By Andrew Goudsward | September 30, 2021
Alvaro Bedoya was appointed by President Joe Biden to the Federal Trade Commission earlier this month.
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.
By Scott Graham | May 4, 2020
The justices sounded confident that a 19th-century precedent won't apply to Booking.com's application. But after an hour of telephonic arguments, it seemed like anyone's guess which case law will apply.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | April 24, 2020
The judge pointed out that some FTC commissioners wanted to specifically sanction Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg for the company sharing private user data with outside parties.
By Ross Todd | March 9, 2020
LinkedIn's lawyers contend that a Ninth Circuit decision has "denied operators of public-facing websites a critical means of protecting user data from unauthorized third-party scrapers" under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act.
By Mike Scarcella | December 23, 2019
DOJ's Office of Legal Counsel "simply renders legal advice and has no power to determine the 'rights or obligations' of, or impose 'legal consequences' on, plaintiffs or anyone else," the Justice Department asserted in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit.
By Leigh Jones | Vanessa Blum | December 13, 2019
Time waits for no one. So in this episode we're exploring the changes in legal tech that developed this year and what we can expect in 2020.
By Scott Graham | November 15, 2019
The court's involvement is sure to reignite a 50-year-old debate over how much, if any, software should be subject to copyright, and the contours of the fair use defense in the digital age.
By Ross Todd | June 7, 2019
Locksmiths sued Google, Bing and Yahoo claiming they overstepped immunities under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act by assigning sham competitors actual physical addresses on their mapping applications. The D.C. Circuit found that the publishers' algorithms provided “neutral means” and an “automated editorial act” protected from liability.
By C. Ryan Barber | June 3, 2019
U.S. District Judge Paul Barbadoro rejected the Justice Department's abrupt abandonment last year of a legal opinion that had paved the way for the growth of online gambling.
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