Music and videos on digital signage monitors: what are the rules for broadcasting?
YouTube: licence agreement and restrictions
Music rights (SIAE / SCF)
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- SIAE → for copyright on authors and composers;
- SCF → for the related rights of phonogram producers and performers.
A practical example?
It isn’t allowed…
Streaming videos or music from YouTube, not even if:
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- the video is public or free;
- there are no direct profits (because the space is still open to customers/patients);
- use a television or tablet connected to the internet.
Alternatively, you can…
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- Activate subscriptions for background music/video: there are services (e.g. Soundreef, Jamendo Licensing, Rockbot, Rehegoo, etc.) that provide playlists or music videos for commercial use with licences already included.
- Request annual SIAE/SCF licences: If you wish to use mainstream music, you can apply for annual licences for background music or hold music.
- Opt for royalty-free content: you may only use videos or music for which you have an explicit licence for public distribution (e.g. from audio/video stock platforms).
Can I use self-produced videos that I have uploaded to YouTube?
Copyright and content ownership
The videos must be produced by the practice itself (e.g. patient interviews, case studies and similar) and must be uploaded to the practice’s official YouTube channel. In addition, the practice must own the rights to the video. This means that the practice must have filmed and edited the content internally or, if it had the content produced by a videographer, it must have acquired all rights to it. Finally, it is important that the video does not contain unauthorised third-party music or images.
Please note! If music, jingles or images from third-party libraries have been used in the videos, it is necessary to verify that the licence for those materials also covers ‘public or commercial use’. For example, ‘royalty-free for personal use’ music on YouTube is not automatically reusable in a public space.
Use via digital signage software
If the practice plays them in the waiting room via a digital signage system, there is no technical or legal problem in retrieving your videos from YouTube (via API, link or embedding) to play them on the digital signage circuit. However, the following conditions must be met:
- the YouTube channel belongs to the studio.
- the videos belong to the studio;
- YouTube’s licence terms are not being violated (i.e. you are not monetising or redistributing other people’s content)
In this case, the reproduction is not a “public performance of third-party content,” but simply the dissemination of one’s own promotional or informational materials.
