By Anne Bagamery | June 22, 2020
The ruling from France's Constitutional Council leaves intact the body of French law that prohibits hate speech, a category that includes racial slurs, denial of the Holocaust, and incitement to violence.
By Ross Todd | June 19, 2020
The federal appellate court upheld a lower court finding the law forcing the publisher of the Internet Movie Database to honor the request anyone who used its paid professional networking site to remove all age information from its public-facing IMDb.com site violated the First Amendment.
By Ross Todd | June 18, 2020
"This is one of the first times a social media company is using coordinated, multi-jurisdictional litigation to enforce its Terms and protect its users," wrote Jessica Romero, Facebook's director of platform enforcement and litigation, in a company blog post announcing the actions.
By Ross Todd | June 17, 2020
The lawsuit filed on behalf of four African American women claims YouTube has improperly restricted and demonetized their videos based on race, and based on tags such as "Racial Profiling," "Police Shootings," "Police Brutality" and "Black Lives Matter."
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Shari Claire Lewis | June 15, 2020
Although BIPA is an Illinois statute, it is widely depended on as a predicate for class actions concerning assertions of privacy rights filed in New York and elsewhere, Shari Claire Lewis discusses in her column.
Delaware Business Court Insider | Expert Opinion
By Shari Claire Lewis | June 15, 2020
Although BIPA is an Illinois statute, it is widely depended on as a predicate for class actions concerning assertions of privacy rights filed in New York and elsewhere, Shari Claire Lewis discusses in her column.
By Eva von Schaper | June 11, 2020
VC Media, a consortium of roughly 200 German publishers, dropped the suit after a Berlin district court made it clear that a 2013 German law was not applicable.
By Rebecca Brazzano | June 10, 2020
A highlight of some risks employers may face from their employees using Zoom, sexting on a company-issued device or using the device to share intimate photos.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | June 8, 2020
Wading into an issue of first impression for the circuit in which it sits, a federal court in Pennsylvania has determined that the federal Communications Decency Act bars a Philadelphia news anchor from suing Facebook and Reddit for allowing her photograph to be used on a dating website and in erectile dysfunction advertisements without her consent.
By Catherine Wilson | June 8, 2020
The Securities and Exchange Commission watched a Miami company's websites offering COVID-19 investment opportunities for weeks before filing a civil complaint.
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