Judge Agrees to Pause Payments of Amazon’s €746 Million GDPR Fine Drew Wilson | December 30, 2021 Amazon has disputed the €746 million fine it was hit under the GDPR. A report says a judge agreed to pause payments.
US ISPs Lose Court Bid to Skirt Network Neutrality Laws in California Drew Wilson | February 26, 2021 A new court ruling says that California can enforce network neutrality laws. It is seen as a loss for major US ISPs who have been fighting this.
Parler Loses Court Bid to Force Amazon to Immediately Restore Platform Drew Wilson | January 23, 2021 Parler has been dealt another blow. The company asked a judge to force Amazon to restore the platform. That request was denied.
Apple vs. Epic Battle Continues With No Jury, Epic Admits Avoiding Fees Drew Wilson | October 3, 2020 The trial of Apple vs. Epic is commencing. There will be no jury and Epic has already admitted to evading Apple fees with its app.
Malibu Media Dealt With Setback in File-Sharing Case Drew Wilson | January 1, 2015 Malibu Media was dealt with a setback in a file-sharing lawsuit against an alleged file-sharer. It was an interesting case where the defendant said that the hard drive failed and it had to be replaced. Malibu Media claimed that this act alone constituted destruction of evidence. The court disagreed with the assessment and denied their …
Judges Given 5 Minutes to Rule On Each Third Strike in France Drew Wilson | July 2, 2009 It seemed like there would be some form of judicial oversight after the three strikes law in France would have to go through a judge, but now there’s a new twist in the infamous HADOPI law. It appears that, on average, judges will be given 5 minutes to decide whether or not to disconnect and …