By Ross Todd | June 17, 2019
The Amazon-owned online video game streaming service is attempting to hold unidentified online trolls liable for a campaign to flood the site with pornography and violent images—including bodycam footage from the shooter at the Christchurch, New Zealand, mosques where 51 people were killed in March.
By Amanda Bronstad | June 17, 2019
Partner Mark Molumphy was admonished by the judge, but lead counsel Joseph Cotchett will have to ask for court permission before arguing for the plaintiffs in the case going forward.
By Scott Graham | June 14, 2019
Continental made the latest move Wednesday, asking U.S. Magistrate Judge Nathaneal Cousins of San Jose to block Nokia from pursuing patent infringement actions against Daimler in three different German courts.
By Charles Toutant | June 14, 2019
Increased use of algorithms, or machine learning, to evaluate job seekers is expected to result in more unintended discrimination in hiring.
By Simon Taylor | June 13, 2019
The ruling means that Google and similar service providers will be able to avoid the vast range of data protection and security obligations that apply to telecommunications companies in Germany.
By Ross Todd | June 13, 2019
A Ninth Circuit judge wrote that messages received by a non-Facebook user were "automated, unsolicited, and unwanted."
By Alaina Lancaster | June 12, 2019
Gary Reback, representing Netscape at the time, had a front-row seat when the government built its antitrust case against Microsoft two decades ago.
By Scott Graham | June 12, 2019
Cisco, McAfee, Palo Alto Networks, Rapid7 and Red Hat join the effort to deter nonpracticing entity patent litigation.
By Alaina Lancaster | June 12, 2019
Uber has billed its services as safe and trustworthy without dedicating the proper resources to back up those claims, according to the complaint written by the assault victim's San Francisco-based attorneys at Walkup, Melodia, Kelly & Schoenberger.
By Ross Todd | June 12, 2019
In a case involving Facebook's "tag suggestions" feature, the Ninth Circuit heard arguments Wednesday over whether the collection of an individual's biometric data in violation of the Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act is sufficient to establish standing in federal court and whether a class action against the social media giant should move forward given the potential billions in damages.
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