article thumbnail

Announcing the 2022 Edition of My Internet Law Casebook

Technology & Marketing Law Blog

I’m pleased to announce the 2022 edition (13th edition) of my Internet Law casebook, Internet Law: Cases & Materials. As usual, I made many hundreds of updates and edits throughout the book. Some things I didn’t include in this edition, despite their seeming importance: hiQ v. a hardcover version for $28.

Editing 141
article thumbnail

Announcing the 2021 Edition of My Internet Law Casebook

Technology & Marketing Law Blog

I’m pleased to announce the 2021 edition of my Internet Law casebook, Internet Law: Cases & Materials. If I counted editions, this would be the 12th edition. Over the years, I’ve posted a number of book excerpts that are accessible for free, including: The entire chapter on online contracts. Primer on CCPA/CPRA.

Editing 145
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

YouTubers Must Pay $3.5m Damages For Uploading 10-Minute Movie Edits

TorrentFreak

Popular mainstream movies lasting a couple of hours are edited down to around 10 minutes and then uploaded to YouTube. Setting aside two hours to watch a movie can be a luxury these days, especially when the busiest among us claim they can guzzle 200 TikTok videos in much less than that. million. .

Editing 137
article thumbnail

How the New 2022 SAG-AFTRA Commercials Contract Affects Performers and Advertisers

LexBlog IP

The new 2022 SAG-AFTRA Commercials Contract (the 2022 Contract), which is retroactively effective to April 1, 2022, appears to offer certain benefits to advertiser and agency signatories of the Commercials Contract, particularly JPC authorizers, as well as Union member performers.

article thumbnail

Artificial Intelligence in the Modern Workplace: Safeguarding Source Code Generated with AI Assistance

JD Supra Law

As outlined in the last edition of this series, this general rule typically applies to independent contractors so long as the term is included in a written contract. This edition. Generally, an employer owns all rights in software code created by its employee in the scope of their employment.

Editing 126
article thumbnail

Elon Musk’s Gifts to Web Scrapers (Guest Blog Post)

Technology & Marketing Law Blog

sued Bright Data for trespass to chattels, breach of contract, tortious interference with a contract, violation of California Business and Professions Code Section 17200, and misappropriation. Editions Ltd. Here, the court agreed, and dismissed Twitter’s breach-of-contract claims on that basis. In November 2023, X corp.

article thumbnail

Webinar Recap! What Employers Need to Know Regarding Non-Compete Changes in 2023

Trading Secrets

This essential webinar provides exclusive insights from our 2023-2024 edition of the 50-State Desktop Reference. The first specifies that any contract that is void under California law is unenforceable regardless of where and when the employee signed the contract. California recently enacted two new non-compete laws.