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Tag Archives: Internet Law
Apple again at center of debate over Reporter’s Shield Protection for bloggers
Four years ago, I was part of a legal team that represented a group of bloggers that filed a friend of the court brief in O’Grady v. Superior Court, a legal proceeding that tested, among other things, whether bloggers were … Continue reading
U.S. Supreme Court declines to disturb federal court ruling favoring Fantasy Baseball
The Las Vegas Sun reports: Without comment, the justices declined to hear the case involving a segment of the $1.5 billion fantasy sports industry in the United States, in which participants manage imaginary teams based on the real-life performances of … Continue reading
This Week in Law Discusses Blogging and Podcasting Liability and Insurance Issues
This Week in Law is one of the more useful podcasts floating around the internet. April’s edition covers the liability and insurance issues that arise from blogging and podcasting. Suppose you are a lawyer and are sued for a blog … Continue reading
WikiLeaks is back
Yahoo! News reports: A federal judge who shuttered the renegade Web site Wikileaks.org reversed the decision Friday and allowed the site to re-open in the United States. In mid-February, U.S. District Court Judge Jeffrey White issued an injunction against Wikileaks … Continue reading
ACLU and EFF seek to intervene in “wikileaks.org” case
The ACLU has issued this press release: The American Civil Liberties Union, the ACLU of Northern California and the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) last night filed a motion to intervene in a lawsuit that led a federal district judge to … Continue reading
What “fingerprints” does your digital camera leave behind?
It was widely reported earlier this month that pages from Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows were photographed and published on the Internet in advance of the official release. The Electronic Frontier Foundation had an interesting take on this story: … Continue reading
Oklahoma Mother wins $70,000 fee award against RIAA
The Electronic Frontier Foundation’s “Deep Links” Blog reports: After more than three years of litigation, a single mom who was improperly swept up in the RIAA’s P2P litigation “driftnet” has finally been vindicated. An Oklahoma court has ordered the RIAA … Continue reading
California State Bar shuts down internet based criminal law firm
Legal Pad reports: Working for Robert Nudelman must have been a really bad experience — because some of the fellow lawyers in his Woodland Hills firm decided to take him down. State Bar officials announced Monday that they shut down … Continue reading
Do Second Life cyber-products have trademark protection?
TBO.com reports: Kevin Alderman thinks of himself as “the Hugh Hefner of the digital millennium.” He’s built a virtual adult entertainment empire, making and selling cyber sex toys in a three-dimensional online world known as “Second Life,” a hugely popular … Continue reading
Tagged Internet Law
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