By Ross Todd | August 20, 2019
The Ninth Circuit on Tuesday held that The Ultimate Software Group Inc., a company behind a website which allowed Wesley Greer to connect with a drug dealer who sold him fentanyl-laced heroin, fell within the broad immunity afforded to interactive computer services under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act.
By Ross Todd | August 20, 2019
A federal appeals court decided Weston-based Ultimate Software was not liable for a drug addict's death after he connected to a dealer on a website created by the company.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Jonathan D. Bick | August 16, 2019
Internet inventions come in four major categories, each with a different way of best protecting it.
By Ross Todd | August 15, 2019
Peter Obstler, partner at bicoastal litigation boutique Browne George Ross, this week filed suit against the video hosting platform on behalf of a class of LGBTQ plaintiffs. Obstler and the firm also represent a nonprofit founded by political commentator Dennis Prager in a lawsuit claiming YouTube discriminates against political conservatives.
By Ross Todd | August 15, 2019
Peter Obstler, partner at bicoastal litigation boutique Browne George Ross, this week filed suit against the video hosting platform on behalf of a class of LGBTQ plaintiffs. Obstler and the firm also represent a nonprofit founded by political commentator Dennis Prager in a lawsuit claiming YouTube discriminates against political conservatives.
By Ross Todd | August 12, 2019
The California Supreme Court has revived a lawsuit bankruptcy lawyer Robert White filed against online payment company Square Inc., holding that "visiting a website with intent to use its services is, for purposes of standing, equivalent to presenting oneself for services at a brick-and-mortar store."
By Amanda Bronstad | August 9, 2019
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit upheld certification of a class of Illinois users who claim Facebook's facial recognition violates the state's biometrics law.
By Amanda Bronstad | August 8, 2019
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit upheld certification of a class of Illinois users who claim Facebook's facial recognition violates the state's biometrics law.
By Alaina Lancaster | August 1, 2019
“The poster is outside the territory of the U.S.; the church's main concerns have been addressed by the takedown,” said Judge James Donato at a hearing Thursday morning. “Isn’t that enough to call it a day?”
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Alyssa Engleberg and Michelle A. Levin | July 19, 2019
From service-of-process to discovery to evidence, the internet is changing the way we practice. As attorneys, we must remain vigilant regarding any developments in this arena, as today's Snapchat can quickly become yesterday's MySpace.
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