0 results for ''Durie Tangri''
Barring a successful appeal, a ruling Wednesday spells the end to the Authors Guild's claims related to HathiTrust--a massive digitization project involving Google Inc. and a group of university libraries. It's not quite as clear what it means for the authors' separate class action against Google, but it definitely isn't good.
Cite as: The Authors Guild et al. v. Google Inc., 05 Civ. 8136 (DC), NYLJ 1202487550856, at *1 (SDNY, Decided March 22, 2011)Judge Denny Chinp class="decid
Protect Innovators, Not Lawyers
Viacom and YouTube squared off in a New York appeals court on Oct. 18 as Viacom tries to overturn last year's judgment in YouTube's favor. The outcome may well decide what kind of Internet economy we will have — a top-down contest between a few big companies, or a bottom-up ecology where small startups continue to invent the future as fast as they can.The settlement announced Tuesday between AP and the street artist who used an AP photo to create an iconic image of President Obama is a near-total win for the news organization, which will share rights to Fairey's image going forward. Now the AP is going after the company that sold clothing bearing the image Fairey created.
Cite as: The Authors Guild et al. v. Google Inc., 05 Civ. 8136 (DC), NYLJ 1202487550856, at *1 (SDNY, Decided March 22, 2011)Judge Denny Chinp class="decid
We usually think of Christopher Seeger of Seeger Weiss as an aggressive mass torts plaintiffs lawyer, but apparently he couldn't resist a juicy trade secrets case against Google--even though the case has a bit of a checkered history.
Thanks to a group of Hollywood studios and their lawyers at Munger, Tolles & Olson, Zediva's days of streaming individually-rented DVDs to online customers may be over.
The dispute over the image of Barack Obama in the iconic "Hope" poster is getting nastier. The Associated Press claims the artist routinely appropriates the work of others; the artist says the AP is selling unlicensed images of other artists' work.
Stanford prof Mark Lemley is a defendant in the suit brought by a lawyer who claims he was wrongfully named in a suit by two Yale law students who, in turn, claim they were defamed on a popular message board. Got that?
Since the Supreme Court denied cert in March in federal antitrust litigation over a $400 million Bayer settlement that kept Barr Labs from selling a Cipro knock-off, plaintiffs lawyers have pinned their hopes on state court litigation over the deal. Now those hopes have been considerably dimmed.
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