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Record Labels Still Want to Know if Piracy Trial Jurors Read TorrentFreak

TorrentFreak

The “repeat infringer” issue remains a hot topic in US courts and several ISPs have been sued over the years. Following a jury trial, the company was ordered to pay a billion dollars in damages to a group of major record labels. The most prominent outcome thus far is the guilty verdict against Cox from late 2019. More New Questions.

Music 137
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Unpacking IDC v Lenovo (Part IV): top-down cross check; allegations regarding conduct; permission to appeal

The IPKat

After explanation on the history from [888], the Judge observed from [921] the overall picture: Lenovo were justified in seeking further information and/or assurances about the rates which other similarly situated implementers were paying. InterDigital should be compensated now for the delay in receipt of those sums ([29]).

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Inside Arbitration: Spotlight interview: Elaine Wong

Herbert Smith Freehills

Breaches of this nature can cause clients significant damage, through the cost of running the investigation and – in some scenarios – where they have had to report to a regulator and pay a fine. Elaine is a partner whose career epitomises what it means to work in international arbitration.

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Instead of Shining a Light on Dark Patterns, New FTC Report Leaves Many Questions Unanswered

LexBlog IP

For some time now, dark patterns have been quite the trending topic for both marketers and privacy professionals. And outside this country, the European Data Protection Board issued some interesting guidelines on the topic. A bipartisan group of lawmakers introduced legislation called the DETOUR Act that would ban dark patterns.

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Will California Eliminate Anonymous Web Browsing? (Comments on CA AB 2273, The Age-Appropriate Design Code Act)

Technology & Marketing Law Blog

Third, this bill reaches topics well beyond children’s privacy. Instead, the bill repeatedly implicates general consumer protection concerns and, most troublingly, content moderation topics. Instead, the bill repeatedly implicates general consumer protection concerns and, most troublingly, content moderation topics.

Privacy 137
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[Guest post] Book review: ‘Developments and Directions in Intellectual Property Law: 20 Years of the IPKat’

The IPKat

I never wrote for the IPKat, so count me out of that august group, although my pay level is the same. I never wrote for the IPKat, so count me out of that august group, although my pay level is the same. The organization is Part 1. Developments in IP Law, Policy, and Practice: KatFriends’ Views’ Part 2.

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India’s High Court of Delhi issues guidance on SEP licensing that seeks to harmonize decisions in other countries (Intex v. Ericsson)

LexBlog IP

The Court here ruled that Ericsson had made a prima facie case it will prevail, and further ordered that Intex must pay 100% of the royalty while the case was pending (not just 50%). This is an important decision to review in understanding licensing and litigation of international SEP portfolios. are finally de4termined.