After his death in 1990, legal battles erupted between the Osho International Foundation (Switzerland) and the Osho Friends Foundation (India). While the Indian foundation maintains that OSHO’s works should be in the public domain (especially in India), the Western foundation holds international copyrights to the original recordings and transcripts.

Furthermore, the 70-year copyright term on OSHO’s early works (1960s-1970s) will begin expiring in the 2030s. By 2040, the majority of his physical publications will enter the public domain globally.

OSHO built his career mocking priests, popes, and politicians. He told you to think for yourself. So, when a user sees a pop-up asking for $19.99 to unlock the "Book of Wisdom," their brain screams: "He would hate this."