Copyright, Free Speech and Victim Rights In the Digital Age

The annals of copyright decisions could provide a reasonably representative catalog of what our culture has been up to over the past 200 years. A Feb. 3 decision from the Southern District of New York is a case in point. It involves a sex-trafficking conspiracy, Tweets attacking a troubled crypto firm, and a claimed transfer of copyright ownership through a restitution order in a criminal case, all over an undercurrent of competing First Amendment and victim-privacy concerns.

10 minute read April 01, 2026 at 12:13 AM
By
Robert W. Clarida and Thomas Kjellberg
Copyright, Free Speech and Victim Rights In the Digital Age

Because copyright law deals with nearly every book, movie, song, computer program, blog post, photograph, artwork, map, chart and boat hull created since 1790, the annals of copyright decisions could provide a reasonably representative catalog of what our culture has been up to over the past 200 years.

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