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The Entertainment and Media Law content community collects and organizes the best information from around the web that will help you learn and stay current. If you would like to be included and or participate, please contact: Tony Karrer
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8 Articles match "Default","Facebook"
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The Latest from Entertainment and Media Law
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Google Buzz Causes Uproar Over Privacy Concerns
This new feature looks like Google’s attempt to compete with the likes of Facebook and Twitter. The default setting made that list public, so it basically allowed anyone who viewed a user’s profile to see who the user emails and chats with the most. Many people balked at having that information made public. Image Source.
JetLawBlog
- Thursday, February 18, 2010
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The Best from Entertainment and Media Law
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You Got Served. By Facebook?
Facebook seems to be creeping into every aspect of our lives. Now, according to an Australian court, a social networking site may be used to serve a default judgment on a non-appearing defendant. Unsuspecting Facebook User].. Thanks, The Facebook Team. The case involved two friends who defaulted on a six-figure loan.
JetLawBlog
- Sunday, February 1, 2009
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Facebook Takes a Page from Ticketmaster's Playbook: Block Unauthorized Web Site Access with Carefully Drafted Terms of Use
million default judgment against RMG. In December 2008, Facebook filed a similarly framed complaint against Power Ventures, the operator of Power.com, an online service that allows social networking users to access all of their accounts through one interface. In Facebook, Inc. Facebook Complaint ¶ 24, 41. Slip op.
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Small Changes at Facebook Have Large Repercussions for Your Privacy
Since its inception, Facebook has undergone a revolution in terms of how users can find out information about each other. And when Facebook updates its site so frequently that users cannot keep up with the changes, privacy options that once seemed almost overly protective can be rendered useless. Rachel Friedman. Image Source.
JetLawBlog
- Thursday, July 2, 2009
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E.U. Signs Anti-Cyberbullying Pact with Social Networking Sites
Last Tuesday, the European Union signed a pact with seventeen social networking sites in Europe, including Facebook and MySpace. The pact ensures that private profiles of underage users are not searchable on website search engines, and will make the default setting for underage users private. 8211;Brooke Russ.
JetLawBlog
- Thursday, February 12, 2009
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Google Buzz Causes Uproar Over Privacy Concerns
This new feature looks like Google’s attempt to compete with the likes of Facebook and Twitter. The default setting made that list public, so it basically allowed anyone who viewed a user’s profile to see who the user emails and chats with the most. Many people balked at having that information made public. Image Source.
JetLawBlog
- Thursday, February 18, 2010
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Court: 'no recourse' for victims of defamatory postings under Section 230
3) Defendants failed to defend themselves in court, so the court issued a default judgment in plaintiffs' favor, as well as an injunction ordering defendants to remove the postings from the sites at issue. Or, as Chief Justice Marshall similarly put it in Marbury v. See , e.g. Gertz v. Robert Welch , Inc., 418 U.S. Please remove them."
Copyrights & Campaigns
- Tuesday, December 22, 2009
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The Importance of Registries
When a registry is initialized, the operator has to make some choices, such as the default switch for titles for which the owner has not come forward (for whatever reason). Is the default for any title that Google has already scanned illegally “opt out”? few other thoughts come to mind immediately. Any retailer. And only Google.
Music Technology Policy
- Friday, October 31, 2008
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Federal Rule Bars Post-Judgment Injunctive Relief against Web Site for Third-Party Defamatory Posts
The posts were made by a former family member on a number of sites, including Facebook and MySpace and a second complaint site in addition to the Ripoff Report site operated by Xcentric. But in Blockowitz v. Williams , 1:09-cv-03955 (N.D. 65, which governs the enforcement of injunctions. 65 to compel them to comply. with the enjoined party."
New Media and Technology Law
- Wednesday, January 6, 2010
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