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The Recorder

Comic Con Litigants Can't Be Silenced on Social Media Ahead of Trial

Sorry comic fans. The Ninth Circuit thinks an upcoming trademark trial between two of your biggest annual conventions is "banal" and a "run of the mill" civil proceeding.
12 minute read

The Legal Intelligencer

New Public Access Policy Coming Soon: Prepare Now to Be Competent

One dictionary defines “competence” as “the ability to do something successfully or efficiently.”
18 minute read

The Recorder

YouTube Accused of Discriminating Against Conservative Videos

The lawsuit was filed Monday on behalf or Prager University, a nonprofit digital media outfit co-founded by conservative talk show host Dennis Prager.
7 minute read

Connecticut Law Tribune

Welcome To the New Connecticut Law Tribune!

Welcome to the Connecticut Law Tribune, part of the new law.com network!We're excited to share improvements we've made to the way we present news…
3 minute read

Daily Business Review

Florida Supreme Court May Weigh Judges' Facebook Friendships

The case started as a dispute over unpaid legal fees.
3 minute read

New Jersey Law Journal

Did Talking to Media Flout Confidentiality Pact? High Court Won't Weigh In

The New Jersey Supreme Court has declined to decide whether remarks made to a reporter by a woman who claimed she was the subject of a bogus parking ticket, along with added comments by her lawyer, violated the confidentiality clause in her settlement with a municipality.
6 minute read

National Law Journal

Judge Mulls Limits to Search Warrants for Anti-Trump Protesters' Facebooks

The ACLU asked the court to block or, at least, narrow a government search warrant for three Facebook accounts in connection with an investigation into criminal rioting on Inauguration Day.
13 minute read

The Recorder

EU Push to Filter 'Illegal' Content Raises Alarms In Silicon Valley

SAN FRANCISCO—The European Commission is ramping up pressure on tech companies to more aggressively use automated filtering to scrub “illegal”…
5 minute read

The Legal Intelligencer

Prof Fired Over Hitler Parody Meme Can Proceed With Breach of Contract Suit

A former professor who was fired after creating an online parody video depicting faculty members as Nazis can proceed with his breach of contract claims against the university where he worked, a federal court in Pennsylvania has ruled.
3 minute read

Daily Report Online

Gag Order in Beauty Queen Murder Case Goes to Ga. Supreme Court

A long-running fight over a media gag order in a South Georgia murder trial will go before the Georgia Supreme Court when it meets on Oct. 24 at the University of Georgia School of Law.
4 minute read

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