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Was Mark Twain the Original “Bad Art Friend”?

Copyright Lately

The dispute between writers and former friends Sonya Larson and Dawn Dorland over a short story involving a kidney donation has captured the attention of social media during the past week. Well, that would have been joyful news to me about the middle of December, when I gladly took the first offer that came, and made a contract.

Art 93
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Section 230 Survives Yet Another Constitutional Challenge–Huber v. Biden

Technology & Marketing Law Blog

2003); Winter v. Two More Courts Tell Litigants That Social Media Services Aren’t State Actors. Anti-Zionist Loses Lawsuit Over Social Media Account Suspensions–Martillo v. Are Social Media Services “State Actors” or “Common Carriers”? AOL, 318 F.3d 3d 465, 472 (3d Cir. Facebook, Inc.

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Announcing the 2023 Edition of My Internet Law Casebook

Technology & Marketing Law Blog

Meanwhile, product design is the real Section 230 battlefront today, and the Lemmon case is the flagship case for that line of litigation. Verio ruling (both the contracts and TTC portions) and the Hamidi ruling. The chapter makes a nice module to add discussion about online contracts to another course. Contracts Meyer v.

Editing 52
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Not Invincible: A Cautionary Tale for Creators

Copyright Lately

Contributors to creative works are of course free to reach whatever type of agreement they’d like regarding revenue splits—although it’s definitely preferable to put things in writing, especially when it comes to proving up the contract in a lawsuit. Invincible #1. A copy of the Crabtree’s new lawsuit follows. View Fullscreen.

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2022 Internet Law Year-in-Review

Technology & Marketing Law Blog

And if Musk ever flips any of Twitter’s long-standing legal or policy positions in litigation or lobbying, he could truly melt down the industry. The opinion upheld every aspect of Texas’ social media censorship law. Basically, Musk’s mistakes pour gasoline on the regulatory fires for everyone.

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