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French Court Rules Against Google in Books Case
A court in Paris, France, ruled Friday that Google Inc. is breaking French law with its policy of digitizing books, handing the U.S. Internet giant a $14,300-a-day fine until it rids its search engine of the literary extracts. A judge also ordered Google to pay $430,000 (300,000 euro) in damages and interest to French publisher La Martiniere, which brought the case on behalf of a group of French publishers. The attorney for Google, Alexandra Neri, said Google plans to appeal the decision.The Bankruptcy Files: Aluminum, Concrete, and Construction
Suits Point to Vaccinations as Culprit
Margaret Cronin FiskSpecial to American Lawyer MediaIn the months after Joseph Alexander Counter was born in 1996, he appeared to be progressing normally. He had met all his development milestones and by the age of 20 months had a growing vocabulary, said plaintiffs' attorney Michael Waters of Dallas' Waters Kraus.Trending Stories
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