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Furthermore, the circuit court found flaws in the district court's opinion on whether YouTube qualified for the safe harbor protections of the DMCA, with some definitional matters concerning the term "syndication" under the statute remaining unsettled. [19] Thus, the case was remanded to the district court for further fact-finding on these ...
Lenz in turn sent YouTube a counter-notification, claiming fair use and requesting that the video be reposted. Six weeks later, YouTube reposted the video. In July 2007, Lenz sued Universal for misrepresentation under the DMCA, and sought a declaration from the court that her use of the copyrighted song was non-infringing. [3]
Barilaro v Shanks-Markovina & Google was a defamation court case before the Federal Court of Australia in 2021 and 2022. [2] [3] The case revolved around claims that two videos published on the friendlyjordies YouTube channel brought the then Deputy Premier of New South Wales, John Barilaro, into public disrepute, odium, ridicule, and contempt. [4]
[18] [19] Hildebrandt surrendered her license as a counselor pending resolution of the court case and a disciplinary investigation. [13] [20] After her arrest, YouTube banned Franke from the platform, also deleting two channels which were linked to her. [21] On December 18, 2023, Franke pleaded guilty to four counts of aggravated child abuse.
The Jessi Slaughter cyberbullying case was an American criminal case that revolved around an 11-year-old named Jessica Leonhardt (known online as "Jessi Slaughter" and "Kerligirl13"), whose profanity-laden videos went viral on Instagram and YouTube in 2010. The videos were made in response to accusations that a friend had raped Leonhardt, and ...
The original video has had more than 15 million views as of May 2023, [11] although mirrored copies of the video had received tens of millions of additional views shortly after her death; additionally, a YouTube video by React has a video of teens reacting to Todd's video which has garnered 44.7 million views as of May 2023, [12] and various ...
In 2017, his videos in the courtroom went viral, with more than 15 million views. [6] [7] In 2022, views of Caught in Providence neared 500 million, [8] and one video shared on Pulptastic had 43.6 million views on YouTube. [9] He became well known for his empathy and light humor in court. [10]
United States v. X-Citement Video, Inc., 513 U.S. 64 (1994), was a federal criminal prosecution filed in the United States District Court for the Central District of California in Los Angeles against X-Citement Video and its owner, Rubin Gottesman, on three charges of trafficking in child pornography, specifically videos featuring the underaged Traci Lords.