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Media & Entertainment
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									October 21, 2025
									Vivid Seats Faces Class Action Claiming 'Drip Pricing' TacticsTicket reseller Vivid Seats is facing a proposed class action alleging that it used "drip pricing" to illegally deceive consumers by advertising artificially low ticket prices before revealing mandatory fees at checkout. 
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									October 20, 2025
									Sandy Hook Families Oppose Reverting Equity To Alex JonesFamilies of Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting victims have pushed back against a bankruptcy trustee's attempt to relinquish equity interests in conspiracy theorist Alex Jones' Free Speech Systems LLC, telling a Texas bankruptcy court Friday that doing so would frustrate their collection of more than $1 billion in judgments. 
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									October 20, 2025
									Penny Stock Trader Wants New 'Scalping' Trial After SEC LossA man found liable on U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission claims he earned at least $2.5 million by buying, hyping, and then selling penny stocks in a "scalping" scheme has asked a New York federal judge for a new trial, saying the verdict form unfairly lumped his civil charges together. 
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									October 20, 2025
									Judge Blocks DOD Schools' Gender, Sex And Race Book BanA Virginia federal judge said Monday that the U.S. Department of Defense school system must restore hundreds of books and lessons on race and gender that were pulled under the Trump administration, finding the removals likely violated students' First Amendment rights. 
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									October 20, 2025
									TikTok Must Produce Docs On Anorexic InfluencerA California federal judge on Monday ordered TikTok to produce documents related to Eugenia Cooney, an influencer with anorexia and 2.8 million followers, in litigation over claims social media hurts youth mental health, and also instructed YouTube to yield documents on two of its witnesses. 
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									October 20, 2025
									5G Broadcast Called Potential 'Force Multiplier' For IndustryAdvocates of federal policies to support 5G Broadcast said the technology can help cellular networks by offloading technology that uses 5G to broadcast television, and other content is not "in competition with mobile networks" but a complement to them. 
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									October 20, 2025
									Zuckerberg Ordered To Testify At 1st Social Media Harm TrialA Los Angeles judge on Monday ordered Meta Platforms CEO Mark Zuckerberg to testify at an upcoming bellwether trial over major social media technology companies allegedly causing harm to young users' mental health, but put off deciding whether he must testify at future bellwether trials. 
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									October 20, 2025
									OpenAI Says It Owes Musk Nothing In For-Profit MoveOpenAI and Microsoft have asked a California federal court to avoid trial on claims that OpenAI duped Elon Musk into donating $45 million with false promises of remaining a nonprofit, arguing no such promises were made and that the billionaire's money came without strings or control. 
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									October 20, 2025
									Ill. Judge Grills Immigration Officials Over Use Of ForceTwo immigration officials defended their agencies' recent use of force during the Trump administration's ongoing enforcement crackdown in Chicago on Monday, taking the stand after an Illinois federal judge expressed concern that they were violating her earlier order temporarily barring them from using allegedly violent silencing tactics against the media and peaceful protesters. 
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									October 20, 2025
									Tax Startup CEO Swindled $13M From Investors, SEC SaysThe CEO of a defunct tax-compliance startup lied to investors as she raised $13 million for her company, overstating its revenues by almost 900 times and falsely claiming she was a certified public accountant, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission said Monday in California federal court. 
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									October 20, 2025
									'A Total Mess': Judge Slams Calif. Privacy Law's AmbiguityCalifornia's Invasion of Privacy Act "is a total mess" that routinely requires courts to make "borderline impossible" decisions about how to apply the law's language to new technologies, a San Francisco federal judge commented in an order Friday, pleading for state lawmakers to bring the law into the 21st century. 
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									October 20, 2025
									RELX Escapes Ex-Employee's Greenwashing, Retaliation SuitA Massachusetts federal judge has tossed a suit accusing RELX PLC of retaliating against a former employee and committing securities fraud by making business decisions that contradicted environmentally minded pledges made to investors, ruling that the employee missed the window to file a charge related to his termination. 
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									October 20, 2025
									TikTok Urges Nix Of Wash. Applicant's Pay Transparency SuitTikTok urged a Washington state court to toss an applicant's proposed class action claiming the video platform failed to include salary information in job listings, arguing the worker leading the case and dozens of others couldn't show he was harmed by the omission. 
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									October 20, 2025
									Judge Ends Songwriters' 'Funk Rave' Suit Against Pop StarA Florida federal judge on Monday permanently dismissed a suit from two songwriters who claimed that Brazilian pop star Anitta had copied their work in her song "Funk Rave," saying the songwriters had three chances to state their claims but had failed to adequately do so. 
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									October 20, 2025
									Reggaeton Copyright Clash Sparks Dueling Sanctions BidsAttorneys in a copyright lawsuit about the origins of Reggaeton are embroiled in competing motions for sanctions, with lawyers representing Jamaican musicians — who accuse the genre's leading stars of infringement — arguing that the court's ire should be directed at opposing counsel's recent sanctions request over allegedly fabricated quotes. 
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									October 20, 2025
									DC Says It's Ready To Pick Subgrantees For BEAD MoneyThe District of Columbia has received the green light from the federal government on how it plans to use its $100 million slice of the Broadband Equity, Access and Deployment program pie after a Trump administration revamp of the program made all the states and territories rework their proposals. 
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									October 20, 2025
									Meta Faces Massive Cut To $167M Win Over WhatsApp HackA California federal judge said Friday that WhatsApp parent Meta must either accept a cut of its $167.25 million punitive damages win against spyware-maker NSO Group to $4 million or go to trial again over the proper amount of damages, concluding that the amount awarded by a jury was "excessive." 
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									October 20, 2025
									Squires Gives Entropic Chance To Save Patent ClaimsThe head of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office says that the Patent Trial and Appeal Board has to take another look at certain claims the board found invalid in an Entropic Communications local area network patent challenged by Dish Network. 
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									October 20, 2025
									Radio Co. Challenges Nielsen's National-Local Data 'Tying'Cumulus Media sued Nielsen in New York federal court last week, as the local and national radio network owner seeks temporary and lasting blocks on a new ratings data policy Cumulus says entrenches Nielsen's monopolies by conditioning comprehensive nationwide data on subscriptions to the data for local geographies. 
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									October 20, 2025
									Trump Media Aims To DQ Gunster In Fight With InvestorsTrump Media & Technology Group, which owns President Donald Trump's Truth Social platform, is fighting with investors over whether Gunster should be allowed to represent them against the company's lawsuit over taking the business public in light of a Florida state judge's ties to the firm. 
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									October 20, 2025
									Mobile Cos. Ask FCC To Revisit Local Interconnection RuleWireless carriers asked the Federal Communications Commission to ditch a rule that allows local exchange carriers to request interconnection agreements with mobile providers, triggering procedures the carriers say can be overly burdensome. 
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									October 20, 2025
									LA Reid's Former Attys Face Sanctions Bid In Sex Assault SuitAttorneys for a producer accusing music executive Antonio "L.A." Reid of sexual assault asked a New York federal judge to sanction his former lawyers for allegedly causing unreasonable delays to the proceedings, most recently preventing a trial from proceeding as scheduled in September. 
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									October 20, 2025
									Catching Up With Delaware's Chancery CourtThis past week, the Delaware Chancery Court and Supreme Court handled a crowded corporate docket, weighing blockbuster merger appeals, shareholder settlement objections, fights over control involving an NBA franchise and a high-profile appeal from Elon Musk involving a massive payday from Tesla. 
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									October 20, 2025
									UK Steps Up Antitrust Probe Into Getty-Shutterstock MergerThe U.K. antitrust regulator escalated its investigation into Getty's proposed acquisition of Shutterstock, citing on Monday "realistic" risks that a combined $3.7 billion entity could harm competition. 
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									October 17, 2025
									Angels Couldn't Oversee Pitcher The Night He OD'd, Jury ToldA former Los Angeles Angels communications executive told a California state jury Friday that the team had no ability to control or oversee pitcher Tyler Skaggs and the staffer who supplied him with drugs on the night Skaggs overdosed because both employees were off duty at the time. 
Expert Analysis
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								Courts Redefining Software As Product Generates New Risks  A recent wave of litigation against social media platforms, chatbot developers and ride-hailing companies has some courts straying from the traditional view of software as a service to redefining software as a product, with significant implications for strict liability exposure, say attorneys at Reed Smith. 
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								Trump's 2nd Term Puts Merger Remedies Back On The Table.jpg)  In contrast with the Biden administration, the second Trump administration has signaled a renewed willingness to resolve merger enforcement concerns through remedies from the outset, particularly when the proposed fix is structural, clearly addresses the harm and does not require burdensome oversight, say attorneys at Cooley. 
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								Reel Justice: 'Oh, Hi!' Teaches Attys To Return To The Statute  The new dark comedy film “Oh, Hi!” — depicting a romantic vacation that turns into an inadvertent kidnapping — should remind criminal practitioners to always reread the statute to avoid assumptions, meet their ethical duties and finesse their trial strategy, says Veronica Finkelstein at Wilmington University School of Law. 
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								What To Know About NCAA Deal's Arbitration Provisions  Kathryn Hester at Jones Walker discusses the key dispute resolution provisions of the NCAA's recently approved class action settlement that allows for complex revenue sharing with college athletes, breaking down the arbitration stipulations and explaining how the Northern District of California will handle certain enforcement, administration, implementation and interpretation disputes. 
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								Opinion Premerger Settlements Don't Meet Standard For Bribery  Claims that Paramount’s decision to settle a lawsuit with President Donald Trump while it was undergoing a premerger regulatory review amounts to a quid pro quo misconstrue bribery law and ignore how modern legal departments operate, says Ediberto Román at the Florida International University College of Law. 
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								Series Playing Soccer Makes Me A Better Lawyer  Soccer has become a key contributor to how I approach my work, and the lessons I’ve learned on the pitch about leadership, adaptability, resilience and communication make me better at what I do every day in my legal career, says Whitney O’Byrne at MoFo. 
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								What To Do When Congress And DOJ Both Come Knocking  As recently seen in the news, clients may find themselves facing parallel U.S. Department of Justice and congressional investigations, requiring a comprehensive response that considers the different challenges posed by each, say attorneys at Friedman Kaplan. 
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								Series Law School's Missed Lessons: Learning From Failure  While law school often focuses on the importance of precision, correctness and perfection, mistakes are inevitable in real-world practice — but failure is not the opposite of progress, and real talent comes from the ability to recover, rethink and reshape, says Brooke Pauley at Tucker Ellis. 
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								Midyear Rewind: How Courts Are Reshaping VPPA Standards  The first half of 2025 saw a series of cases interpreting the Video Privacy Protection Act as applied to website tracking technologies, including three appellate rulings deepening circuit splits on what qualifies as personally identifiable information and who qualifies as a consumer under the statute, say attorneys at Perkins Coie. 
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								How The Healthline Privacy Settlement Redefines Ad Tech Use  The Healthline settlement is the first time California has drawn a clear line in the sand around how website tracking must function in practice, so if your site uses tracking technologies, especially around sensitive content like health or finance, regulators are inspecting your website's back end, not just its banner, say attorneys at Baker Donelson. 
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								Series Adapting To Private Practice: From ATF Director To BigLaw  As a two-time boomerang partner, returning to BigLaw after stints as a U.S. attorney and the director of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, people ask me how I know when to move on, but there’s no single answer — just clearly set your priorities, says Steven Dettelbach at BakerHostetler. 
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								Influencer Marketing Partnerships Face Rising Litigation Risk  In light of recent class actions claiming that brands and influencers are misleading consumers with deceptive marketing practices — largely premised on the Federal Trade Commission's endorsements guidance — proactive compliance measures are becoming more important, say attorneys at Olshan Frome. 
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								7 Ways Employers Can Avoid Labor Friction Over AI  As artificial intelligence use in the workplace emerges as a key labor relations topic in the U.S. and Europe, employers looking to reduce reputational risk and prevent costly disputes should consider proactive strategies to engage with unions, say attorneys at Baker McKenzie. 
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								Anthropic Ruling Creates Fair Use Framework For AI Training  A California federal court’s recent ruling that Anthropic’s use of copyrighted books to train its large language model qualified as fair use provides important guidance for both artificial intelligence developers and copyright holders because it distinguishes between transformative uses and unauthorized uses involving pirated or format-shifted works, say attorneys at Ropes & Gray. 
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								Series Playing Baseball Makes Me A Better Lawyer  Playing baseball in college, and now Wiffle ball in a local league, has taught me that teamwork, mental endurance and emotional intelligence are not only important to success in the sport, but also to success as a trial attorney, says Kevan Dorsey at Swift Currie.