Skip to main content

Search

  • newsletter
Redefine reasonable.
QuestionCopyright.org logo
  • Home
  • About
  • Projects
  • Learn
  • News
  • Join Us
  • Contact
  • Store

  • Minute Memes
  • Speakers Bureau
  • Creator-Endorsed Mark
  • Sita Distribution Project
  • QuestionCopyright.com Store

Home

Victor.Cohen

  • View
  • Track
Printer-friendly versionPrinter-friendly version PDF versionPDF version
Victor.Cohen's picture

Personal Information

Biography

Victor Cohen is currently a third-year law student at Brooklyn Law School with plans to enter into the copyright and internet/tech policy world upon graduation. To this end, he has focused his studies on copyright, telecom, privacy, free speech, and related issues. Victor has worked with web startups, artists, and activists through Brooklyn Law School's BLIP Clinic and with city government as an intern at (now former) New York City Councilmember Bill de Blasio's legislative office. He is an internet triumphalist, a huge fan of remix and mashup culture, and a former epeeist with the Lafayette College fencing team.

Victor Cohen (username Victor.Cohen) was a legal intern at QuestionCopyright.org in 2010.

Donate
QuestionCopyright.org is a U.S. 501(c)(3) non-profit organization

Copyright notice: These web pages are devoted to questioning the idea that copyright is necessary for the promotion of creative expression. Therefore, our content is released to the public and can be considered to be in the public domain: you may copy, share, excerpt, modify, and distribute modified versions of this and other pages from QuestionCopyright.org. We ask, but do not require, that you credit QuestionCopyright.org when appropriate and link back to the original article for online citation. When we publish articles by others, or quote from articles originally published elsewhere, that content is of course still under its original copyright. However, we only publish material that is available under a free license (except for short quotes covered by so-called "fair use" doctrine), so you'll still have all the aforementioned rights.

Log In