By John Council | July 31, 2017
Kamyar Jahanrakhshan, also known as Andy Rakhshan, of Seattle, is accused of launching a cyberattack against a website that refused to remove a negative link to a court case involving him.
By newyorklawjournal | New York Law Journal | July 31, 2017
Suit Over Domain Name's Transfer Dismissed; No Private Cause of Action in FTCA or FARA
By Ross Todd | July 28, 2017
Munger, Tolles & Olson partner Donald Verrilli and Harvard Law School professor Laurence Tribe squared off in a bet-the-company battle pitting the professional networking site against data analytics startup hiQ Labs.
By Ross Todd | July 27, 2017
A judge in San Francisco has asked property owners to show why their nuisance and trespass claims against Niantic Inc. belong in federal court.
By Ben Hancock | July 26, 2017
Google argues in a complaint that an injunction issued in late June by Canada's high court violates its rights under the First Amendment.
By Ben Hancock | July 25, 2017
The tech giant argues that a Canadian Supreme Court ruling affecting U.S. search results violates its rights under the First Amendment and Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act.
By Greg Land | July 25, 2017
Exclusive Legal Marketing and two of its client firms are accused of using online bait-and-switch advertising to lure potential clients, but the founders say there's nothing illegal or improper about their methods.
By Greg Land | July 24, 2017
Two brothers in charge of a Texas-based legal advertising and referral company say they're in a "David and Goliath" battle against law firms suing them in three states over claims including deceptive trade practices and trademark infringement for online ad campaigns targeting Google users searching for the plaintiff's firms.
By Ross Todd | July 24, 2017
The decision is a victory for ZL Technologies, a Milpitas,California-based company that provides electronic content archiving software used in eDiscovery, compliance and analytics.
By By Nicholas M. De Feis and Philip C. Patterson | July 24, 2017
In their International Criminal Law and Enforcement column, Nicholas De Feis and Philip Patterson use the Eastern District case 'U.S. Gasperini' to illustrate the global reach of U.S. computer intrusion laws. They write that the opinion demonstrates how, as technological innovation increasingly blurs any remaining lines between a computer and other electronic devices, U.S. computer anti-intrusion laws may eventually come to cover conduct involving virtually every electronic device in the world.
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