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The King of Copyright

"I Have a Dream" is a fair use nightmare.

If you weren’t alive to witness Martin Luther King’s “I Have a Dream” speech on the Washington Mall, you might try to switch on the old YouTube and dial it up. But you won’t find it there or anywhere else, because rights to its usage remain with King and his family.

Typically, a speech broadcast to a large audience on radio and television (and considered instrumental in historic political changes and ranked as the most important speech in 20th century American history) would seem to be a prime candidate for the public domain. But the copyright dilemma began in December 1963, when King sued Mister Maestro, Inc., and Twentieth Century Fox Records Company to stop the unauthorized sale of records of the 17-minute oration.

Read the rest at Motherboard.