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Ryanair v. Booking CFAA Trial Ends with Strangest Possible Outcome (Guest Blog Post)

Eric Goldman

Ryanair recently “prevailed” in its CFAA claim in its litigation against Booking.com. This has been a hard case to follow online, because many of the key rulings have been filed under seal. Goliath in web-scraping litigation than the long-standing legal dispute between Ryanair v. And there is no better example of Goliath v.

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Understanding the CCB’s First Two Final Determinations (Guest Blog Post–Part 3 of 3)

Eric Goldman

By guest blogger Elizabeth Townsend Gard , John E. Eight months after filing, the first two Copyright Claims Board (CCB) Final Determinations have been handed down. Step Two: The CCB does a compliance review of the filed claim to determine if the claim qualifies for the CCB. The respondent files a response to the claim.

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Supreme Court Fixes One Problem with the Copyright Statute of Limitations, But Punts Another — Warner Chappell Music v. Nealy (Guest Blog Post)

Eric Goldman

Combining these two holdings, it concluded: “we must apply the discovery rule to determine when a copyright infringement claim accrues, but a three-year lookback period from the time a suit is filed to determine the extent of the relief available.” By Guest Blogger Tyler Ochoa Last week, the U.S. Two years later, in Starz Entertainment v.

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Contractual Control over Information Goods after ML Genius v. Google (Guest Blog Post)

Eric Goldman

Guy Rub , The Ohio State University Michael E. Solicitor General to file a brief on Genius’s petition, and in May 2023, she did so. On June 26, just before the end of its term, the Supreme Court denied Genius’s cert petition, putting this litigation to rest. by guest blogger Prof.

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OpenText named a Leader and Outperformer in the GigaOm Radar for E-Discovery

OpenText

Faster, smarter decisions in litigation and investigations. OpenText™ is proud to be named a Leader and Outperformer in the latest GigaOm Radar Report for E-Discovery. Legal teams are under increasing pressure to deliver timely and defensible responses to litigation and regulatory demands. The result?

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What Happened to Gonzalez v. Google After the SCOTUS Decision?

Eric Goldman

In the mid-2010s, plaintiffs filed about 20 lawsuits filed around the country seeking to hold social media services liable for allegedly facilitating terrorist attacks. This blog post recaps what’s happened to the Gonzalez case since then. Two of those cases, Gonzalez v. Google and Taamneh v. Case Citation : Gonzalez v.

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Should Copyright Preemption Moot Anti-Scraping TOS Terms? (Guest Blog Post)

Eric Goldman

If nothing else, litigants know where they stand in these jurisdictions. W]e take a restrictive view of what extra elements transform an otherwise equivalent claim into one that is qualitatively different from a copyright infringement claim.” Solicitor General to file a brief on Genius’s petition. Briarpatch, 373 F.3d

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