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Media & Entertainment
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April 10, 2025
Carlton Fields Beats DQ Bid In Fla. $500M Miss America Suit
A Florida federal judge denied a bid to disqualify Carlton Fields in a $500 million lawsuit over the ownership of the company that runs the Miss America pageant, saying such a remedy is extraordinary, and that the allegations are "scattered and speculative."
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April 10, 2025
Fox Can't Depose LinkedIn Founder In $2.7B Smartmatic Case
A New York state judge Thursday denied Fox News' request to depose LinkedIn founder and Democratic donor Reid Hoffman about his investment in Smartmatic, but allowed limited questioning of his adviser as part of the voting company's $2.7 billion defamation case stemming from false claims that it helped rig the 2020 election.
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April 10, 2025
Gaming Board's Stance 'Not Helpful' To BetMGM, Justice Says
Michigan Supreme Court justices on Thursday sounded somewhat skeptical that a state gambling law preempts an online bettor from suing BetMGM over its refusal to pay out $3 million in winnings, noting the state's gaming board said it doesn't have the authority or resources to take on civil claims unrelated to regulating internet gaming.
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April 10, 2025
Yahoo Privacy Feature Actually Invades Privacy, User Says
Yahoo secretly collects users' data for targeted advertising purposes, according to a proposed class action that alleges the company has been tracking user activity across websites and apps without their consent.
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April 10, 2025
Consumer Wants Steam Award Axed, Says Arbitrator Used AI
A consumer has asked a California federal court to vacate an arbitral award issued in favor of Valve Corp., the company behind the PC game marketplace Steam, accusing the case's arbitrator of improperly relying on artificial intelligence.
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April 10, 2025
Meta Trial Rooted In Decade-Old WhatsApp, Instagram Buys
Federal Trade Commission lawyers are set for a trial Monday that will assess the exact scope of competition that Meta Platform's offerings face providing personal social media services and the reach of monopolization allegations targeting its purchases of WhatsApp and Instagram.
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April 09, 2025
OpenAI Countersues Musk For 'Relentless' Harassment
OpenAI on Wednesday lodged a countersuit to Elon Musk's lawsuit accusing the ChatGPT maker of abandoning its nonprofit mission, urging a California federal court to stop the billionaire from continuing an alleged "harassment campaign" aimed at impeding its success.
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April 09, 2025
Media Matters' Delay Irks Judge In X 'Libel Tourism' Case
The California federal judge overseeing X Corp.'s lawsuit alleging Media Matters for America drove advertisers from its platform blasted the defendant on Wednesday for waiting over a year before seeking to enforce a forum selection clause in X's terms of service requiring disputes be litigated in San Francisco.
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April 09, 2025
FBI Agent Denounced By OneTaste Execs Likely To Testify
An FBI agent accused of misconduct by two former OneTaste executives will likely be allowed to testify at their upcoming trial on forced labor conspiracy charges, a Brooklyn federal judge said Wednesday.
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April 09, 2025
Dominion Wins Defamation Claim In Mixed Newsmax Ruling
A Delaware Superior Court judge on Wednesday agreed with Dominion Voting Systems that Newsmax made false and defamatory statements that the voting machine company rigged the 2020 election in favor of former President Joe Biden, but ruled a jury would have to determine whether those statements were made with malice.
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April 09, 2025
Tillis Says China IP Theft Should Be Priority In Trade Talks
U.S. Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., on Wednesday called China's theft of U.S. intellectual property "rampant" and said the issue should be near the top of the agenda if the Trump administration enters trade negotiations with the Chinese government in the coming weeks.
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April 09, 2025
Shaq's $11M Deal With NFT Investors Gets Judge's Final OK
Hall of Fame basketball player Shaquille O'Neal and the creators of the Astrals nonfungible token project have received a judge's final approval of an $11 million deal to resolve a proposed securities class action with buyers of the tokens that O'Neal allegedly promoted.
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April 09, 2025
Trump's FCC Nominee Faces Light Scrutiny At Senate Hearing
The woman that President Donald Trump has tapped to become the fifth member and final member of the Federal Communications Commission and cement the agency's Republican majority mostly skated through her nomination hearing Wednesday morning.
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April 09, 2025
Hollywood Filmmaker Owes $1.7B For Sex Assault, Jury Says
A New York state jury held Wednesday that Oscar-nominated screenwriter and director James Toback must pay $1.68 billion to 40 women he sexually assaulted over the course of four decades, according to an announcement from the victims' lawyers.
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April 09, 2025
Charter Confused Jurors In $1B Patent Feud, Gilstrap Told
A New York-based startup whose infringement case against Charter Communications was rejected by a federal jury in Marshall, Texas, last month now wants a new trial, telling U.S. District Judge Rodney Gilstrap that Charter deployed a "calculated plan to confuse the jury."
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April 09, 2025
Chancery Lets Paramount Investors Probe Skydance Deal
Delaware's top Chancery magistrate said Wednesday that Paramount Global stockholders probing the company's proposed $8 billion Skydance Media merger can have access to dozens of documents, but kept sealed further details in a transcript of a hearing closed to the public for at least five additional days.
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April 09, 2025
Live Nation Likely Won't Escape Concertgoers' Antitrust Suit
A California federal court indicated on Wednesday that he's not inclined to toss an antitrust case from consumers accusing Live Nation Entertainment Inc. and Ticketmaster LLC of monopolizing the concert ticketing market following their 2010 merger.
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April 09, 2025
ITC Ends Google Patent Case Against Sonos
The U.S. International Trade Commission has decided to end another investigation into whether Sonos speakers infringe patents issued to Google, finding those patents are invalid.
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April 09, 2025
Miami Dolphins Win Arbitration Bid In Crowd Brawl Suit
A Florida appellate panel on Wednesday sent to arbitration a lawsuit attempting to hold the Miami Dolphins liable for injuries a woman suffered after a fight broke out in the stands, ruling that although the plaintiff did not purchase the tickets, the arbitration clause was still valid.
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April 09, 2025
Disney Doesn't Deserve $5.7M Fee In 'Moana' Suit, Artist Says
Disney doesn't deserve $5.7 million in fees for beating an animator's copyright suit accusing it of ripping off his Polynesian adventure story to create "Moana," the plaintiff said Tuesday, arguing his case wasn't frivolous, considering the California federal judge found multiple times that sufficient similarity existed between the works.
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April 09, 2025
Publishers Clearing House Hits Ch. 11, Plans Digital Pivot
Publishers Clearing House, which started as a magazine subscription seller known for giant check giveaways, filed for bankruptcy Wednesday in New York with plans to focus on its digital advertising operations and sell its assets.
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April 09, 2025
Twitter Seeks To Strike Arbitrations In Severance Fight
Fifteen individual arbitration awards don't add anything to workers' claims seeking additional severance payments from X, the social media platform argued, urging a Delaware federal court to strike them from the docket.
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April 09, 2025
Dropbox Can See Case Funding Details In IP Row, Court Says
A patent owner has to hand over a copy of an agreement it has with a litigation funder as part of its infringement lawsuit against Dropbox over cloud-based file system patents, a federal magistrate judge in California has ruled.
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April 09, 2025
ChatGPT Output Can't Be Defamation, OpenAI Tells Ga. Court
OpenAI LLC this week told a Georgia state court that its product ChatGPT did not defame a talk radio show host because its warnings that ChatGPT output was not factual "were repeated, prominent, clear, and specific" and the output claiming he was a defendant in a suit was not presented as actual facts.
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April 09, 2025
GameStop Customer Wants 'Boring' Browsing To Stay Private
GameStop Inc.'s use of third-party software to record customers' online browsing violates Pennsylvania's wiretap law, even if the data collected isn't sensitive or traceable to a particular person, a proposed class representative told the Third Circuit during an oral argument Wednesday.
Expert Analysis
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Open Questions In Unsettled Geofence Warrant Landscape
The Fourth and Fifth Circuits recently reached radically divergent conclusions about the constitutionality of geofence warrants, creating an uncertain landscape in which defendants should assert and preserve the full range of conventional Fourth Amendment challenges, says Charles Fowler at McKool Smith.
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A Look At 5 States' New Data Privacy Laws
With new data privacy laws in Utah, Florida, Texas, Oregon and Montana recently in effect or coming into force this year, state-level enforcement of data privacy creates significant challenges and risks for how businesses interact with employees and consumers, and for companies that provide and use technologies in multiple jurisdictions, say attorneys at Jenner & Block.
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Mental Health First Aid: A Brief Primer For Attorneys
Amid a growing body of research finding that attorneys face higher rates of mental illness than the general population, firms should consider setting up mental health first aid training programs to help lawyers assess mental health challenges in their colleagues and intervene with compassion, say psychologists Shawn Healy and Tracey Meyers.
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Licensing And Protections For Voice Actors In The Age Of AI
While two recently enacted California laws and other recent state and federal legislation largely focus on protecting actors and musicians from the unauthorized use of their digital likenesses by generative artificial intelligence systems, the lesser-known community of professional voice actors also stands to benefit, says attorney Scott Mortman.
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2 High Court Securities Cases Could Clarify Pleading Rules
In granting certiorari in a pair of securities fraud cases against Facebook and Nvidia, respectively, the U.S. Supreme Court has signaled its intention to align interpretations of the heightened pleading standard under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act amid its uneven application among the circuit courts, say attorneys at V&E.
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Series
Collecting Art Makes Me A Better Lawyer
The therapeutic aspects of appreciating and collecting art improve my legal practice by enhancing my observation skills, empathy, creativity and cultural awareness, says attorney Michael McCready.
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Secret Service Failures Offer Lessons For Private Sector GCs
The Secret Service’s problematic response to two assassination attempts against former President Donald Trump this summer provides a crash course for general counsel on how not to handle crisis communications, says Keith Nahigian at Nahigian Strategies.
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Unpacking Nazi-Era Art Restitution Cases Under HEAR Act
Since the enactment of the Holocaust Expropriated Art Recovery Act in 2016, courts, commentators and litigants have struggled to delineate the extent to which time-based arguments remain relevant to resolving Nazi-era restitution claims, but a decision in Bennigson v. The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation provides valuable clarity on this issue, say attorneys at Patterson Belknap.
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Insurance Likely Kept Swift Out Of The Woods After Vienna
Financial losses Taylor Swift incurred from the cancellation of three concerts in Vienna in August will likely be covered by insurance policies, considering how the facts of the situation differ from those of the Foo Fighters' 2015 insurance dispute over event cancellation and terrorism coverage, say attorneys at Anderson Kill.
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Litigation Inspiration: Honoring Your Learned Profession
About 30,000 people who took the bar exam in July will learn they passed this fall, marking a fitting time for all attorneys to remember that they are members in a specialty club of learned professionals — and the more they can keep this in mind, the more benefits they will see, says Bennett Rawicki at Hilgers Graben.
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What Pennsylvania Can Expect From Anti-SLAPP Law
Pennsylvania's anti-SLAPP law is an important step in protecting speech on matters of public concern against retaliatory claims, and is buttressed by a robust remedy for violations as well as procedural requirements that lawyers must follow to take advantage of its application in practice, says Thomas Wilkinson at Cozen O'Connor.
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Opinion
AI May Limit Key Learning Opportunities For Young Attorneys
The thing that’s so powerful about artificial intelligence is also what’s most scary about it — its ability to detect patterns may curtail young attorneys’ chance to practice the lower-level work of managing cases, preventing them from ever honing the pattern recognition skills that undergird creative lawyering, says Sarah Murray at Trialcraft.
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Antitrust Issues To Watch Amid Google Ad Tech Trial
Regardless of the outcome of the U.S. Department of Justice's advertising technology antitrust suit against Google in Virginia federal court, matters ranging from market definition to unified pricing will likely have far-reaching implications for the digital advertising industry, competition and innovation, say attorneys at Holland & Knight.
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What To Know About Latest Calif. Auto-Renewal Law Update
While businesses have about nine months to prepare before the recently passed amendment to California's automatic renewal law takes effect, it’s not too early to begin working on compliance efforts, including sign-up flow reviews, record retention updates and marketing language revisions, say Gonzalo Mon and Beth Chun at Kelley Drye.
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Taking Stock Of FCC's New Spectrum Rule For Drones
While an order recently adopted by the Federal Communications Commission is intended to provide drones with rapid access to a limited amount of spectrum in the 5030-5091 megahertz band, the commission envisions an incremental approach to full usage that will play out over the course of the coming months and years, say attorneys at Wiley.