Book Review: “Unfair to Genius: The Strange and Litigious Career of Ira B. Arnstein”

By Eric Goldman Ira Arnstein is well-known to most IP professors as the named plaintiff in the copyright classic Arnstein v. Porter from 1946 (also see this case archive). The Second Circuit’s opinion is a landmark ruling that appears in…

Employee Can’t Be Fired When His Login Credentials Are Used on Shared Computer to Access Porn — DOH v. Litten

[Post by Venkat Balasubramani] West Virginia Department of Transportation v. Litten, 2013 WL 2662712 (W. Va. Ct. App. June 5, 2013) [pdf] Litten worked as a mechanic for the West Virginia Dept of Highway. He was fired for accessing porn…

Catching Up on 512 Safe Harbor Cases (and Other Online Copyright Cases) From the Past Year

[Post by Venkat Balasubramani with a comment by Eric; followed by a massive supplement from Eric] [Eric’s intro: sometimes, a draft blog post misses the publication window and then comes out painfully late. Venkat drafted the first draft of this…

Will The FTC’s Crackdown On Search Ad Disclosures Hurt Google’s Revenues? (Forbes Cross-Post)

By Eric Goldman The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) hates inauthentic online content.  To combat this perceived ill, the FTC has been waging a multi-year battle against surreptitious ads online.  The FTC has been quite clear about what it wants online…

Judges’ Facebook Friendships Insufficient for Recusal .. Again

[Post by Venkat Balasubramani] I recently blogged about a trio of cases involving attempts to unseat jury verdicts based on social media relationships between the jurors and witnesses or parties. (“No New Trials When Jurors Haven’t Adequately Disclosed Facebook Friendships.”)…

Crass and Offensive Tweets by Student May not Justify Suspension — Rosario v. Clark County School Dist.

[Post by Venkat Balasubramani] Rosario v. Clark County School Dist., 13-cV-362 JCM (PAL) (D. Nev. July 3, 2013) Rosario was a student at Desert Oasis High School. He tried out and was originally cut from the basketball team, but apparently…

Some 47 USC 230 Cases From the Past Year You Might Have Missed (Because I Didn’t Blog Them)

By Eric Goldman How do you celebrate the Fourth of July? I spent the holiday thinking about how 47 USC 230 enhances my freedoms. However, I’ve been feeling a little guilty because I try to blog every Section 230 case…

Essay Explaining Why 47 USC 230 Should Immunize State Crimes

By Eric Goldman You’ve probably already heard that at the Summer 2013 NAAG meeting in Boston, some State Attorneys General indicated they will ask Congress to exclude state criminal prosecutions from the 47 USC 230 immunity. Although many folks believe…

After “Bellwether Trial,” Court Says Malibu Media Isn’t Copyright Troll – Malibu Media v. Does

[Post by Venkat Balasubramani] Malibu Media v. Does, 12-2078 (E.D. Pa. June 18, 2013) [pdf] In a somewhat bizarre ruling, a district judge in Pennsylvania held, following a “bellwether trial” that Malibu Media was not a “copyright toll.” In a…

“Heisman Pose” Photographer’s Lawsuit Whittled Down–Masck v. Sports Illustrated

By Jake McGowan Masck v. Sports Illustrated, et al., 2:13-cv-10226-GAD-DRG (E.D. Mich. June 11, 2013) Back in February, we blogged about photographer Brian Masck’s Shakespearean complaint, asserting copyright infringement claims (and others) against numerous defendants for using his famous “Heisman…