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Facebook recently paid 1.4 million Illinois residents $397 in 2022 as part of a class action lawsuit for facial recognition breaches through its “Tag Suggestions” feature, per CNBC.
If a company doesn’t deliver on its promises to you, it doesn’t matter how unfair it is nor how angry you are — you aren’t likely to file a lawsuit for $15, or $50 or even $500, Even for ...
Google argued that since Viacom and its lawyers were "unable to recognize that dozens of the clips alleged as infringements in this case were uploaded to YouTube" with Viacom's express authorization, "it was unreasonable to expect Google's employees to know which videos were uploaded without permission." [16] [17]
A payout from a tech giant may be in your future, if you are game enough to file a claim by next month. Oracle America agreed to settle a class-action lawsuit in May for $115 million over ...
In re: High-Tech Employee Antitrust Litigation (U.S. District Court, Northern District of California 11-cv-2509 [10]) is a class-action lawsuit on behalf of over 64,000 employees of Adobe, Apple Inc., Google, Intel, Intuit, Pixar and Lucasfilm (the last two are subsidiaries of Disney) against their employer alleging that their wages were ...
The recipients were asked to contact Odex within one week and pay settlement fees from S$3,000 to S$5,000 or face legal action. The recipients also had to sign a non-disclosure agreement, promise to destroy all copies of the downloaded anime, and stop downloading the copyrighted material. [6] [11] [12] Some alleged offenders decide on litigation.
You go to YouTube, you're looking for information. And so you should get it from those types of sources, whether that's CNN or The New York Times or Fox News. That's going to be first and foremost.
She issued an injunction which immediately prohibited Napster: "from engaging in, or facilitating others in copying, downloading, uploading, transmitting, or distributing plaintiffs' copyrighted musical compositions and sound recordings, protected by either federal or state law, without express permission of the rights owner." [4]