By Colleen Murphy | August 4, 2023
"Although the current record establishes that eBay has a § 512(c) policy (on paper) and that eBay did remove content that infringed Ms. Okolita's copyright(s), I am not persuaded that a review of Ms. Okolita's FAC and its attachments makes it obvious that eBay is sheltered by the safe harbor," stated U.S. District Court Judge Lance E. Walker.
By Avalon Zoppo | August 3, 2023
A divided federal court finds the Communications Decency Act does not protect the website from potential liability.
By Erick Franklund | July 26, 2023
The Internet is still standing, but the Supreme Court's reasoning in theGonzalez opinion remains perplexing. Gonzalez and Taamneh are a story about how the Supreme Court "saved" the Internet from itself, and the Court needed both cases to do so.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Aleeza Furman | July 20, 2023
"As the first case that has made a decision about online forced arbitration agreements, it hopefully sends a message … that you can't take away the right to a jury trial guaranteed by the Pennsylvania constitution by simply hiding some language in pages and pages of fine print," said Messa & Associates' Joseph Messa.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Jonathan Bick | July 11, 2023
The primary legal difficulty associated with AI training is the acquisition and use of training data without the consent of the owner of said training data.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Jonathan Bick | June 20, 2023
Most agree that internet deepfake content is widespread and may be used to manipulate the public, attack personal rights, infringe intellectual property and cause personal data difficulties. However, little agreement exists as to who is legally liable for internet AI deepfake content.
By Riley Brennan | June 16, 2023
This case was first surfaced by Law.com Radar.
By Jason Grant | May 25, 2023
Two lawsuits have been lodged in Montana federal court since last week when Montana's governor signed into law what's considered to be the first attempt by a state to fully ban the popular short-video platform: One by Tik Tok itself and another by residents who create Tik Tok videos and often use the app to generate business.
By Mike Neighbors, Editor, Law.com Radar | May 9, 2023
Plaintiffs seeking to hold Big Tech accountable for online sex trafficking were recently defeated in the Ninth Circuit—but now they're taking the fight to Texas.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Jonathan Bick | May 5, 2023
Internet employment terminations are now lawful so long as they are properly executed.
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