised 1.5% of licence fees to support cultural projects and creators’ professional development, which is managed through Copyright Agency’s Cultural Fund. See further 13. Cultural Fund.
4.1 Licence fees received by sector[26]
$ Million | 2010–11 | 2011–12 | 2012–13 | 2013–14 | 2014-15 | 2015–16 |
Schools | 56.3 | 58.6 | 59.8 | 60.8 | 61.8 | 62.7 |
Universities | 25.5 | 26.3 | 27.0 | 29.0 | 30.7 | 30.7 |
TAFEs | 3.8 | 4.0 | 3.9 | 3.6 | 3.3 | 3.3 |
Other education providers | 4.0 | 4.5 | 4.8 | 5.0 | 5.3 | 6.3 |
Education total | 89.6 | 93.4 | 95.5 | 98.4 | 101.1 | 103.0 |
States & territories | 7.0 | 6.3 | 6.2 | 4.7 | 2.0[27] | 3.9 |
Commonwealth | 3.0 | 3.1 | 2.8 | 2.8 | 2.5 | 1.5 |
Survey plans | 0.2 | 3.8 | 2.7 | |||
Gov total[28] | 10.0 | 9.4 | 9.0 | 7.7 | 8.3 | 8.1 |
Press clipping | 12.5 | 12.7 | 12.7 | 12.0 | 12.5 | 12.1 |
Other commercial | 3.4 | 3.9 | 4.5 | 4.9 | 5.7 | 5.9 |
Overseas | 1.8 | 2.3 | 2.6 | 2.7 | 4.1 | 4.1 |
Resale royalty | 0.2 | 0.4 | 0.8 | 0.6 | 0.9 | 0.8 |
LearningField | – | – | – | 0.6 | 2.5 | 3.1 |
Net investment income | 5.3 | 4.0 | 2.7 | 2.3 | 2.1 | 1.9 |
Other total | 23.2 | 23.3 | 23.3 | 23.1 | 27.8 | 27.9 |
TOTAL | 122.8 | 126.1 | 127.8 | 129.2 | 137.2 | 139.0 |
4.2 Distributions at a glance
Each year’s distributions include some funds received before that year, depending on when the funds and data for allocation were received.
In 2015–16, Copyright Agency received a total of $139m, comprising:
- $134.9m from domestic licensing; and
- $4.1m collected overseas.
Copyright Agency distributed $115.5m, comprising:
- $94m to domestic rightsholders; and
- 6m to foreign rightsholders.
See further 12. Payments to content creators.
5. Statutory licence schemes: education
The statutory licence scheme for education in the Copyright Act allows educational use of text and images provided there is fair compensation to content creators.[29] Copyright Agency was appointed by the Australian Attorney General in 1990 to manage the scheme.
There is a similar scheme for broadcast content (e.g. documentaries, films and current affairs), managed by Screenrights.[30]
The schemes now apply to both not-for-profit and for-profit educational institutions. The amount of fair compensation can be determined by the Copyright Tribunal if it cannot be agreed. The last Tribunal determination on fair compensation from schools for text, images and print music was in 2002, and for universities in 1999.
Most schools (all government schools, and most Catholic and independent schools) are represented by the Copyright Advisory Group (CAG)[31] in negotiations for fair compensation. Most Technical and Further Education (TAFE) colleges (apart from those in Victoria)[32] are also represented by CAG. Australian universities are represented by Universities Australia.[33] Copyright Agency also negotiates individual agreements with more than 1,000 independent educational institutions.
For total revenue from the education sector, see 4.1 Licence fees received by sector.
5.1 Developments in 2015–16
- joint proposal to government, with education representatives and Screenrights, for simplification of the statutory licence for education (reflected in draft amendments released by the government)
- launch of a joint licence with APRA | AMCOS and PPCA for early childhood centres, covering music, text and images, in partnership with Early Childhood Australia
- commencement of negotiations with Universities Australia on next agreement
5.2 Total cost of education for school students
According to the Australian Curriculum and Assessment Authority, the recurrent government funding for school education in 2012–13 was $48 Billion.[34]
Compensation to content creators under the statutory licence is less than 0.13% of this funding.
5.3 Licence fees paid for school students
When adjusted for student numbers, volume of copying and consumer price index, licence fees have remained stable over the last 10 years.
Under the agreements for 2013–15 and 2016–17, the rate per student is fixed at the 2012 rate ($16.93), but (unlike in previous agreements) without an annual increase for the Consumer Price Index (CPI).
In real terms, the per-student rate for school students is lower now than in 2012.
5.4 Universities
The agreements with the university sector set a flat rate for the agreement period, but, unlike the agreements for the school sector, it has been a single lump sum for the sector as a whole rather than a per-student rate.
Of the $25.8 billion of expenditure in universities in 2014, the copyright fee of $30.7m was 0.12%.
5.5 Individually licensed institutions
As at 30 June 2016, we had 1,015 individual licences with education institutions, 75 of which are newly licensed institutions (59 commercial institutions, and 16 non-commercial institutions).
About 60% of the individually licensed institutions are not-for-profit, and the remainder for-profit. The institutions included pre-schools, schools and colleges offering higher education degrees, as well as Vocational Education and Training (VET) level diplomas and certificates 1–4. Some offer specialist education, such as theological studies, business studies and English language training.
The for-profit institutions are mostly very large private colleges and registered training organisations (RTOs) offering tertiary education. The not-for-profit institutions include training arms of government bodies, private or community kindergartens, community colleges, neighbourhood houses, smaller RTOs and charitable RTOs.
While we license these institutions individually, we liaise with peak bodies for various classes of institution with a view to:
- increasing understanding of copyright and licensing issues;
- providing licensing information to their members; and
- designing licences that are appropriate to the needs of their members.
5.6 Usage records processed
The following shows the number of records from surveys that we processed in 2015–16. In most cases, these survey records comprise a cover sheet with information about the copying, and a copy of the content copied.
Each survey record may show that numerous ‘pages’ were copied, and may show that those ‘pages’ included a number of separate ‘works’. For example, a survey record may show that 10 pages from a book were copied, and that those pages included narrative text, a poem, and images. Survey records from tertiary institutions include course packs, which comprise extracts from a variety of sources.
Components of copied pages may be processed separately: there are different relative values for different types of content, and there may be different owners of copyright for various components.
The following is an indication of the volume of processing, rather than a comprehensive report on all processing in 2015–16. The processing includes research to determine whether or not a use was made in reliance on the statutory licence or not. The following includes records for uses made outside the statutory licence, and therefore excluded from estimates of the extent of reliance on the statutory licence, and from distribution.
survey records processed | ‘usage’ records | ‘pages’ processed | |
schools: hardcopy | 63,807 | 86,345 | 285,832 |
schools: digital | 15,191 | 23,832 | 77,762 |
universities: hardcopy | 1,550 | 3,680 | 4,0225 |
universities: digital | 8,833 | 22,087 | 309,963 |
other (inc TAFE) | 1,879 | 6,697 | 2,6615 |
5.7 Engagement with education sector
Our statutory licensing staff engage with the education sector in a variety of ways, including participation in education conferences and other events. For example, in 2015-16 staff participated in:
- ACPET Conference (Melbourne): 26-28 August 2015
- VELG: National VET Conference (Adelaide): 16-18 September 2015
- English Australia Conference (Brisbane) 23-25 September 2015
- NEAS conference (Sydney) 12-13 May
- Vivacity (Newcastle): 19–20 May 2016
- a range of professional development workshops and webinars on copyright as well as one-on-one college visits to provide copyright education to staff
6. How content is used in the education sector
The statutory licence managed by Copyright Agency allows copying and sharing of text and images for educational purposes:
- from any source (e.g. print, digital, legitimate or infringing); and
- for any type of reproduction or communication (e.g. printing, scanning, photocopying, downloading, making available on a server, emailing).
The only limitation is that, for some works, only a ‘reasonable portion’ can be used if the work is available for purchase.
Each year, a small sample of schools and universities participate in surveys of usage conducted by an independent research company.[35] The design of each survey is agreed with CAG (for schools) and UA (for universities), and those organisations participate in training of survey participants. By agreement with education sector representatives, survey participants record some uses made outside the statutory licence.[36]
Uses made outside the statutory licence are identified and excluded when the usage data is processed by Copyright Agency, in accordance with protocols agreed with education sector representatives.
The extent and type of information gathered about usage is affected by:
- the technology available to collect and process data;
- administrative burden on licensees; and
- cost of collecting and processing data.
6.1 Surveys of usage
Licensees participate in surveys of usage for two quite distinct reasons:
- to provide an indication of the overall levels of usage (‘volume’); and
- to provide information about content used, to assist with distribution of fair compensation and licence fees.
Some survey records are useful for the first purpose but not for the second (because they do not contain sufficient information to identify a rightsholder). In identifying survey records for distribution purposes, we exclude those that do not contain sufficient identifying information.[37] Conversely, some information gathered in surveys is relevant to distribution, but does not affect compensation negotiations.
The design of surveys is agreed with licensee representatives. This includes the sample design and the survey duration.
6.2 2015 schools surveys
Every year, an independent research company conducts two surveys of copying in a sample of schools for Copyright Agency. One survey records printing, scanning and photocopying in 252 schools over a two-year period, each for a term:
- NSW, ACT, South Australia and Northern Territory in the ‘even’ years (e.g. 2014, 2016)
- Victoria, Tasmania, Queensland and Western Australia in the ‘odd’ years (e.g. 2013, 2015).
The other survey records ‘electronic use’ (e.g. uploading to a server, downloading, emailing) in 100 schools each year, for a four week period.
6.3 Number of schools and students in Australia in 2015
In 2015, there were 9,404 schools in Australia, with more than 3.75 million students: 65% in government schools, and 35% in non-government schools.[38]
6.4 Printing, scanning and photocopying by the surveyed schools
In 2015, surveys of printing, scanning, photocopying were conducted in the following number of schools:
VIC/TAS | QLD | WA | Total | ||
Government | Primary | 32 | 20 | 8 | 60 |
Secondary | 12 | 8 | 4 | 24 | |
Total government schools | 44 | 28 | 12 | 84 | |
Non-government | Primary | 8 | 4 | 4 | 16 |
Secondary | 4 | 12 | 8 | 24 | |
Total non-government schools | 12 | 16 | 12 | 40 | |
GRAND TOTAL | 56 | 44 | 24 | 124 |
In total, there were 76,190 students in those schools.
The following figures represent content copied and shared in reliance on the licence managed by Copyright Agency: that is, uses that would otherwise have required a copyright clearance. Any uses recorded in surveys that were not done in reliance on the licence are excluded.[39]
The 124 schools surveyed:
- photocopied 3 million ‘pages’ of content[40]
- printed 337,000 ‘pages’
- scanned 13,000 ‘pages’
Taking into account the survey results for both 2014 and 2015,[41] the calculated ‘pages’ per student for 2015 is:
Activity | ‘pages’ |
Photocopied | 173.9 |
Printed or scanned | 17.3 |
Total | 191.2 |
6.5 Electronic use by the surveyed schools
In addition, surveys of electronic use were conducted in 100 schools, each for a four week period. There were 37,518 students in those schools.
The schools surveyed for electronic use copied or shared 539,000 ‘pages’ of content.
The calculated ‘pages’ per student for 2015 is:
Activity | ‘pages’ |
‘Displayed’ (e.g. from a learning management system) | 71.7 |
‘Published’ to students online (e.g. from a learning management system) | 31.7 |
Printed, saved or copied by students | 13.4 |
Downloaded, saved to computer, screenshot or digital photo | 11.0 |
Emailed | 5.6 |
Total | 133.4 |
Both Copyright Agency and the schools sector recognise that the current system is not perfect, but it has to balance burden and cost with accuracy. Copyright Agency and the schools sector regularly review current methods with a view to improvements and alternatives.
6.6 Uses excluded from compensation negotiations
Not all uses of content are taken into account in compensation negotiations. Uses excluded from consideration include those that:
- do not ordinarily require copyright permission;[42]
- the content creator has notified us are directly licensed for educational use;
- are presumed to be directly licensed for educational use;[43]
- are presumed to have no value (such as ‘technical’ copies); and
- are not practicable to ‘measure’.
There are two mechanisms for taking these uses into account in compensation negotiations:
- uses recorded in surveys that are excluded in the course of processing the survey records (which follows protocols agreed between Copyright Agency and CAG and UA); and
- overall discounts in the flat fees, to reflect the class of excluded use.
Processing exclusions include:
- quotations and extracts of three paragraphs or less;
- material created exclusively by the surveyed institution’s current employees: teacher’s own work;
- media or press releases;
- examination papers/materials if used for assessment purposes;
- logos;
- advertisements; and
- content published by Commonwealth departments and agencies.[44]
Discounts are negotiated for uses such as the following:
- the use of ‘small portions’;
- copying from ‘blackline masters’;[45] and
- use of content that may lack sufficient ‘originality’ to be protected by copyright.[46]
6.7 Books teachers chose to copy in schools
The following are lists of the books teachers most often chose to copy in primary and secondary schools from 2011–16.[47] The lists represent how widely the books were copied (that is, in the highest number of schools), rather than amounts allocated to those titles. There is more information on our website.[48]
6.8 Books copied in primary schools
PM Benchmark 1: Reading Assessment Resource
Words Their Way: Word Sorts for Within Word Pattern Spellers
Words Their Way: Word Sorts for Letter Name-Alphabetic Spellers
Arty Animal Outlines
Words Their Way: Word Sorts for Syllables and Affixes Spellers
PM Benchmark Kit 1: Teachers’ Notes
Times Table Challenge
PM Benchmark Kit 2: Reading Assessment Resource
Grammar Handbook 1: A Handbook for Teaching Grammar and Spelling
Starting Sounds: Book 1
Primary Mathematics: Book A
M100W: Magic 100 Words: Learning Centres Resource
Crafty Rhymes and Activities
Words Their Way: Word Sorts for Derivational Relations Spellers
Teaching Reading Comprehension Strategies: A Practical Classroom Guide
Primary Mathematics: Book C
Maths Plus Student Book: Year 4
PM Benchmark Kit 2: Teachers’ Notes
Primary Mathematics: Book E
Phonics Handbook: A Handbook for Teaching Reading Writing and Spelling: In Print Letters
NSW Targeting Maths: Year 2: Student Book
Primary Mathematics: Book F
NSW Targeting Maths: Year 3: Student Book
Sound Waves 3: Student Book
6.9 Books copied in secondary schools
Motivating Mathematics: Over 200 Puzzles
Science Focus 1: Homework Book
Science Focus 3: Homework Book
Year 8 Mathematics Revision and Exam Workbook
Pearson Mathematics 8: Student Book
Cambridge Preliminary Mathematics General
Geography Focus 2: Stage Five
Have Sum Fun: 200 Maths Puzzles
Year 9 Mathematics Revision and Exam Workbook 1 (Essential Skills: Years 7 To 10 Series)
Sum Fun: 170 Maths Puzzles
Geoactive 2: Stage 5: Australian Geography
Pearson Science 10: Activity Book
Pearson Science 8: Activity Book
Excel Essential Skills: New Year 7 Mathematics Revision and Exam Workbook 1
Geography Focus: Book 1
Maths Mate 8: Student Pad
Pearson Science 7 Activity Book
Retroactive 1: Stage 4: World History
Maths Quest 8 for the Australian Curriculum and Ebookplus: Student Edition
Pearson Science 9: Activity Book
Pearson Science 9: Student Book
Pearson Mathematics 7: Vol 1: Student Book
Geoactive 2: Stage 5: Australian Geography
History Alive 9 for the Australian Curriculum and Ebookplus
Excel Essential Skills Preliminary General Mathematics: Revision and Exam Workbook (Excel Essential Skills Series)
7. Statutory licences: governments
The statutory licence for governments allows Commonwealth, State and Territory government departments and agencies to make any use of any copyright content for the services of the government.[49] Copyright Agency has been ‘declared’ by the Copyright Tribunal as the collecting society authorised to collect and distribute ‘equitable remuneration’ for government copying of text images and print music.[50] Copyright Agency also licenses, as agent for its members, the communication of text, images and print music.[51]
The statutory licence does not apply to government-related entities that are not ‘the Crown’, or to local governments, but Copyright Agency offers ‘voluntary’ licences for them.
Copyright Agency has received limited recent usage data from governments, which means recent distributions of licence fees have been based on data indicating content available for use, rather than reported as used.
For total revenue from the government sector, see 4.1 Licence fees by sector.
7.1 Developments in 2015–16
- agreements signed with Queensland and South Australia on payments for past and future sales of survey plans (and close to finalised with Victorian government)
- agreements signed with Northern Territory and South Australian governments on government use of content
- negotiations with other state governments and Commonwealth in train
7.2 Number of government employees
The table below indicates the number of employees (full-time equivalent: FTE), according to the most recent reports we have received.
State | Reported for | FTEs |
Commonwealth | 2014-2015 | 207,684 |
ACT | 2015-2016 | 14,536 |
NSW | 2011-2012 | 208,308 |
Northern Territory | 2015-2016 | 16,292 |
Queensland | 2014-2015 | 131,251 |
Victoria | 2014-2015 | 67,118 |
Western Australia | 2015-2016 | 77,215 |
Tasmania | 2013-2014 | 20,095 |
South Australia | 2015-2016 | 81,268 |
7.3 Engagement with sector
Engagement with the government sector included:
- participation in the Victorian Automated Library Association biennial national conference and exhibition
- sponsorship of the NSW State Conference for surveyors
- sponsorship of the 2016 NSW Awards for Excellence in Surveying and Spatial Information
8. Statutory licences: people with a disability
There are statutory licences in the Copyright Act that allow institutions (including educational institutions) to provide materials in suitable formats for people with disabilities.[52] Copyright Agency is appointed by the Australian Government to manage these licences for text, but Copyright Agency’s board has decided to not seek payment under these licences. The government intends to amend the Copyright Act to replace the statutory licences with an exception for institutions assisting people with disabilities.
Copyright Agency has developed an online database of ‘master’ copies, known as the Master Copy Catalogue, to assist institutions to share information about their holdings of ‘master copies’ that can be made available to other institutions under the statutory licences.
There are more than 80 institutions participating in the Masters Copy Catalogue, and there are now more than 14,000 accessible format master copies made under the statutory licence, recorded in the catalogue, available to Australian institutions assisting people with a disability.
8.1 Developments in 2015–16
- Australia ratified the Marrakesh Treaty[53] for the visually impaired in December 2015[54]
- Copyright Agency presentation at 2016 Print Disability Roundtable[55]
- Copyright Agency participation in Australian Publishers’ Association webinars on Marrakesh treaty
- release of draft copyright amendments for people with disabilities
9. Commercial and other ‘voluntary’ licences
Members can appoint us as their agent to include their works in various licence schemes we offer. The licences also cover the works of rightholders represented by our international affiliates. Licensees include organisations in the corporate and not-for-profit sectors.
We offer ‘blanket’ annual licences, which cover uses of all works we represent. We also offer ‘pay-per-use’ (transactional) licences, including through an online automated facility.[56]
The licences do not cover works that are listed on Copyright Agency’s website as excluded works,[57] but do include an indemnity for uses of other works not represented by us.
Licence fees reflect the value of the licences (e.g. compared to other commercial licensing arrangements), and consultations with members. Licence terms also reflect consultations with members and the extent of their authorisation to us. Consultations are ongoing (particularly with publishers of scientific, medical and technical journals, and with newspaper publishers), to review licence conditions in the light of developments such as changing business practices.
Licence fees for the commercial sector vary for different types of businesses, but are all higher than the compensation paid by governments under the statutory licence.[58]
Licence fees paid by quasi-government bodies are lower than the compensation paid by governments, because the licence does not cover all uses allowed by the statutory licence (e.g. use of entire works available for purchase, or uses of content excluded from our voluntary licences).
For total revenue from commercial and other voluntary licences, see 4.1 Licence fees by sector.
9.1 Developments in 2015–16
- 146 new clients and 60 extended licences to cover additional content and uses resulting in a 11% increase in licence fees from the corporate sector
- Continuation of monitoring program for corporate websites with infringing publication of newspaper content with a view to increased uptake of licences in the corporate sector
- Renegotiation of licensing arrangements for digital press clippings
- Extension of online licensing portal RightsPortal to enable pay-per-use licensing for journal articles
9.2 Licences for the corporate sector
In addition to our general licence for corporations, we have licences covering the specific requirements of:
- pharmaceutical companies
- public relations (PR) companies
- law firms
- Australian-based firms with offices in other countries
Other licence schemes include:
- digital press clippings (as agent for newspaper and magazine publishers)
- inclusion of journal articles and other works in commercial subscription services
9.3 Not-for-profit sector
We offer licences (which we refer to as Associations Licences) for a range of not-for-profit entities, including incorporated associations, unincorporated associations, societies and unions. We have specific sector licences for:
- local governments;
- religious organisations; and
- civil celebrants
9.4 Quasi-government bodies
We have a special licence for quasi-government bodies that may not be able to rely on the statutory licence for governments because they are not part of the Commonwealth or a State or Territory government. The licence operates in a similar way to the government statutory licence, but does not allow the copying of entire works that are available for purchase (only a portion may be copied).
In 2015–16:
Sector | Number of licensees | Licence fees $ |
State and Territory | 12 | 94,888 |
Commonwealth | 3 | 22,022 |
9.5 Transactional (pay per use) licences
We offer transactional (pay per use) licences in two ways:
- an automated online service (RightsPortal);[59] and
- a manual clearance service.
The automated service currently applies to newspaper content (text, but not images), but is being extended to enable licensing of articles from scholarly journals.
For content not yet covered by the online facility, we offer a manual clearance service. Licensees make a request by email, and we respond within 48 hours. We liaise with the rightsholder, who decides whether or not to license and sets a price, and manage the licence arrangements, invoicing and payment.
Most of the users of these services are publishers.
9.6 Engagement with licensees
The Commercial Licensing team engages with current and potential licensees in a variety of ways. In 2015–16, they conducted 44 training sessions with a range of organisations around Australia.
The team also spoke at:
And the team participated in the following conferences and events:
- CommsCon
- Mumbrella360
- General Counsel Summit
- ARCS – Regulatory and Science
- Australian Corporate Counsel (ACC) NSW
- ACC Victoria
- ACC WA
- ACC National
10. Viscopy services
Copyright Agency began managing Viscopy’s services on 2 July 2012, pursuant to an agreement approved by the Australian Consumer and Competition Authority.[60] The services include managing Viscopy’s relationships with its members, international affiliates and licensees.
Viscopy represents more than 13,000 artists, artists’ estates and beneficiaries. Through its international affiliations, Viscopy also represents more than 40,000 foreign artists.
Viscopy’s major licensees are auction houses and public galleries. Most of Viscopy’s licences are pay-per-use (rather than ‘all of repertoire’).[61]
10.1 Developments in 2015–16
- 7% increase in fees from direct licences collected for members
- highest ever number of applicants for John Fries award
- Indigenous education program for visual artists
10.2 Artists represented
Year | Australian artists represented |
2009 | 7,300 |
2010 | 7,581 |
2011 | 8,761 |
2012 | 8,876 |
2013 | 10,074 |
2014 | 11,399 |
2015 | 11,642 |
2016 | 13,362 |
10.3 Total income
10.4 Viscopy licence fees
10.5 Deductions
The services agreement between Viscopy and Copyright Agency sets out the deductions from licence fees and other income payable to Copyright Agency. In the first year of the agreement, this was 25% of licence fees from Viscopy licences and statutory licence fees collected by Copyright Agency and Screenrights, and 10% of foreign licence fees. There is no deduction by Viscopy from artists’ resale royalties collected by Copyright Agency. The services agreement provides for the deduction from statutory licence fees collected by Copyright Agency to be reduced to 10% over a three-year period.
10.6 Amounts distributed
Amount | When paid |
$1,048,812 | September 2015 |
$193,618 | December 2015 |
$238,684 | March 2015 |
$188,493 | June 2016 |
$1,669,607 |
10.7 Distribition recipients
ANZ members | International members | Total | |
Direct | 498 | 618 | 1,116 |
International | 692 | 396 | 1,088 |
Statutory | 96 | 207 | 303 |
Total | 1,286 | 1,221 | 2,507 |
10.8 Voice of the Artist
Viscopy provided funding for a program called Voice of the Artist, with the aim of stimulating discussion about how we value images and create opportunities for creators, users and consumers. The program included:
- a survey of artists;[62]
- a publication, guided by the survey, with feature articles from artists, academics and writers;[63] and
- an event at the Art Gallery of NSW, as part of the annual Vivid Festival, with speakers including Christopher Hudson, publisher at the Museum of Modern Art in New York.[64]
11. Artists’ resale royalty scheme
The artists’ resale royalty scheme commenced on 9 June 2010. Copyright Agency was appointed by the Minister for the Arts to manage the scheme in May 2010.
The scheme requires payment of a 5% royalty of the sale price on certain resales of artworks by Australian artists. [65] It also requires the reporting of all resales with a sales value of $1,000 or more to Copyright Agency, with sufficient information to determine if a royalty is payable. A royalty is not payable if the seller acquired the work before the scheme commenced.
There is a dedicated website – resaleroyalty.org.au – which has an online reporting facility, and online registration facility for contact details for artists and art market professionals.
11.1 Developments in 2015–16
At 30 June 2016, the scheme had generated over $4.3 million in royalties for 1,200 artists from more than 12,800 resales.
- The artists who received royalties were at different stages of their careers and different parts of Australia, including urban and remote areas.
- Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander artists represented 65% of the artists receiving royalties, and received 39% of the royalties.
- 40% of recipients live in the Northern Territory, and 16% in South Australia and Western Australia (mostly in regional and remote areas).
- The number of artists benefitting from the scheme continues to increase, with a further 145 or 14% more artists who have now had an eligible resale this financial year.
11.2 Results for 2015–16
2015–16 | Since June 2010 | |
Resales reported[66] | 8,252 | 50,942 |
Resales subject to royalty[67] | 2,120 | 12,821 |
Royalties invoiced | $754k | $3.7m |
Royalties collected | $713k | $3.5m |
Royalties paid (exc admin fee) | $621k | $3.1m |
11.3 Percentage of resales subject to royalties, by payment range
The following shows the percentage of resales reported to Copyright Agency that prima facie meet the eligibility criteria for payment of a royalty, by payment range.[68]
2010–11 | 2011–12 | 2012–13 | 2013–14 | 2014–15 | 2015–16 | ||
Sale amount | Royalty amount | ||||||
$1,000–1,999 | $50–99 | 40% | 45% | 44% | 42% | 41% | 40% |
$2,000–19,999 | $100–999 | 60% | 54% | 53% | 54% | 52% | 54% |
$20,000–99,999 | $1,000–4,999 | 1% | 1% | 2% | 3% | 4% | 5% |
$100,000–399,999 | $5,000–19,999 | 0% | 0% | 0% | 1% | 1% | 1% |
$400,000+ | $20,000+ | 0% | 0% | 0% | 0% | 1% | 0% |
11.4 Stakeholder engagement
Copyright Agency used a variety of methods to communicate information about the scheme to stakeholders. Presentations included:
Where | When | Audi-ence | Comments |
Darwin Aboriginal Art Fair | Aug-15 | 100 | Attended by more than sixty Art Centres from across Northern and Central Australia representing over 2000 Indigenous artists. |
Panellist on “ Not theft, its art” panel at La Trobe University | Aug-15 | 50 | Attended by artists, writers and lawyers interested in intellectual property issues |
Desertmob Industry Lounge, Alice Springs | Sep-15 | 200 | Central Australian artists and industry stakeholders |
Tarnathi Indigenous arts festival, SA | Oct 15 | 300 | This inaugural event reached many artists, writers and industry stakeholders |
Meeting at Castlemaine museum and gallery | Oct 15 | 10 | Met with curators and CEO to discuss resale, copyright, licensing and ICIP rights |
Asia Pacific Triennial, GOMA | Nov 15 | 500 | Networked with Aboriginal and NZ artists |
Torres Strait Islander regional authority artist forum | April 16 | 100 | Held on Thursday Island this workshop catered to artists from this and surrounding islands |
Workshop with Umi artists | April 16 | 30 | Cairns based Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander artists |
Copyright workshop at QLD museum | April 16 | 15 | QLD Museum curators and collections managers |
Guest lecture at Wollongong university | Oct 15 | 20 | Focus of this session was copyright and Indigenous cultural IP rights |
Workshops at Mid north coast NSW | Feb 16 | 20 | Spoke to local Aboriginal artists from Kempsey, Coffs harbour and mid North coast NSW |
WIPO Pacific regional delegation | Feb 16 | 20 | Focus of this session was traditional cultural expressions and copyright issues |
Aboriginal artist camp on South Stradbroke Island, QLD | Apr 16 | 20 | 10 selected emerging Gold Coast Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander artists were mentored by Torres Strait Islander artist, Brian Robinson. |
Artist and writers workshop, Thirroul, NSW | May 16 | 50 | Local South Coast artists and writers |
Westpac financial literacy workshop at Ngurra tjuta Arts and Tangentyere arts | June 16 | 30 | Teamed with Westpac for these sessions. Westpac presented on how to manage income like royalties and art sales |
12. Payments to content creators
Statutory compensation, licence fees and royalties are held in trust for content creators until paid. Statutory compensation and licence fees are paid to owners of copyright whose works have been used, or are available for use, by licensees.
Data for distribution is acquired from a variety of sources, including surveys of usage by licensees and data that indicates content available to licensees. There are a series of processes involved in allocating payments to content creators based on the best data available at a reasonable cost within the relevant time period. These include processing and analysing the available data, applying relative values for different types of content and uses, and identifying and contacting content creators. The processes are sometimes complex, accounting for the time between receipt of licence fees, allocation, and payment.
Where there is more than one person with a copyright interest (e.g. author and publisher), we can distribute to each if we have verified information about the payment shares. Otherwise, we pay to one person with a copyright interest, on their undertaking to share with any others with an entitlement to a share.
Distribution policy is overseen by the Board, and published on our website.[69]
The Copyright Tribunal has power to review distribution arrangements for statutory licence fees.
12.1 Developments in 2015–16
- $5m in copyright licence fees paid to 9,600 content creators
- Additional communications on how licence fees were distributed[70]
12.2 Payments to content creators by income source
The following table shows the sources of payments distributed in 2015–16:
12.3 Payments to content creators by content type
The following tables show estimates of payments according to sources of content. Distributions of licence fees from the education sector were based on surveys of usage in a statistical sample of educational institutions. Distributions of licence fees from governments (apart from those for sales of survey plans) were based on data indicating content available for use.
Source | $m Education | $m Gov | $m Other | $m Total |
Book | 65.45 | 2.46 | 5.54 | 73.46 |
Website[71] | 5.88 | 0.09 | 0.01 | 5.98 |
Journal | 5.50 | 2.47 | 2.96 | 10.93 |
Magazine | 0.58 | 0.02 | 0.61 | 1.21 |
Newspaper | 0.60 | 0.49 | 12.57 | 13.66 |
Survey plans | – | 2.64 | – | 2.64 |
Other[72] | 5.94 | 0.04 | 1.64 | 7.61 |
Total | 83.97 | 8.20 | 23.33 | 115.50 |
Source | Education | Gov | Other | % overall |
Book | 78% | 30% | 24% | 64% |
Website | 7% | 1% | 0% | 5% |
Journal | 7% | 30% | 13% | 9% |
Magazine | 1% | 0% | 3% | 1% |
Newspaper | 1% | 6% | 54% | 12% |
Survey plans | 0% | 32% | 0% | 2% |
Other | 7% | 0% | 7% | 7% |
12.4 Total distributions for 2015–16 by recipient class
$m | % | recipients[73] | ||
Australian recipients | Education resources creators[74] | 51.04 | 44% | 1,045 |
Other core content creators[75] | 36.30 | 31% | 6,484 | |
Not-for-profit bodies[76] | 3.04 | 3% | 546 | |
Education/training bodies[77] | 1.70 | 1% | 115 | |
Government bodies[78] | 0.47 | 0% | 81 | |
Other[79] | 1.45 | 1% | 1,114 | |
Total | 94.02 | 81% | 9,385 | |
Foreign recipients | Foreign collecting societies | 18.21 | 16% | 22 |
Other foreign recipients | 3.47 | 3% | 196 | |
Total | 21.68 | 19% | 218 | |
GRAND TOTAL | 115.5 | 100% | 9,603 |
12.5 Payments to recipients by state and territory
State | Education licence fees | Government licence fees[80] | Artists’ resale royalties |
NSW | 50% | 57% | 28% |
VIC | 34% | 13% | 26% |
QLD | 9% | 26% | 3% |
WA | 5% | 1% | 2% |
ACT | 1% | 1% | 1% |
SA | 1% | 1% | 1% |
NT | >1% | >1% | 35% |
TAS | >1% | >1% | 4% |
Total | 100% | 100% | 100% |
12.6 Recipients of payments by recipient category
Our payments reach rightsholders in two ways: directly (from us) and indirectly (through a member or another collecting society).
Where there is more than one rightsholder in a work (e.g. publisher and author), we can pay each rightsholder directly where we have information about the payment shares they have agreed between or among them. Otherwise, we pay one rightsholder on their undertaking to on-pay any amounts due to other rightsholders.
Of the total payments of $115.50m in 2015–16:
Obligation to share[81] | No obligation to share[82] | Total | |
Initial recipient | $m | ||
Organisations | 55.5 | 27.6 | 83.1 |
Individual creators | 6.6 | 6.2 | 12.8 |
Local collecting societies | 1.5 | – | 1.5 |
Foreign collecting societies | 18.1 | – | 18.1 |
TOTAL | 81.7 | 33.8 | 115.5 |
12.7Recipients of licence fees from schools by recipient category
$m | % | recipients[83] | ||
Australian recipients | Education resources creators[84] | 35.86 | 68% | 947 |
Other core content creators[85] | 8.35 | 16% | 1863 | |
Not-for-profit bodies[86] | 1.83 | 3% | 290 | |
Education/training bodies[87] | 0.78 | 1% | 84 | |
Government bodies[88] | 0.24 | <1% | 35 | |
Other[89] | 0.42 | <1% | 439 | |
Total | 47.50 | 88% | 3,658 | |
Foreign recipients | Foreign collecting societies | 5.21 | 10% | 24 |
Other foreign recipients | 0.38 | <1% | 61 | |
Total | 5.59 | 10% | 85 | |
TOTAL | 53.09 | 100% | 3,743 |
12.8 Recipients of licence fees from Universities by recipient category
$m | % | recipients | ||
Australian recipients | Education resources creators | 9.12 | 35% | 106 |
Other core content creators | 6.80 | 26% | 961 | |
Not-for-profit bodies | 1.83 | 3% | 290 | |
Education/training bodies | 0.23 | 1% | 45 | |
Government bodies | 0.06 | <1% | 17 | |
Other | 0.13 | 1% | 108 | |
Total | 18.18 | 66% | 1,527 | |
Foreign recipients | Foreign collecting societies | 7.06 | 27% | 20 |
Other foreign recipients | 2.20 | 9% | 66 | |
Total | 9.26 | 36% | 86 | |
TOTAL | 25.82 | 100% | 1,435 |
12.9 Initial recipients of licence fees from schools and universities by category
Most allocations are paid to one recipient, who undertakes to share the payment with anyone else with an entitlement to share of the payment, such as an author with a contractual entitlement.
Schools | Universities | |||
$m | recipients | $m | recipients | |
Individual creators | 7.6 | 2,310 | 2.7 | 898 |
Organisations[90] | 40.2 | 1,410 | 16.0 | 518 |
Foreign collecting societies | 5.2 | 23 | 7.1 | 19 |
TOTAL | 53.0 | 3,743 | 25.8 | 1,435 |
12.10 Payments to individual non-staff creators
The following is based on information provided by members organisations that received nearly 80% of the $40m in schools licence fees, and $16m in universities licence fees, that was not paid directly to individual creators or to foreign collecting societies. We have assumed that a similar proportion was shared with individual non-staff creators by the other recipients.
In addition to payments to individual non-staff creators, organisations also pay staff writers and illustrators.
$m | ||
Schools | Universities | |
Paid direct to individual creators[91] | 7.6 | 2.7 |
Paid indirectly by organisations that provided data | 10.1 | 5.0 |
Paid indirectly by other organisations (estimated) | 2.6 | 1.4 |
TOTAL | 20.3 | 9.1 |
12.11 Number of recipients of shared payments
The organisations that provided information about sharing of licence fees from schools and universities reported paying more than 10,000 non-staff creators and having 400 writers and illustrators on staff.
Individual creators paid directly: schools + universities[92] | 3,057 |
Contracted writers and illustrators who received payments from publishers | >10,000 |
Staff writers and illustrators supported by licence fees | >400 |
12.12 Recipients of compensation paid by governments
The distribution of compensation from governments in 2015 was (apart from that from survey plans) mostly based on data from various sources indicating content that was available to governments to use during the licence period (rather than information about actual use). We used different data sources for different types of content (such as books, journals, newspapers and images), in accordance with the best data available to us at the time at a reasonable cost.[93]
$m | % | recipients | ||
Australian recipients | Education resources creators | 0.49 | 7% | 126 |
Other core content creators | 1.37 | 21% | 1,600 | |
Not-for-profit bodies | 0.09 | 1% | 63 | |
Education/training bodies | 0.05 | 1% | 22 | |
Government bodies | >0.01 | 0% | 4 | |
Surveyors (back payments) | 2.30 | 36% | 414 | |
Surveyors (current) | 0.34 | 5% | 416 | |
Other | 0.06 | 1% | 116 | |
Subtotal | 4.39 | 72% | 2,362[94] | |
Foreign recipients | Foreign collecting societies | 1.31 | 20% | 21 |
Other foreign recipients | 0.48 | 7% | 39 | |
Subtotal | 2.10 | 28% | ||
TOTAL | 6.49 | 100% | 2,423 |
12.13 List of distributions for 2015–16
We publish our distribution schedule on our website, with information about how each distribution was calculated, including the source or sources of data used for the distribution and the licence period. The following is a list of distributions completed in 2015–16.
In some cases, there was more than one distribution of licence fees from a source during the year. This was because:
- licence fees are paid more than once a year (e.g. universities; press clipping licence fees); or
- there were difference sources of data for different types of content used under the licence (e.g. books, magazines, journals).
The deductions are in most cases based on projected operating costs, plus the 1.5% authorised by members for Copyright Agency’s Cultural Fund.
$ | Completed | Deduction % | ||
Schools | ||||
Schools (annual) | 53,088,481 | 1/06/2016 | 14.44 | |
Universities | ||||
Universities (first biannual) | 12,912,436 | 27/11/2015 | 14.44 | |
Universities (second biannual) | 12,912,421 | 18/05/2016 | 14.44 | |
Independently licensed education institutions | ||||
Independently licensed institutions: books and journals | 3,203,587 | 1/12/2015 | 16.53 | |
Independently licensed institutions: images | 576,190 | 27/11/2015 | 16.53 | |
Independently licensed institutions: other | 500,746 | 27/11/2015 | 16.53 | |
Independently licensed institutions: newspapers and magazines | 74,629 | 1/12/2015 | 16.53 | |
Pre-schools | 79,240 | 7/06/2016 | 14.80 | |
TAFE | ||||
Victorian TAFE colleges | 424,577 | 31/07/2015 | 16.60 | |
TAFE (other than Victoria): newspapers and magazines | 26,344 | 11/03/2016 | 13.68 | |
TAFE (other than Victoria): books, journals, other | 1,373,897 | 14/03/2016 | 13.68 | |
Governments | ||||
Text (including books, journals, newspapers, magazines) | 3,849,463 | 8/04/2016 | 15.88 | |
Department of Defence: music | 120 | 19/04/2016 | 14.44 | |
Images | 1,875,966 | 7/06/2016 | 14.55 | |
Department of Defence: music | 394 | 29/10/2015 | 15.94 | |
Surveyors | ||||
NSW (2003–2012) | 1,838,970 | 8/10/2015 | 16.60 | |
NSW (2014) | 218,787 | 16/12/2015 | 15.10 | |
NSW (2015, January–March) | 62,434 | 15/02/2016 | 14.44 | |
QLD (2002–2015) | 939,674 | 14/04/2016 | 16.60 | |
NSW (2015, April–June) | 66,078 | 26/05/2016 | 14.44 | |
Quasi-government organisations | ||||
Books, journals, other | 189,587 | 19/04/2016 | 14.47 | |
Newspapers and magazines | 23,698 | 19/04/2016 | 14.47 | |
Corporations and associations | ||||
Corporations: books, journals, other | 1,902,870 | 4/04/2016 | 15.37 | |
Corporations: newspapers and magazines | 157,479 | 4/04/2016 | 15.37 | |
Religious organisations: books, journals, other | 354,812 | 7/06/2016 | 13.00 | |
Religious organisations: newspapers and magazines – 201671 | 45,136 | 7/06/2016 | 13.00 | |
Corporations and associations: images[95] | 529,625 | 7/06/2016 | 15.06 | |
Corporations: newspapers and magazines | 208,198 | 30/09/2015 | 16.42 | |
Press clippings | ||||
Digital press clippings (2014, March–June) | 664,629 | 14/09/2015 | 10.00 | |
Digital press clippings: Government downstream (2014, March–June) | 46,508 | 14/09/2015 | 10.00 | |
Photocopied press clippings (2010-15) | 71,636 | 15/09/2015 | 14.13 | |
Digital press clippings (2015, July–September) | 567,909 | 18/03/2016 | 10.00 | |
Digital press clippings: Government downstream (2015, July–September) | 40,149 | 18/03/2016 | 10.00 | |
Pay-per-use | ||||
Domestic recipients (2015, March–June) | 54,449 | 29/07/2015 | 15.00 | |
Overseas recipients (2015, March–June) | 3,155 | 29/07/2015 | 15.00 | |
Infringements (2015, March–June) | 7,692 | 29/07/2015 | 15.00 | |
Settlements (2015, March–June) | 53,617 | 29/07/2015 | 15.00 | |
Domestic recipients (2015, July–September) | 53,562 | 29/10/2015 | 15.00 | |
Overseas recipients (2015, July–September) | 2,739 | 29/10/2015 | 15.00 | |
Infringements (2015, July–September) | 6,587 | 29/10/2015 | 15.00 | |
Settlements (2015, July–September) | 26,175 | 29/10/2015 | 15.00 | |
Domestic recipients (2015, October–December) | 27,678 | 1/02/2016 | 15.00 | |
Overseas recipients (2015, October–December) | 4,230 | 1/02/2016 | 15.00 | |
Infringement (2015, October–December) | 1,825 | 1/02/2016 | 15.00 | |
Settlements (2015, October–December) | 37,897 | 1/02/2016 | 15.00 | |
Domestic recipients: journals (2015, October–December) | 1,953 | 1/02/2016 | 15.00 | |
Domestic recipients (2016, January–March) | 16,536 | 18/04/2016 | 15.00 | |
Settlements (2016, January–March) | 72,519 | 18/04/2016 | 15.00 | |
Document delivery/print on demand | ||||
EBSCO (2011–14) | 53,094 | 14/09/2015 | 20.00 | |
INFORMIT: A Plus (2014, June–September) | 145,321 | 19/08/2015 | 20.00 | |
INFORMIT: AGIS (2014, June–September) | 231,872 | 19/08/2015 | 20.00 | |
INFORMIT: APAFT & Collections (2014, June–September) | 512,603 | 19/08/2015 | 20.00 | |
Porter Geoconsultancy (2009–13) | 2,666 | 14/09/2015 | 13.40 | |
Proquest (2012–14) | 34,679 | 14/09/2015 | 20.00 | |
Classic Australian Works (2010–12) | 507 | 14/09/2015 | 14.29 | |
Foreign collecting societies | ||||
Copydan (Denmark) | 156,347 | 4/08/2015 | 12.46 | |
Access Copyright (Canada) | 86,134 | 5/08/2015 | 9.32 | |
Copyright Clearance Center (US) | 139,250 | 5/08/2015 | 10.17 | |
Copyright Licensing Agency (UK) | 784,185 | 6/08/2015 | 13.59 | |
JAACC (Japan) | 160,118 | 7/08/2015 | 15.58 | |
Copyright Licensing New Zealand | 34,936 | 13/08/2015 | 16.60 | |
Copyright Licensing New Zealand | 709,682 | 13/08/2015 | 13.33 | |
Copyright Licensing New Zealand | 261,946 | 16/02/2016 | 14.44 | |
Licence fees without data | 660,649 | 21/03/2016 | 13.68 | |
Authors Licensing and Collecting Society (UK) | 611,877 | 14/04/2016 | 14.44 |
13. Cultural Fund
Copyright Agency’s Constitution allows the Board to allocate up to 1.5% of income to cultural development through the Cultural Fund.[96] The Cultural Fund supports a wide variety of projects each year.
In 2015–16, $2.06 million was provided through the Cultural Fund for 66 projects, 43 applicants for the career fund, and 8 Copyright Agency Fellowships.
Applications | Approved | Declined | |
Cultural Fund | 195 | 66 | 129 |
Career Fund | 372 | 43 | 323 |
13.1 Recipients by category 2011–16
Category | $’000 | % |
Education/Training/Workshop | 1,599 | 17% |
Residency/Fellowship | 1,496 | 16% |
Reading Australia | 1,127 | 12% |
Prize/Award/Grant | 1,081 | 12% |
Festival/Event | 798 | 8% |
Mentorship | 795 | 8% |
Conference/Symposium | 693 | 7% |
Intern/Traineeship | 459 | 5% |
Cultural Exchange | 452 | 5% |
Advocacy/Research | 307 | 3% |
Journal/Review | 296 | 3% |
Digital development | 253 | 3% |
Production/new work | 60 | 1% |
TOTAL | 9,416 | 100% |
13.2 Projects supported by the Cultural Fund in 2015–16
The following projects were approved for funding in 2015–16. These, and projects supported in previous years, are described in more detail on our website.[97] In some cases, the funding was approved for a project spanning two or three years.
Applicant | Amount | Project |
Festival of Golden Words Inc | $10,000 | Tamar Valley Writers Festival |
Australian Children’s Literature Alliance | $24,000 | Australian Children’s Laureate |
Kid’s Own Inc | $30,000 | Into the Grand Imaginarium: Authors and illustrators inspiring family creativity (over three years) |
Arts Margaret River | $10,000 | Margaret River Readers and Writers Festival |
Writing WA | $10,000 | Singapore-Western Australia Book Industry Trade Summit |
The Literature Centre Inc. | $60,000 | Regional Talented Young Writers Programme (over three years) |
Carriageworks | $30,000 | The Patrick White Project (over two years) |
Currency House | $22,800 | An investment in cultural leadership (over three years) |
State Library of Queensland | $20,000 | Communities of Story |
Australian Centre of the Moving Image | $20,000 | ACMI X – Creative Industries Co-working Space – writer residencies |
National Gallery of Victoria | $30,000 | Melbourne Art Book Fair |
Perth International Arts Festival | $10,000 | Perth Writers Festival Inspired Learning Program |
The Red Room Company Poetry | $20,000 | Poetry Object: supporting excellence in poetry across Australia (over two years) |
Centre for Media History, Macquarie University | $15,000 | Brian Johns Lecture series (over three years) |
La Trobe Uni (Huss) | 15,000 | Teaching Australia |
UTS | $80,000 | CA New Writers Program (over two years) |
Australian Embassy Beijing | $20,000 | Australian Writers Week 2016 |
Sydney Review of Books | $10,000 | Sydney Review of Books Emerging Critics Fellowships |
The Lifted Brow | $15,000 | Prize for Experimental Non-fiction and Related Writing Workshops (over three years) |
O L Society Limited | $15,000 | Overland Residency (over two years) |
Chart Collective | $5,000 | Chart Collective Online Map Content |
Westerly Centre | $5,000 | Westerly Magazine’s Writer Development Program |
Sappho Poetry Reading Series | $30,000 | Sappho Poetry Read (over three years) |
Queensland Poetry Festival | $12,000 | Indigenous Poetry Prize (over two years) |
Australian Poetry | $20,000 | Australian Poets Festival and National Poetry Prize (over two years) |
Perpetual Limited | $32,000 | Miles Franklin Shortlist |
Playwriting Australia | $40,000 | Indigenous Playwrights Retreat (over two years) |
Queensland Theatre Company | $90,000 | Indigenous New Work Residency (over three years) |
Playlab | $10,500 | The Incubator |
Malthouse Theatre | $45,000 | Co.Lab: Malthouse Theatre Writer and Director Program (over three years) |
The Walkley Foundation | $10,000 | Walkley Foundation Freelance Program |
The Walkley Foundation | $30,000 | Walkley Foundation Storyology Festival (over two years) |
Australian Publishers Association | $20,000 | Hello! From Australia |
Australian Booksellers Association | $7,000 | Australian Booksellers Association Conference |
Newcastle Art Gallery | $12,000 | Black White and Restive |
Sydney Non Objective | $10,000 | SNO Young and Emerging Artists Interdisciplinary Project |
Das Platforms | $10,000 | Oberon Editorial Project (over two years) |
Melbourne Fringe | $4,500 | Artist Development Forum Series and Resources |
Koorie Heritage Trust | $15,000 | Nukun and Ngujarn Footprints |
WestWords Ltd | $20,000 | Western Sydney Writers’ Fellowships / Artist Residencies |
PEN Melbourne | $39,000 | PEN Melbourne FreeSpeak Project 2016 – 2018 (over three years) |
Express Media | $19,200 | Toolkits – intensive, craft-specific online programs for young writers |
proppaNOW INC | $5,000 | proppaNOW (May Activism Program) |
arts margaret river | $10,000 | Margaret River Readers and Writers Festival |
Koorie Heritage Trust | $15,000 | Nukun and Ngujarn Footprints |
Sydney Non Objective | $10,000 | SNO Young and Emerging Artists Interdisciplinary Project |
Westerly Centre | $5,000 | Westerly Magazine’s Writer Development Program |
writingWA | $10,000 | Singapore-Western Australia Book Industry Trade Summit |
WestWords Ltd | $20,000 | CAL Western Sydney Writers’ Fellowships/Artist residencies |
The Big Issue | $25,000 | The Big Issue Fiction Edition |
Helm Wood Publishers Pty Ltd trading as Centre for Stories | $10,000 | The Australian Short Story Festival |
Griffith Review | $20,000 | Griffith Review The Novella Project IV Competition |
UWA Publishing | $55,500 | Dorothy Hewett Award for an unpublished manuscript |
Anne Summers Reports (ASR) | $15,000 | Illuminate |
Spineless Wonders | $10,000 | Spineless Wonders Presents…Little Fictions |
Australasian Association of Writing Programs | $9,000 | Meniscus literary journal: expanding reach |
The Australian Historical Association | $24,000 | AHA-Copyright Agency Travel and Writing Bursaries, 2009-2010, 2011-2013, 2014-2016 |
Small Press Network Inc. | $60,000 | Independent Publishing Conference |
The Walkley Foundation | $20,000 | Walkley Digital Media Innovation Program |
The Walkley Foundation | $45,000 | Walkley Training Program |
Victorian College of the Arts, University of Melbourne | $60,000 | Art & Australia Residential Fellowship Program |
Desart Inc | $11,365 | Our Land Our Life Our Future |
The National Association for the Visual Arts (NAVA) | $126,000 | The Copyright Agency Visual Arts and Craft Fellowship |
Australian Network for Art & Technology (ANAT) | $100,000 | Synapse: where art and science meet |
Naomi Milgrom Foundation | $9,600 | MPavilion International Curator Forum |
The Literature Centre Inc | $10,000 | Celebrate Reading National Conference 2016 |
13.3 Career Fund support 2015–16
The following were successful applicants for Career Fund support in 2015–16.
Recipient | Amount | For |
Michelle Hall | $3,500 | Artist residencies at School of Cellular and Molecular Medicine at Bristol University and a Residency at Aberystwyth Arts Centre, Wales. |
Nette Hilton | $1,300 | Mentorship with Kathryn Heyman |
Ross Onley-Zerkel | $5,000 | Structured writing mentorship with the assistance of Auslan interpreters. |
Rosetta Mills | $2,500 | Masterclasses at U- Symposium in Singapore and Facing Pages in Arnhem. |
Nicole Gill | $1,000 | ACT Writers Centre’s HARDCOPY program. |
Jason Hendrik Hansma | $2,200 | Workshop at Jan Van Eyck Academy in Maastricht, The Netherlands. |
Anna Louise Richardson | $2,500 | Curatorial internship and mentoring program with Curator of the 2016 Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art. |
Carolyn McKenzie Craig | $1,400 | International Print Conference IMPACT in Hangzhou, China. |
Aleesah Darlison | $1,300 | 2015 WORD Vancouver International Literary Festival in Canada and 2015 Young Child Expo & Conference in Spokane USA. |
Caelli Jo Brooker | $1,500 | Intensive practical workshops and mentored studio access to develop her skills and knowledge in the discipline of letterpress. |
Anita Bacic | $1,800 | Mentorship in Korcula, Croatia with an urban and cultural anthropologist and a media artist and curator. |
Anthony White | $1,000 | Lithographic Printmaking workshop with Master Printer Michael Woolworth in Paris. |
Kim Anderson | $2,500 | DRAW International, a structured residency in France. |
Rosie Isaac | $2,300 | Structured residency at Hospitalfield, Scotland. |
Josiane Smith | $790 | Redact weekend intensive workshop for manuscript assessment. |
Sarah Holland-Batt | $3,000 | VIII International Latin American Poetry Festival in Buenos Aires. |
Eleanor Limprecht | $1,000 | 2016 Tin House Summer Writers’ Workshop in Portland, Oregon. |
Kailum Graves | $2,000 | SOMA Summer in Mexico, an intensive eight-week program for international artists, curators, critics, and art historians. |
Christian Halford | $3,000 | Mentorship with renowned Australia painter Nicholas Harding. |
Charmaine Green | $2,000 | Mentorship with Rolande Souliere a First Nation Canadian artist. |
Brooke Robinson | $2,000 | Musical theatre development workshop ‘Books, Music & Lyrics’. |
Ben Beames | $1,500 | Mentorship with Rachel David of Red Metal in New Orleans. |
Alicia King | $2,000 | Classes in creating glass neon forms at UrbanGlass in Brooklyn. |
Christina Booth | $1,000 | 2016 Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators bi-annual conference in Sydney. |
Tania Smith | $1,000 | Residency at the University of San Carlos, Cebu. |
Kieran Swann | $2,000 | Internship program, Portland Institute of Contemporary Art. |
Alicia Sometimes | $1,500 | Bloomsbury Festival in the UK; mentorship with John-Paul Muir. |
Bruce Pascoe | $15,000 | Continue work on a pair of novels: ‘The Grain Armies’ and ‘The Great Dividing Range’. |
Angela Valamanesh | $15,000 | Artist in residence at the Rare Book / Special Collections. |
Paddy O’Reilly | $10,000 | Complete novel ‘The White Line’, a story of survival at the bottom of the so-called ‘trickle down effect’. |
Daniel Keene | $10,000 | Complete two works for the theatre: a volume of short plays (Short Plays III) and a play for young audiences (Pirouttes). |
Angela Slatter | $1,000 | Writer-in-Residence at the Katharine Susannah Prichard Writers Centre in Perth WA for 2016. |
Rhonda Pryor | $1,200 | Undertake ten-day residential workshop with Japanese Textile Workshops in Japan. |
Toby Fitch | $2,000 | Participate in two poetry conferences in the United States. |
Thomas Borgas | $1,700 | Participate in Resonate, a five day program of lectures, panel discussions, exhibitions and workshops for artists, designers and educators. |
Hannah Robinson | $1,500 | Work with mentor, photographer Christina Force. |
Jennifer Mackenzie | $1,200 | Participate in writer’s residency at Seoul Art Space_Yeonhui, South Korea. |
Tamara Lazaroff | $2,400 | Undertake structured writer’s residency at Can Serrat International Arts Centre, Spain in 2016. |
Pam Brown | $1,350 | Present on work, give a talk on Australian poetry and work as an editor, do two substantial readings in the US. |
Joanna Gould | $3,000 | Professional development workshops with mentors from the broader creative industries. |
Wendy Dunn | $1,650 | Participate in a Varuna Writer Development Residency. |
Tim Woodward | $2,000 | Undertake a structured residency at Ruang Mes 56 in Yogyakarta, Indonesia, learning Javanese woodcarving and wood-shaping techniques. |
Liesl Pfeffer | $1,600 | Residency at the Vermont Studio Center (VSC) in Johnson, Vermont. |
Susan Hawthorne | $3,000 | Speaking at the Women Leaders in Peacebuilding and Building Lives Conference to be held in Lingayen, Pangasinan, Philippines. |
Anita Larkin | $1,500 | Mentorship with contemporary ceramic artist Lynda Draper for a 15-week period. |
Donica Bettanin | $2,500 | Participate in the 2016 Atelier for Young Festival Managers in Budapest, Hungary. |
Elizabeth Bryer | $2,000 | Participate in Middlebury Bread Loaf Translators’ Conference, in Ripton, Vermont, USA. |
Valerie Sparks | $2,800 | Undertake training with the CSIRO Autonomous Systems Lab in Brisbane, and the Perceptual Robotics Laboratory in Pisa, Italy (PERCRO). |
James Voller | $2,000 | Artist in residence at the Vermont Studio Centre and Kala Art Fellowship residency in Berkeley. |
Jennifer Kemarre Martiniello | $1,000 | Undertake the structured residencies at Blue Dog Glass, Melbourne. |
Rebekah Clarkson | $1,000 | Participate in International conference on the Short Story in English, Shanghai, China. |
Inez Baranay | $1,000 | Participate in the congress Go Between, In Between: Borders of Belonging, Barcelona. |
Michael Giacometti | $2,000 | Participate in the Faber Academy UK online ‘Writing a Novel’ course. |
13.4 Fellowships
Fellowship | $ | Awarded to |
Author fellowship[98] | 40,000 | Mark Henshaw |
Publisher fellowships[99] | 10,000 | Chrysoula Aiellou (Scholastic Australia): children’s publishing in the digital environment |
5,000 | Glenda Browne: active indexes for e-books | |
10,000 | Naomi Gothard: digital ways to overcome barriers to Indigenous translations | |
5,000 | Gemene Heffernan-Smith (HarperCollins Australia): how digital technology can be harnessed to counter piracy | |
10,000 | Andrew Wrathall (Books + Publishing): survey and analyse online book reviewing in Asia and Australia | |
Copyright research fellowships[100] | 20,000 | Professor Melissa de Zwart: “How Does Copyright Function in an Instagram World” |
20,000 | Dr Dimitrios Eliades: “Copyright and Indigenous Traditional Knowledge” |
14. Money held in trust for content creators
At any given time, we are holding money in trust for content creators. The balance of money in the trust fund changes significantly over the course of a year, increasing with the receipt of licence fees, and decreasing with the distributions of licence fees.
The reasons that licence fees may not have been paid at a given date include:
- the payment was only recently received;
- we have not yet received the information need to allocate to rightsholders; and
- fees have been allocated, but not yet paid, to rightsholders.
14.1 Trust fund components at 30 June 2016
As at 30 June 2016, there was $47.64m in trust, representing:
Fees allocated but not yet paid | $10.67m | 22% |
Fees to be allocated | $17.65m | 37% |
Other[101] | $19.32m | 41% |
14.2 Funds for distribution
Allocated but not yet paid | To be allocated | |
Education | $7.97m | $6.02m |
Government | $1.30m | $4.26m |
Other | $1.40m | $7.37m |
Total | $10.67m | $17.65m |
14.3 Funds allocated but not yet paid, by reason
Education | Gov | Other | Total | |
We have not yet received confirmation of entitlement to claim. | $4,398,552 | $339,934 | $357,157 | $5,095,643 |
We have invited a non-member to join and claim payment, or we are in the process of making contact | $1,339,357 | $623,882 | $786,357 | $2,749,596 |
We have allocated a payment to a rightsholder, but they are not entitled to claim and we are in the process of identifying alternative rightsholders | $783,177 | $136,617 | $162,389 | $1,082,185 |
Payments allocated to foreign rightsholders from a country:
· with a collecting society with which we have a ‘Type B’ agreement (repertoire exchange but not fee exchange); · with a collecting society that is not authorised by its members for the type of content or use (e.g. digital use); or · no collecting society |
$567,525 | $93,815 | $20,206 | $681,545 |
There is not enough information to identify a rightsholder, or we have exhausted all attempts to identify a rightsholder (where a number of potential rightsholders have informed us they are not entitled to claim the payment) | $355,449 | $7,097 | $24,386 | $386,931 |
There is a dispute about who is entitled to claim, or clarification of entitlement is pending. | $522,420 | $96,804 | $53,223 | $672,447 |
Total | $7,966,480 | $1,298,149 | $1,403,719 | $10,668,347 |
14.4 ‘Rollover’ of allocations held in trust
We hold allocations to rightsholders (who may or may not be members) in trust. Most licence fees are allocated using data from surveys of statistical samples of licensees. These allocations do not represent payment per use, but rather distribution of licence fees in accordance with the best data available.[102]
An allocation that has not been paid to a rightsholder after four years is ‘rolled over’. The Board determines how funds rolled over are applied for the benefit of members.[103]
Most of the allocations rolled over in 2015–16 were to rightsholders that we were unable to identify, or unable to contact. We have reviewed our processes in recent years so that these allocations are vastly reduced, and future rollovers will also be reduced.
14.5 Total allocated and rolled over
Education | Government | Other | Total | |
Allocated 2011–12 | $86.30m | $26.73m | $19.88m | $132.91m |
Paid | $83.94m | $25.42m | $19.34m | $128.70m |
Rolled over (not paid) | $2.36m | $1.31m | $0.54m | $4.21m |
Rollover as % of total allocated | 2.7% | 4.9% | 2.7% | 3.2% |
14.6 Reasons allocation not paid
Education | Government | Other | Total | |
Allocated to member but not claimed | $0.81m | $0.57m | $0.22m | $1.60m |
Work identified: rightsholder unknown | $0.36m | $0.23m | $0.13m | $0.72m |
Rightsholder identified, but not contacted or did not join | $1.04m | $0.32m | $0.14m | $1.51m |
Very small aggregate amount allocated to rightsholder | $0.02m | $0.09m | $0.03m | $0.15m |
Foreign recipients: no agreement with foreign collecting society | $0.13m | $0.09m | $0.01m | $0.24m |
Total | $2.36m | $1.31m | $0.54m | $4.21m |
14.7 Distribution timeline
The charts below show the time between receipt and distribution of licence fees for schools for the 2016 calendar year, and universities for the 2015–16 financial year. There was one major distribution of licence fees from schools and two for universities.
Licence fees from schools were allocated to rightsholders in May 2016, and licence fees from universities were allocated to rightsholders in in November 2015 and May 2016.
Nearly all the licence fees from schools were received between mid-February and mid-May. Nearly all those licence fees had been paid to recipients by mid June.
The licence fees from universities allocated to rightsholders in December 2015 were mostly paid by mid-December 2015, and nearly all paid by mid-February 2016.
Similarly, the licence fees from universities allocated to rightsholders in May 2016 were nearly all paid by mid-June 2016.
14.10 Distributions and trust fund balance 2012–16
Year | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 |
Distributed ($m) | 141.6 | 90.7 | 103.3 | 136.6 | 115.5 |
Trust fund balance at 30 June ($m) | 79.7 | 44.2 | 57.8 | 48.34 | 47.64 |
15. Operating costs
Our administrative costs are met from licence fees.[104] For most licence schemes, we deduct actual operating costs rather than a fixed commission.[105] Deductions therefore vary from year to year, and from licence scheme to licence scheme. The Constitution also allows a deduction of up to 1.5% of revenue for support of cultural projects (the Cultural Fund).[106]
Copyright Agency’s Board must approve the company’s annual operating budget. Any proposed changes to directors’ remuneration must be approved by members at a general meeting. The largest component of operating costs is salaries.
For the past five years, total operating costs have been around 14% of total revenue.
15.1 Operating costs in 2015–16
- Operating costs: $19.3m[107]
- Licence fee revenue and net investment income recognised: $139.0m[108]
- Expenses as proportion of licence fee revenue and net investment income: 13.9%
Cost | $’000 |
personnel | $12,813 |
general administration | $3,477 |
surveys | $1,190 |
corporate relations | $442 |
other external services | $739 |
legal fees | $296 |
international | $315 |
TOTAL | $19,272 |
15.2 Expenditure to revenue ratio
The following represents our total expenditure as a proportion of our total revenue in 2015–16.
year | 2011–12 | 2012–13 | 2013–14 | 2014–15 | 2015–16 |
percentage | 14.2% | 13.9% | 14.3% | 13.6% | 13.9% |
15.3 Staff remuneration and performance
All employees have a position description outlining the responsibilities and key competencies required for their role. Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) are set each financial year and cascaded down from the senior management team to ensure alignment with the business requirements. They are then reviewed and agreed upon by employees with their manager, and performance objectives and targets are determined.
Our employees have one formal performance review each year, during which an individual’s performance is reviewed against the agreed objectives. Recommendations for annual remuneration are based on:
- the assessment of each employee’s performance against those objectives;
- benchmarking against similar positions in comparable organisations;
- overall company performance; and
- market and economic conditions.
In assessing appropriate employee remuneration, we employ the services of independent consultants who analyse relevant market data such as salary reports, and also assess the relative positions of roles and compare them to similar roles in other organisations. We use the results of this job evaluation system and other external salary benchmarks such as:
- market salary comparison for each job position, based on assessment against external salary reports;
- annual Consumer Price Index; and
- other sources of direct market comparison, such as job advertisements.
Final decisions regarding remuneration are made after considering managers’ recommendations, external benchmarks and environment, salary relativities within the company and our financial capacity.
15.4 Staffing in 2015–16
- In 2015–16, employee benefits expense was 9% of total revenue (64% of our operating costs)
- Staffing levels vary from time to time in accordance with requirements
- Staff include full-time employees, part-time employees and contractors
- In 2015–16, staffing levels ranged from 91.5 full-time equivalent (FTE) to 104.5 FTE
- At 30 June 2016, there were 91.5 FTE staff
- As at 30 June 2016, the median remuneration (including superannuation) for all staff was $93,413.
Staff remuneration greater than $100,000 as at 30 June 2016 was as follows:
Remuneration range* | $100–149k | $150–199k | $200–249k | $250–299k | $300–349k | $350+ |
Staff in range 2015–16 | 29 | 6 | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
*includes superannuation but not incentive payments |
16. Members
Membership of Copyright Agency is free. Anyone with a copyright interest in a ‘work’ can apply for membership.[109] Applications for membership are approved by the Board
There are three classes of membership: ‘author’, ‘publisher’ and ‘collecting society’.[110] Content creators can apply for membership online.[111] People can choose to be a member solely for entitlement to any statutory licence compensation allocated for use of their works, or they can choose to also authorise Copyright Agency to license reproduction and communication of their works.
For a number of reasons, we only make payments to members, but our systems enable payment to new members for past usage recorded in surveys of usage.
Payments can be made to a content creator indirectly via a member: unless we have verified information about the ‘payment shares’ for a work, a recipient of a payment must undertake any amounts due to others (e.g. a publisher to authors).
16.1 Members at 30 June 2016
Member type | Number |
Creator[112] | 21,823 |
Publisher | 8,222 |
Creator/Publisher | 388 |
Collecting Society | 29 |
Total | 30,462 |
16.2 Members 2010–16
Year | 2010 | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 |
Number of members | 15,612 | 19,417 | 23,894 | 26,732 | 28,375 | 29,539 | 29,539 |
16.3 Member survey results
Members of Copyright Agency and Viscopy were surveyed in between April and June 2016 regarding their satisfaction with member services. The first group surveyed were members who had received a payment in the last two years. The second group surveyed were members who had not received a payment in the last two years.
About 2,800 members responded.
Of the members who had received a payment in the last two years, 83% were very or quite satisfied with member services, and 15% were neither satisfied nor dissatisfied. Of the members who had not received a payment in the last two years, 62% were very or quite satisfied with member services, and 32% were neither satisfied nor dissatisfied.
16.4 Member enquiries
The Member Services team answered 13,577 enquiries in 2015–16, mostly from members:
2015 | 2016 | total | |||||||||||
Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | ||
phone | 352 | 234 | 262 | 191 | 182 | 282 | 236 | 172 | 248 | 191 | 174 | 796 | 3,320 |
1,063 | 707 | 766 | 444 | 532 | 660 | 860 | 998 | 654 | 987 | 1,189 | 1,397 | 10,257 | |
total | 1,415 | 941 | 1,028 | 635 | 714 | 942 | 1,096 | 1,170 | 902 | 1,178 | 1,363 | 2,93 | 13,577 |
17. International agreements and engagement
The ‘voluntary’ licences offered by Copyright Agency and Viscopy are dependent upon the authorisation given by members to license their content, and the authorisation of foreign content creators through their copyright management organisations (CMOs). Copyright Agency and Viscopy therefore have agreements with foreign CMOs that enable us to include foreign works in Australian licences, and foreign CMOs to include Australian works in their licences. The maintenance of those agreements requires active management, affected by a range of external developments including changes in regulatory frameworks and business practices.
Both Copyright Agency and Viscopy also seek to extend their mandate through arrangements with organisations representing rightsholders in countries not yet covered in our mandates. This often requires assistance to those organisations to get established and begin operations, particularly in developing countries.
Establishing arrangements with ASEAN countries is an important area of focus. International engagement also involves services in other countries: for example, Viscopy represents foreign repertoire for New Zealand as well as Australia.
Copyright Agency and Viscopy are members of the International Federation of Reproduction Rights Organisations (IFRRO)[113] and the International Confederation of Societies of Authors and Composers (CISAC).[114] Copyright Agency plays an active role on the IFRRO board and Committees.[115]
17.1 Developments in 2015–16
- Chairing IFRRO Asia Pacific Committee and Legal Issues Forums
- Participation in IFRRO Asia Pacific Committee meeting 31 Aug – 1 Sept 2015, Beijing, China
- Series of meetings with partner CMOs including Copyright Clearance Center (CCC, US), CLA (Copyright Licensing Agency, UK), China Written Works Copyright Society (CWWCS), Korea Reproduction and Transmission Rights Association (KORRA), and Japan Academic Association for Copyright Clearance (JAC) to coincide with IFRRO Asia Pacific Committee (APC) meeting, as well as meeting with Cultural Officer, Australian Embassy Beijing.
- Participation in IFRRO Annual World Congress, 8–12 November 2015, Mexico City, Mexico
- Series of meetings with partner CMOs including CCC, CLA, Newspaper Licensing Agency (NLA, UK), Publishers Licensing Society (PLS, UK) KORRA, JAC, KOPINOR (Norway) and Access Copyright (Canada) to coincide with IFRRO AGM.
- Participation CISAC Asia Pacific Committee Meeting, 25 November 2016, Sydney – hosted by APRA AMCOS
- Negotiations of South East Asian mandate agreements with foreign CMOs
- Series of meetings in Singapore to support local CMO CLASS in establishing new licensing scheme (July 2015–May 2016)
- Guest speaker at Regional Seminar on Building Awareness of the Notions and Functions of Copyright in Today’s Changing Environment, Singapore, April 29, 2016 (TAG of Excellence Regional Consultations)
- Guest speaker at Marshall Islands 2nd Heads of IP Office Conference for Pacific Island Countries, June 27–29 2016
- Hosted visit from World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) Sub Regional Workshop Pacific Islands to Copyright Agency Viscopy offices
- Participation in IFRRO mid-term meetings Brussels (1–2 June), CISAC General Assembly Meeting Paris (3 June), PDLN (Press Database and Licensing Network) Rome (6–7 June)
- Series of meetings with partner CMOs across text, visual arts, and media sectors – including CCC, CLA, Bildkunst (visual arts society, Germany), Artists Rights Society (ARS, US), Picasso Estate, KORRA – to coincide with IFRRO, CISAC, and PDLN conferences.
18. Policy and advocacy
We monitor and seek to influence policy developments that affect copyright-based compensation, licence fees and other income. We form policy positions in consultation with a range of stakeholders, including industry and professional bodies representing content creators.
We are a member of bodies that have a key advocacy role, such as the Australian Copyright Council. We seek to influence policy at the international level primarily through our membership of IFRRO.
18.1 Developments in 2015–16
The major development was an inquiry into intellectual property arrangements by the Productivity Commission, launched in August 2015. The inquiry involved initial consultations, an issues paper, a draft report, roundtables, public hearings and the final report (delivered to the government on 23 September 2016).
The other important development was a draft amendment bill with proposed changes for the education sector, libraries and people with disabilities (all of which had consensus support), together with a proposed expansion of the ‘safe harbour’ provisions for internet service providers to benefit other online providers (strongly opposed by content creators).
Internationally, copyright was under review in various countries, including by the US House Judiciary Committee, instigated by the US Copyright Office, and by the European Commission.
18.2 Submissions and representations in 2015–16
Engagement in policy and advocacy included:
- Joint proposal with other copyright management organisations and education sector representations on simplifying the statutory licence for education (August 2015)
- Position papers provided to the government on copyright protection for unpublished works, and preservation of manuscripts and other original works (August 2016)
- Consultation with Productivity Commission on issues relevant to inquiry on intellectual property arrangements (August 2015)
- Submission to Australian Law Reform Commission on Traditional Rights and Freedoms – Encroachments by Commonwealth Laws: Interim Report (September 2015)
- Submission to Productivity Commission on Issues Paper (November 2015)
- Consultation with Ernst and Young on costs and benefits of recommendations by Australian Law Reform Commission on fair use and fair dealing (February 2016)
- Submission (with other industry bodies) to Productivity Commission annexing report by PwC Understanding the Costs and Benefits of Fair Use (February 2016)
- Submission to Department of Communications and the Arts on draft Copyright Amendment (Disabilities and Other Measures) Bill (February 2016)
- Submission to Joint Standing Committee on Treaties on Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement
- Submission to Productivity Commission on Draft Report (June 2016)
- Participation in Productivity Commission roundtable (June 2016)
- Participation in Productivity Commission public hearings (June 2016)
19. Stakeholder communication and engagement
Copyright Agency’s stakeholders include content creators, content users and the Australian government.
Content creator stakeholders include members of Copyright Agency and of Viscopy, potential members, professional organisations for content creators (such as Australian Society of Authors, Australian Publishers Association, Media Entertainment and Arts Alliance, National Association for the Visual Arts, and Australian Institute for Professional Photography), and international affiliates.
Content user stakeholders include people who use content under licences (e.g. teachers, government employees), professional associations for those users (such as teacher associations and unions), and people who negotiate licence fees and other arrangements for their sector (such as Copyright Advisory Group and Universities Australia).
Copyright Agency’s main stakeholder relationship with the Australian government is related to its appointments by the government to manage statutory schemes and the artists’ resale royalty scheme.
Copyright Agency also has a stakeholder relationship with the Australian government, and with State and Territory governments, in their capacity as licensees, and as owners of copyright.
Other important stakeholders include other copyright management organisations (such as Screenrights and APRA|AMCOS), and industry associations for content creators (such as those for music and film).
19.1 Developments in 2015–16
- Creator Series author events held in Adelaide, Brisbane and Sydney
- Regular meetings and presentations to staff and boards of key industry organisations
- Meetings with various Departments and Ministers (Communications, Attorney General and Prime Minister’s Office) on copyright issues
- A survey of all Copyright Agency and Viscopy members on member satisfaction
- Fully digital Annual Review developed for Copyright Agency and Viscopy
- Monthly eNews, Creative Licence, issued to members and other stakeholders
- Engagement with stakeholders via Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and Instagram
- Media coverage of Copyright Agency activities and issues
- Publication of Opinion pieces in media on copyright issues
- Voice of the Artist event held during Vivid Sydney
- Major sponsorship of Miles Franklin Literary Award
- Literary agents briefed in Sydney and Melbourne
- Training sessions about the Copyright Agency’s processes with members on request
- Event at Parliament House at which Dominic Young (CEO Copyright Hub) and Scott Turow (writer and former Chair of US Authors Guild) spoke
20. LearningField
LearningField is an online platform providing access to resources linked to the Australian curriculum and state curriculums.[116] It is an ‘all you can eat’ annual subscription, allowing use of all LearningField resources: more than 12,000 chapters from 800 textbooks.
LearningField is a collaboration between Copyright Agency and three founding publishers, and is open to other participating publishers.
20.1 Developments in 2015–16
- Launch of new platform provided by VitalSource
- Partnership with Schoolbox to enabled teachers to use LearningField content from within learning management systems
- Integration of LearningField by SEQTA into its Teach product.
- Increase in participating publishers from 9 to 13, including Wet Paper, English Teachers’ Association NSW, Association for the Teaching of English, Impact Publishing
- Agreement renewed with founding publishers (Pearson, Oxford University Press and Cambridge University Press)
21. Reading Australia
Reading Australia (readingaustralia.com.au) is a website to assist teaching and reading of Australian literature in Australian schools and universities. It was created by Copyright Agency, with funding from its Cultural Fund.
Reading Australia has been developed in partnership with the Australian Association for the Teaching of English, the Primary English Teaching Association Australia, the Australian Literacy Educators Association and the Association for the Study of Australian Literature, with funding from Copyright Agency’s Cultural Fund.
The website initially listed 200 books chosen by a panel from the Australian Society of Authors to celebrate the work of leading Australian writers and illustrators. There are now a further 70 titles, covering all genres and periods of Australia’s literary history.
There are now over 100 resources aimed at Foundation to Senior Secondary. The educational resources are designed to help teachers navigate Australian texts within the framework of the Australian Curriculum. Many of the secondary-level titles are also accompanied by essays written by eminent authors, academics and critics. The website also has video interviews with authors, including 10 created in partnership with ABC Splash.
Twenty titles have had AustLit trails created for them. These trails are curated collections of information covering the title’s context, themes, and more, as well as links to academic research and publications.
21.1 Developments in 2015–16
- new online platform launched in July 2015
- 70% increase in subscriber numbers from 3,673 to 6,246
- new features include news fees, intuitive and filtered searches and better interfaces
- opinion piece by David Malouf on Reading Australia, published in Sydney Morning Herald (July 2015)
- 31 new children’s book titles
- 77 new teacher resources for secondary students
- 78 new essays for secondary schools
- 39 new resources for primary schools
- 2 new videos
- 5 new essays for tertiary teaching
- a partnership with University of Technology Sydney (UTS) called ‘Writers on Writers’, whereby contemporary authors (many who teach professional writing) are filmed interviewing authors they admire who are on the Reading Australia list
- 10 interviews with Australian authors hosted on ABC Splash[117]
- 3 Introduction to Reading Australia videos
- Reading Australia BookPros (in partnership with Australian Society of Authors)[118]
22. Governance and accountability
Copyright Agency and Viscopy are signatories to the Collecting Societies Code of Conduct.[119] Matters covered in the Code include governance and accountability, education and awareness, and complaints and disputes.
We report annually to the Code Reviewer on our compliance with the requirements of the Code, and the Code Reviewer’s report is published on our website.
In conjunction with the Government’s appointment of Copyright Agency to manage the statutory licence for education in 1990, the Attorney-General’s Department developed guidelines for collecting societies.[120]
Our Constitution (which reflects some of the requirements in the guidelines) is available from our website, as is our Corporate Governance Statement, Client Service Charter, Privacy Policy and profiles of board directors.
Our Complaints Procedure and Disputes Resolution Procedure are available on our website.
The Copyright Tribunal has powers to determine aspects of licensing arrangements, including compensation fees payable under statutory licences, and distribution arrangements.
22.1 Developments in 2015–16
- Code Reviewer’s report on collecting societies’ compliance with the Code of Conduct in 2014–15 published
- Code Reviewer’s supplementary report on triennial review of the text of the Code published[121]
- Report to Code Reviewer on compliance with the Code of Conduct 2015–16
[1] abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/mf/4221.0.
[2]universitiesaustralia.edu.au/australias-universities/key-facts-and-data.
[3] ncver.edu.au/about/news-and-events/media-releases/total-vet-activity-second-report-released.
[4] Number of employees covered by Copyright Agency’s licensing agreements.
[5] There are also statutory licence schemes for people with disabilities (visual impairment and intellectual disability), which Copyright Agency is appointed by the Attorney General to manage. Copyright Agency’s board has decided not to seek any compensation under these schemes, and the government intends to replace the licence with an exception.
[6] From statutory and voluntary licences, but not the artists’ resale royalty scheme.
[7] Principally Screenrights (broadcast content), APRA|AMCOS (music compositions), and PPCA (recorded music).
[8] copyrighttribunal.gov.au
[9] Report to Consider what Alterations are Desirable in the Copyright Law of the Commonwealth (the Spicer Report) (1959): this report preceded the introduction of the current Copyright Act 1968.
[10] Copyright Act 1968 (Cth), available at comlaw.gov.au. The legislation has been amended many times since 1968. Significant amendments include the ‘Digital Agenda’ amendments of 2000, and the introduction of ‘moral rights’ in 2000.
[11] Other forms of intellectual property include patents, trade marks and designs: see ipaustralia.gov.au/understanding-intellectual-property
[12] Creators have these rights in their work even if they do not own copyright.
[13] The primary copyright treaty, the Berne Convention, provides that parties are not required to have an artists’ resale right, but that if they do they must provide reciprocity to nationals of other countries that have the right. In Australia, the right is granted by the Resale Royalty Right for Visual Artists Act 2009 (Cth), overseen by the Minister for the Arts. One of the key arguments for the right is that it benefits ‘fine artists’ who receive fewer benefits from the copyright system than other creators (such as writers and composers) whose work is primarily created for copying and communication rather than the value of the ‘original’ version.
[14] copyright.com.au/duration
[15] Australia is party to a number of treaties, such as the Berne Convention administered by the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) and the Agreement on Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS), administered by the World Trade Organization (WTO). Australia is also party to a number of bilateral and other agreements that affect copyright, such as the Australia–US Free Trade Agreement.
[16] For an overview of all the statutory licences, see Ricketson & Creswell, The Law of Intellectual Property: Copyright Designs & Confidential Information at [12.0]ff.
[17] Ricketson & Creswell, The Law of Intellectual Property: Copyright Designs & Confidential Information at [12.0].
[18] For example, the use of print music in schools is mostly done under the AMCOS print music licence (www.apra-amcos.com.au/musicconsumers/musicineducation/schools.aspx) rather than the statutory licence, because it allows the copying of entire works that are available for purchase (provided the school purchases the requisite number of originals), though the statutory licence remains available to schools for uses not covered by the AMCOS agreement.
[19] Copyright Agency is also declared as the collecting society for people with disabilities, but decided not to seek any compensation under the scheme, and the government intends to replace the statutory licence scheme with an exception: communications.gov.au/have-your-say/updating-australias-copyright-laws
Copyright Agency was ‘declared’ by the Attorney General in 1990 as the collecting society for the statutory licences for education and people with disabilities in Part VB of the Copyright Act, and by the Copyright Tribunal in 1998 as the collecting society for government copies of ‘works’ and ‘published editions’.
[20] Report of the Copyright Law Committee on Reprographic Reproduction (AGPS, Canberra, 1976), known as the Franki Report.
[21] By the Copyright Amendment (Digital Agenda) Act 2000 (Cth).
[22] The Guidelines and Constitution are available at copyright.com.au/governance.
[23] Report of the Committee Appointed by the Attorney-General of the Commonwealth to Consider what Alterations are Desirable in the Copyright Law of the Commonwealth (1959), known as the Spicer Report, at [404]
[24] The statutory licence in section 183 of the Act allows the Commonwealth, States and Territories to use any copyright material for the services of the Crown. The amendments empowered the Copyright Tribunal to appoint (‘declare’) collecting societies to manage ‘government copies’. Copyright Agency was declared as the collecting society in relation to ‘works’ (other than those embodied in films and sound recordings) and ‘published editions’ in 1998. Screenrights is the declared society for broadcast content. For uses that are not ‘government copies’ managed by a declared collecting society, the government must (unless it is contrary to the public interest) notify the copyright owner and either agree terms with the copyright owner, or have terms determined by the Copyright Tribunal. The legislation does not empower the Tribunal to declare a collecting society in relation to ‘communications’ made under the statutory licence, but Copyright Agency operates as agent for its members by accepting notification and negotiating terms.
[25] Some other countries have provision for ‘extended collective licensing’, which is similar to statutory licensing but allows a copyright owner to ‘opt out’. This form of licensing originated in Scandinavian countries, and has recently been introduced in the UK. It is also under consideration in the US.
[26] The table represents licence fees payable for the 2015–16 financial year, rather than received in that period. Does not include fee paid by Viscopy under services agreement with Copyright Agency.
[27] The licence fees from states and territories recognised for 2015–16 reflects adjustments for licence fees expected for previous years that have not been received in full and are now note expected to be received.
[28] Includes voluntary licences for quasi-government entities ($116,910 in 2015–16)
[29] The current statutory licence, in Part VB of the Copyright Act, came into operation in 1990. It replaced the former statutory licence provisions in section 53B, introduced in 1980. The statutory licence was extended to digital uses in 2000, by the Copyright Amendment (Digital Agenda) Act.
[30] There are also arrangements for use of music in schools and universities through the music collecting societies, APRA|AMCOS and PPCA.
[31] CAG represents schools on copyright matters to the Council of Australian Governments (COAG) Education Council. CAG is assisted by the National Copyright Unit (NCU), based in the NSW Department of Education.
[32] Since 2006, Victorian TAFEs have been represented by their own self-funded association, Victorian TAFE Association (VTA).
[34] National Report on Schooling in Australia 2013, acara.edu.au/reporting/national-report-on-schooling-in-australia-2013/funding-australia-s-schools/an-overview-of-government-funding-of-schools
[35] Currently AMR. There are different arrangements with the TAFE sector and individually licensed institutions. Recent distributions of licence fees from those sectors have largely been based on ‘indicative’ rather than survey data.
[36] This is partly in recognition that the teachers completing the surveys would have difficulty determining whether a particular use is made in reliance on the statutory licence or not. Uses not made in reliance on the statutory licence are identified by Copyright Agency’s researchers, following protocols agreed with education sector representatives.
[37] This does not necessarily mean that the work used is a ‘orphan work’: it means that insufficient information has been provided to enable us to identify its copyright owner.
[38] abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/mf/4221.0
[39] In accordance with protocols agreed with the sector: copyright.com.au/about-us/what-we-do/collecting-and-distributing-royalties/data-processing-protocols. For example, content covered by a Creative Commons licence, a licence that allows free use by schools, or a licence (such as a subscription licence) that allows the use.
[40] A ‘page’ is a ‘unit’ of content that has been copied or shared, such as a page from a book, an image, or a page printed from a website.
[41] Taking into account the two-year cycle of states and territories.
[42] E.g. because the content is not protected by copyright; because part used is not ‘substantial’; because the use is covered by a free exception.
[43] Such as from a website with terms of use that allow ‘non-commercial use’.
[44] unless we have been instructed by the relevant agency not to exclude it
[45] ‘Blackline masters’ are workbooks sold with a licence to the purchaser to photocopy. Survey records do not indicate whether or not the recorded use was covered by the licence.
[46] Such as the TV guides at issue in the High Court decision in Ice TV
[47] The lists were compiled from data provided by the schools that participated in surveys of usage from 2011 to mid-2016. From this data we extracted records that related to publications for which we could identify an ISBN (International Standard Book Number) or ISSN (International Standard Serial Number). We then counted the number of schools in which each book and periodical was copied, but not the number of pages copied, or the number of copies made, both of which are taken into account for distribution of licence fees.
[48] http://copyright.com.au/licences-permission/educational-licences/top-100-books-teachers-chose-to-copy/
[49] The statutory licence is in Part VII Division 2 of the Copyright Act
[50] Screenrights is similarly declared for broadcast content.
[51] The legislation does not enable the Tribunal to ‘declare’ Copyright Agency for communication, only for ‘government copies’. Copyright Agency has asked the Australian Law Reform Commission to recommend amendment to the legislation to enable declaration for communication.
[52] See copyright.com.au/people-with-disabilities
[53] Marrakesh Treaty to Facilitate Access to Published Works for Persons Who Are Blind, Visually Impaired or Otherwise Print Disabled
[54]minister.communications.gov.au/mitch_fifield/news/turning_a_new_page_for_people_with_print_disability#.WAROZJN946j
[55] printdisability.org/conference/2016-2/
[56] rightsportal.com.au
[57] copyright.com.au/excluded-works
[58] The current per-employee rate for State governments is about $11. In the Commonwealth, there is a lower rate for large departments and a higher rate for small departments, but the overall average is equivalent to that paid by the States.
[59] rightsportal.com.au
[60] http://transition.accc.gov.au/content/index.phtml/itemId/1022091/fromItemId/278039/display/acccDecision
[61] www.viscopy.org.au/licensing
[62] Results available at https://issuu.com/copyrightagency/docs/vota-whitepaper_final_lr.
[63] https://issuu.com/copyrightagency/docs/vota-publication-2016_web.
[64] https://event.voiceoftheartist.com.au.
[65] Royalties are paid to successors in title after an artist’s death. The legislation allows for the scheme to be extended to artists and successors in title from other countries with similar schemes, by listing those countries in regulations. At the time of writing, no countries were listed.
[66] Resales for $1,000 or more.
[67] All resales must be reported, and Copyright Agency determines which resales are subject to a royalty. A royalty is not payable if the artwork was acquired by the vendor before the commencement of the scheme. Other reasons for a royalty not being payable are: the artist is not an Australian national or resident, and (if the artist has died), there are no beneficiaries with the requisite connection to Australia.
[68] In some cases artists elect to receive payment directly from the art market professional and in some cases artists decline payment for particular resales (e.g. charity auctions).
[69] copyright.com.au/distribution-policy
[70] One-page information sheets linked to distribution schedule webpage; webpages with information on payment summaries and spreadsheets accompanying distributions.
[71] Includes downloaded documents, such as reports and images.
[72] Includes sources such as information sheets, content from CD-ROMs, posters, previous years’ exam papers, student theses from other universities.
[73] Based on allocations of licence fees, a small proportion of which was paid in the 2016–17 financial year. Most recipients give an undertaking to on-pay any amounts due to others, so the number of ultimate recipients exceeds the number of initial payees.
[74] Including educational publishers in the private sector, educational writers and illustrators, and other bodies that create resources specifically for the education sector, such as teacher associations.
[75] Including journal publishers and contributors, trade publishers and authors, artists, print media and film/tv companies
[76] Including cultural institutions, arts organisations, community groups, charities, religious organisations, health and disability organisations, special interest associations, industry groups, professional associations, sporting groups
[77] Including colleges, universities and TAFEs
[78] Including government departments and agencies, and local government.
[79] Includes recipients of small payments that we have not categorised
[80] Includes fees paid for sale of survey plans by NSW and Queensland since 2002.
[81] Such as authors with a contractual entitlement.
[82] In accordance with notified payment shares (information we have received from members about contractual arrangements for sharing Copyright Agency payments).
[83] Most recipients give an undertaking to on-pay any amounts due to others, so the number of ultimate recipients exceeds the number of initial payees.
[84] Including educational publishers in the private sector, educational writers and illustrators, and other bodies that create resources specifically for the education sector, such as teacher associations.
[85] Including journal publishers and contributors, trade publishers and authors, artists, print media and film/tv companies
[86] Including cultural institutions, arts organisations, community groups, charities, religious organisations, health and disability organisations, special interest associations, industry groups, professional associations, sporting groups
[87] Including colleges, universities and TAFEs
[88] Including government departments and agencies, and local government.
[89] Includes recipients of small payments that we have not categorised
[90] Including Australian collecting societies.
[91] Some of these recipients will have shared payments with others, including co-authors and publishers.
[92] Unique recipients: 131 individuals received direct payments from both schools and universities licence fees.
[93] We had regard to the Attorney-General’s Department’s guidelines for declared collecting societies (2001) in determining the approach to the distribution.
[94] There were 432 unique recipients from all the surveyors’ distributions for 2015–16 (that is, many recipients received payments from both the retrospective payments and current licences).
[95] Distribution included some licence fees from quasi-government organisations and religious organisations.
[96] copyright.com.au/cultural-fund. The deduction does not apply to artists’ resale royalties.
[97]copyright.com.au/cultural-fund/projects-supported
[98] copyright.com.au/2015/09/copyright-agency-awards-inaugural-author-fellowship/
[99] copyright.com.au/2015/05/copyright-agency-awards-five-inaugural-publisher-fellows/
[100] copyright.com.au/2015/10/researchers-to-shed-light-on-contentious-copyright-issues/
[101] Provision for operating costs: $893,225; Future Fund (see Note 14 in Notes to Financial Statements for the year ended 30 June 2016): $15,461,816; Indemnity Fund: $2.5m; provision for indemnity in commercial licence fees: $444,197; other: $24,949.
[102] Not every survey record provides information suitable for distribution. For example, a survey record may show that a use occurred in reliance on a licence, but not sufficient information to identify a rightsholder.
[103] See Note 14 in Notes to Financial Statements for the year ended 30 June 2016 for amounts rolled over in 2015–16.
[104] In accordance with the Copyright Act, the Copyright Regulations, the Attorney-General’s Guidelines and Copyright Agency’s Constitution.
[105] There is a fixed commission from some of the commercial licence schemes.
[106] Deductions are not made from artists’ resale royalties or LearningField subscriptions.
[107] Does not include expenses associated with Viscopy services agreement.
[108] Does not include fee paid by Viscopy under services agreement with Copyright Agency.
[109] ‘Work’ has the same meaning as that in the Copyright Act. It includes text works, still images and print music. Some owners of copyright are ‘indirect’ members through their membership of Viscopy and AMCOS (who are collecting society members of Copyright Agency). Membership is open to owners of copyright, their agents and licensees.
[110] A member can be both an author and a publisher member. The class of membership determines voting entitlements for the two elected members of the board: the elected ‘author’ and the elected ‘publisher’ director.
[111] members.copyright.com.au
[112] 1,396 are also members of Viscopy.
[113] www.ifrro.org
[114] www.cisac.org
[115] In 2015–16, Jim Alexander was Vice President of the IFRRO Board, chair of the Education and Enforcement Task Force. Caroline Morgan chaired the Asia-Pacific Committee and the Legal Issues Forum. Karen Pitt was a member of the Nominating and Asia-Pacific Committees. Jim, Caroline and Karen were also members of the Newspaper and Periodicals Working Group and the Visual Arts Working Group.
[116] copyright.com.au/learningfield
[117] http://splash.abc.net.au/home#!/digibook/1919705/interviews-with-10-australian-authors
[118] https://www.asauthors.org/news/new-authors-in-schools-program
[119] The Code is available at copyright.com.au.
[120] There are links to the declaration and guidelines at copyright.com.au/governance
[121] screenrights.org/about-us/governance/code-of-conduct
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