By Katheryn Tucker | January 9, 2019
Connecticut co-led the multistate investigation with the Illinois Attorney General's Office. Several state attorneys general applauded the settlement Tuesday.
By Victoria Hudgins | January 8, 2019
Blind fan to Parkwood Entertainment over Beyonce.com: If you liked it, then you should have put some accessibility on it.
Legaltech News | Analysis|News
By Frank Ready | December 12, 2018
Brad Smith, president of Microsoft, published a blog post calling for federal regulations on facial recognition technology. Existing statutes of privacy my have formed a basis for future legislation—but is that a good thing?
By Amanda Bronstad | December 6, 2018
Plaintiffs lawyers, however, consider the Cambridge Analytica scandal "the tip of the iceberg" in Facebook's "willful pursuit of generating revenue at the expense of its users.”
By Frank Ready | November 29, 2018
Consumers have the power to opt out of certain data uses but many may not be taking the time to engage. But there are signs such disengagement is changing in the U.S.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Shari Claire Lewis | October 15, 2018
In her Internet Issues/Social Media column, Shari Claire Lewis summarizes the anti-cybersquatting rules under the ACPA and explores two recent New York court decisions that help to illuminate the kinds of cyberpiracy claims that courts are willing to consider, and those that they are not.
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Kristen D. Perkins and Paige S. Newman | October 9, 2018
Article III of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) prohibits discrimination against disabled persons in the full and equal enjoyment of public accommodation. When a website is considered a place of public accommodation, the website must be accessible to people with disabilities.
By Max Mitchell | October 8, 2018
A Philadelphia tattoo artist who gained attention for losing more than 100 pounds wants Facebook to stop letting scammers use her image in ads that appear on the social media behemoth, but the company wants the suit to be moved to federal court in California.
By Ross Todd | September 20, 2018
U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh certified a class of California iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S owners who claim their phones lost value when the phone's video-calling feature stopped working with older versions of the phone's software. She, however, declined to certify a nationwide class.
By Ian Lopez | September 14, 2018
New Mexico AG Hector Balderas filed a lawsuit that alleges the tech companies are using algorithms to monitor children's web activity for marketing.
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