Censorsed: Copyright's Festering Free-Speech Problem

AuthorJohn Tehranian
PositionJohn Tehranian is the Paul W. Wildman Chair and Professor of Law at Southwestern Law School and a founding partner of One LLP, an intellectual property and entertainment firm with offices in Beverly Hills, Newport Beach, and Del Mar, California. This article is based on themes explored more broadly by the author in The New ©ensorship, 101 Iowa ...
Pages37-43
Published in Landslide® magazine, Volume 9, Number 5, a publication of the ABA Section of Intellectual Property Law (ABA-IPL), ©2017 by the American Bar Association. Reproduced with permission. All rights reserved. This
information or any portion thereof may not be copied or disseminated in any form or by any means or stored in an electronic database or retrieval system without the express written consent of the American Bar Association.
Copyright’s Festering
Free-Speech Problem
©ensorsed
By John Tehranian
John Tehranian is the Paul W. Wildman Chair and
Professor of Law at Southwestern Law School and a founding
partner of One LLP, an intellectual property and entertainment rm with
ofces in Beverly Hills, Newport Beach, and Del Mar, California. This article is
based on themes explored more broadly by the author in The New ©ensorship,
101 Iowa Law Review 245 (2015). He can be reached at jtehranian@onellp.com.

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