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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. Soon after this initial delay, the coronavirus pandemic hit causing the trial to be postponed even further until 2022. But that’s probably not the goal here. This VPN question is new. More New Questions.

Music 140
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Google Answers Question About Plagiarized Content, Kind Of

Plagiarism Today

However, to be fair, it’s probably not a question that Mueller, or anyone else, can actually answer. But, for some SEO practitioners, it may be a cause for concern. Awais tried to follow up with Mueller, but received yet another curt response. If your site gets most of its traffic from SEO experts, I'd ask them.

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What We Can Learn From The Tesco Case

azrights

Unless people understand brand IP principles, they don’t realise what a weak name looks like, or that it could cause their business to be less successful or to even fail. My initial reaction was to question their ethics, but I then realised these lawyers are probably fighting those cases because they don’t understand the subtleties of names.

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After ACE Shuts Down Streamzz, Pirates Demand Refunds But Get Zebras Instead

TorrentFreak

The manner in which those deletions became apparent to the site’s uploaders and partners caused widespread confusion before spilling over into anger. While zebra videos might have pleased David Attenborough, Naomi Foxx fans probably prefer videos that at least stay on topic. Some uploaders got a little bit upset.

Reporting 118
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keyword ads, product names not confusing in ex-roommate spat

43(B)log

As a plaintiff, you probably don’t want the background narrative to start with “Plaintiff started selling BoostLash, which has the same purpose and functionality as Idol Lash, in 2017, while plaintiff’s principals were still employed at Idol Lash.” The key here is labeling, and the ads were properly labeled. Multi Time Machine v.

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

Technology & Marketing Law Blog

There are probably hundreds of popular websites (and apps) that primarily consist of information for which they don’t have copyright: websites focusing on users’ reviews, the weather, sporting results, statistics, governmental information, and more. Others were probably not. From this perspective, Genius’s complaint is rather standard.

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Is disgorgement the new normal in Lanham Act cases?

43(B)log

Plaintiff argued that it should have been able to use the testimony of its principal, but even during deposition, plaintiff’s counsel stated that he “was not [there] to talk about causation and damages” and objected to questions directed to him about damages, declaring that this topic would be exclusively “within the scope of expert opinion.”