By Charles Toutant | August 3, 2020
"We may not be able to stop something like this from happening again, but we can make it hard for those who target us to track us down," Judge Salas said.
By Mike Scarcella | July 21, 2020
"Each day that the government is allowed to escalate its takeover undermines that trust—trust that may never fully be regained," Deepak Gupta argued for the Open Technology Fund in the D.C. Circuit.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Stephen M. Kramarsky | July 20, 2020
In this technology column on Intellectual Property, Stephen M. Kramarsky discusses how the Second Circuit has clarified discovery limits in international arbitration.
By David Horrigan, Relativity | July 15, 2020
A central consideration in a recent Arizona appellate decision, Stuebe v. Arizona, is whether a computer-generated video notification should be considered hearsay.
By Anne Bagamery | June 22, 2020
The ruling from France's Constitutional Council leaves intact the body of French law that prohibits hate speech, a category that includes racial slurs, denial of the Holocaust, and incitement to violence.
By Ross Todd | June 18, 2020
"This is one of the first times a social media company is using coordinated, multi-jurisdictional litigation to enforce its Terms and protect its users," wrote Jessica Romero, Facebook's director of platform enforcement and litigation, in a company blog post announcing the actions.
By Ross Todd | June 17, 2020
The lawsuit filed on behalf of four African American women claims YouTube has improperly restricted and demonetized their videos based on race, and based on tags such as "Racial Profiling," "Police Shootings," "Police Brutality" and "Black Lives Matter."
By Eva von Schaper | June 11, 2020
VC Media, a consortium of roughly 200 German publishers, dropped the suit after a Berlin district court made it clear that a 2013 German law was not applicable.
By Catherine Wilson | June 8, 2020
The Securities and Exchange Commission watched a Miami company's websites offering COVID-19 investment opportunities for weeks before filing a civil complaint.
By Rocky Tsai, Ropes & Gray | May 19, 2020
Even before the pandemic, over 10,000 ADA lawsuits were filed in the federal courts alone. That inventory of litigation will only increase as businesses throughout the United States race to build out new online ordering, communication tools, mobile apps, and other digital service offerings.
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