By Tal S. Benschar | December 26, 2024
A discussion of 'Wu v. Uber Techs., Inc.,' where the New York Court of Appeals upheld the enforceability of “click-wrap” agreements and also held that issues of the scope of an arbitration agreement were delegated to the arbitrator. The author believes the decision “provides valuable guidance for businesses using websites and apps to ensure their terms of use are found enforceable.”
By Carla-Varriale-Barker | December 20, 2024
After a ten-year old girl died by self-asphyxiation trying to recreate a “Blackout Challenge” after it appeared on her “For You” page on the TikTok platform, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit has refined the contours of immunity under the Communications Decency Act.
By Gail J. Cohen | December 19, 2024
Saskatchewan court upholds earlier ruling that an emoji text sent by a farmer created a binding contract with grain buyer.
By Gail J. Cohen | December 19, 2024
Saskatchewan court upholds earlier ruling that an emoji text sent by a farmer created a binding contract with grain buyer.
By David Kalat | November 20, 2024
"The pace of technological change is slower than it feels, and many seemingly new categories of threats have been with us longer than we remember," writes David Kalat of Berkeley Research Group.
By Martin S. Krezalek | November 20, 2024
Two recent decisions holding that stand-alone websites are not places of public accommodation subject to the protections of Title III of the Americans with Disabilities Act have reopened a legal issue that many considered settled in the Southern District of New York. This potential trend provides hope for e-commerce businesses facing nuisance website accessibility lawsuits.
By Amanda Bronstad | October 25, 2024
U.S. District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers, who is overseeing multidistrict litigation in the Northern District of California, allowed negligence claims brought by school districts to move ahead against Meta Platforms, which owns Facebook and Instagram, and the parent companies of TikTok, Snapchat and YouTube.
By Ryan Smith | October 24, 2024
Legal IT professionals, and anyone whose job intersects with domains, need to know about the seven deadly vulnerabilities of domain names. If ignored, these pitfalls can cause severe damage and increase risks of bad actors interfering with the law firm's or company's domains.
By Avalon Zoppo | September 27, 2024
"An electronic signal is sent over [and] something is implanted on a device that is in California," Judge Daniel Collins said. "It takes data in California from a device in California and ships it out of California. The claim is that the collection and transmission of the data violates California statutes. How does that conduct not occur in California?"
By Ryan Hemmel and Luke Groth | September 17, 2024
As courts and discovery experts debate whether hyperlinked content should be treated the same as traditional attachments, legal practitioners are grappling with the technical and legal complexities of collecting, analyzing and reviewing these documents in real-world cases.
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