A Webcasting service that provides users with individualized Internet radio stations is not required to pay licensing fees to copyright holders of the songs the service plays, the Second U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled.
- September 29, 2009Mark Hamblett
Web sites, social networks and other interactive service providers facilitate the display and exchange of a staggering amount of user-generated information, much of it idle chatter, meaningful commentary and helpful information, though some of it defamatory and offensive speech. Without certain protections, a site owner could face liability, and such a threat conceivably would have a chilling effect on the vibrant exchange of ideas on the Web.
September 29, 2009Richard Raysman and Peter BrownThe Second Circuit's recent decision in Rescuecom Corp. v. Google, Inc. is but one more step in a long-standing battle that's likely to continue for some time; it's been five years already, and the court merely ruled on a technicality that allows the case to run longer still. Most Google users and advertisers are blissfully unaware of what's going on, and even many involved in Internet commerce don't understand the implications.
September 29, 2009Peter KentAnti-SLAPP Motion over Paris Hilton Suit Is Denied
DVD Kiosks Company's Anti-Trust Claim Against Universal Moves Forward
Song Suit over Movies Dismissed For Lack of Personal JurisdictionSeptember 29, 2009Stan SoocherCLAIMS OVER PHOTOS, PERFORMANCE IN DVD
COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT/SAMPLED RECORDINGSeptember 29, 2009Stan SoocherDo the recent rulings in the General Growth Properties bankruptcy spell doom for equipment debt securitizations? Not necessarily so, according to the recent rulings of Southern District of New York Bankruptcy Judge Allan Gropper in the $27 billion General Growth Properties Chapter 11 bankruptcy — at least with respect to the issue of substantive consolidation.
September 29, 2009James R. CairnsInternet gambling proponents suffered a major setback when a federal appeals court refused to strike down a 2006 law in which Congress banned all Internet gambling transactions that would be illegal in the gambler's state.
September 29, 2009Shannon P. DuffyMissy Chase Lapine, author of The Sneaky Chef: Simple Strategies for Hiding Healthy Foods in Kids' Favorite Meals, has come up empty in her claims against Jerry Seinfeld and his wife, Jessica. Lapine had sued Jessica, author of the book Deceptively Delicious: Simple Secrets to Get Your Kids Eating Good Food, for copyright and trademark infringement. But Manhattan federal district court Judge Laura Swain threw those claims out, finding that there were sufficient differences between the two books.
September 29, 2009Andrew LongstrethThe New York Supreme Court, New York County, denied a motion to dismiss a complaint by a personal manager who seeks unpaid commissions from artists he managed.
September 29, 2009Stan SoocherA pair of Beverly Hills film producers have been found guilty of conspiring to bribe a former Thai government official to obtain contracts that provided for, among other things, control of the annual Bangkok International Film Festival, the Justice Department said.
September 29, 2009Mike Scarcella

