By Alaina Lancaster | August 1, 2019
“The poster is outside the territory of the U.S.; the church's main concerns have been addressed by the takedown,” said Judge James Donato at a hearing Thursday morning. “Isn’t that enough to call it a day?”
By Alaina Lancaster | August 1, 2019
The Electronic Frontier Foundation, which intervened on the anonymous user's behalf, is asking U.S. District Judge James Donato to reconsider a magistrate judge's subpoena decision that would give Watch Tower's lawyers access to a Reddit poster's identity.
By Marcia Coyle | June 13, 2019
An Eleventh Circuit decision last year, applying the government edicts doctrine, invalidated the state of Georgia's copyright in the Official Code of Georgia Annotated. 'Next-generation' legal research platforms among those seeking SCOTUS clarity.
By Ross Todd | June 7, 2019
UAB “PLANNER5D,” the private Lithuanian company behind the Planner 5D website, sued Facebook and Princeton over claims they took valuable data from more than 2,500 three-dimensional objects and 45,000 scenes vital to the development of computer vision technology.
By Richard Binder | May 24, 2019
Pepe creator Matt Furie sued Infowars in 2018 for copyright infringement over a poster the company sold on its website.
By Scott Graham | May 3, 2019
The Ninth Circuit ruled that both suits by Media Rights Technologies were based on the same nucleus of facts about alleged software misappropriation. That precludes all copyright claims that accrued before the filing of a 2013 patent suit.
By Scott Graham | April 29, 2019
The Silicon Valley titans have been disputing for nine years whether Google violated Oracle's copyright by copying Java application programming interfaces into its Android operating system.
Corporate Counsel | Expert Opinion
By Thomas McNulty | April 23, 2019
The directive will require major changes for online content sharing services. Under existing law, services are immune from liability for copyright infringement resulting from user-posted content so long as they act promptly to remove material when an objection is raised.
By Victoria Hudgins | March 15, 2019
What rights do photographers and the photographed have when their photo is used unknowingly to train facial recognition technology? It depends on the license, and context.
By Roy Strom | November 28, 2018
A federal judge in Washington brought the hammer down on uber-litigious Fox Rothschild client Strike 3 Holdings, calling it a copyright troll that 'treats this court not as a citadel of justice, but as an ATM.'
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