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Legal experts told NBC News that the disclosure could have legal fallout for Musk across multiple jurisdictions under laws designed to protect consumers from deceptive practices. Chris Gober, a lawyer for America PAC, made the disclosure at a hearing about the giveaways. Elon Musk awarded Kristine Fishell a $1 million check at a town hall in Pittsburgh on Oct. 20. Typically under state law, “this is actually bread and butter stuff for them,” he said in a direct message. The Justice Department, which had warned Musk’s super PAC that its offer may run afoul of federal election law, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Persons: Elon Musk, Musk, ” Christopher Peterson, , Chris Gober, “ We’re, ” Musk, Kristine Fishell, Michael Swensen, Donald Trump, Trump, Larry Krasner, John Summers, Krasner, Gober, Rebecca Tushnet, , Tushnet, George Conway, David Vladeck, ” Lorrin Freeman, ” Jeff Sovern Organizations: NBC News, University of Utah, Musk’s America PAC, America PAC, Pennsylvania, Harvard Law School, Republican, Federal Trade Commission, FTC, Georgetown University, AGs, University of Maryland, The Justice Department, Musk’s Locations: Philadelphia, Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada , North Carolina , Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Wake County, North, North Carolina, Baltimore
CNN —Former President Donald Trump filed a lawsuit Thursday against CBS Broadcasting Inc. and CBS Interactive Inc., demanding $10 billion in damages over the network’s “60 Minutes” interview with Vice President Kamala Harris. Trump’s legal counsel argued that “CBS’s misconduct was unconscionable because it amounts to a brazen attempt to interfere in the 2024 U.S. Presidential Election.”A spokesperson for CBS said that Trump’s claims against “60 Minutes” are false. “The Interview was not doctored; and 60 MINUTES did not hide any part of the Vice President’s answer to the question at issue. 60 MINUTES fairly presented the Interview to inform the viewing audience, and not to mislead it. The lawsuit Trump has brought today against CBS is completely without merit and we will vigorously defend against it,” the spokesperson continued.
Persons: Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, Harris, Trump, Matthew Kacsmaryk, , , Charles Tobin, Ballard Spahr, Floyd Abrams, ” Rebecca Tushnet, Frank Stanton, ” Trump, , CNN’s Kate Sullivan, Kaanita Iyer Organizations: CNN, CBS Broadcasting Inc, CBS Interactive Inc, Court, Northern District of, CBS, Amarillo Division, Trump, Presidential, , Pentagon, Harvard Law School Locations: Northern District, Northern District of Texas, Northern Texas, Amarillo, Texas, Henderson , Nevada
We are actually going to be looking at this in the very early days of generative AI. casey newtonYeah, this feels like one of the big questions in AI right now. rebecca tushnetSo I see why you say that’s strange, but in fact, it’s exactly how you would make a general-purpose tool. But now, finally, along come these new technologies to take them down a peg, and they’re actually going to have to work for a living. So maybe they’re slapping, like, AI sort of things around the stories that they’re aggregating.
Persons: kevin roose Casey, casey newton What’s, kevin roose, casey newton Dots, casey newton, they’re, kevin roose —, casey newton Dot, CASEY, Biden, Mr, kevin roose I’m Kevin Russo, ” casey newton, Casey Newton, Rebecca Tushnet, casey newton Kevin, I’d, Rachel, kevin roose Aw, Harry Potter, kevin roose Wow, SpongeBob, Chuck Schumer, let’s, it’s, Claude, kevin roose Totally, casey newton Yes, Yann LeCun, It’s, you’re, you’ve, Sam Altman, Dario Amodei, kevin roose I’ve, Arati Prabhakar, arati prabhakar, Ben Buchanan, ben buchanan, casey newton Well, Dodd, Frank, I’m, kevin roose Will, You’ve, kevin roose God, kevin roose Hey, Casey, we’ve, Sarah Anderson, who’s, Emad Mostaque, Anderson, weren’t, Kevin, — casey newton, ” rebecca tushnet, rebecca tushnet, that’s, there’s, casey newton Right, I’ve, “ Barbie, “ Barbie ”, Sarah Anderson’s, rebecca tushnet It’s, Barbie, casey newton I’m, Rebecca, Westlaw, we’re, Cory Doctorow, what’s, casey newton Um, Pattie, it’s minty, Patties, Let’s, casey newton No, it’ll, casey newton That’s, KEVIN, “ Joe Biden, , Bruce Reed, Joe Biden, ” ‘, Reed, Camp David, Biden’s, , kevin roose Jack, Jack, , Lily James, kevin roose Oh, kevin roose Ugh, kevin roose Horrible, kevin roose “ Cruise, ” “ Cruise, They’re, haven’t, casey newton Close, kevin roose It’s, Guy, casey newton I’ve, Newton Organizations: Target, Opera, The New York Times, White, White House, casey newton People, Google, casey, Science, Technology, Defense Department, Biden White House, Communications, Department of Commerce, European Union, Harvard Law, Midjourney, Copyright, Stability, Harvard Law School, Associated Press, Adobe, Starbucks, Disney, YouTube, Stetson, Media, Biden, NVIDIA, Variety, Staff, Associated, Microsoft, Guardian, General Motors, Cruise, House Locations: Washington, Bikini, Valley, OpenAI, Anthropic, Silicon Valley, Europe, America, York, They’re, Camp, Sydney, United States, California, Austin , Texas, Phoenix, Dallas , Houston, Miami, San Francisco, Franciscans
Representatives for Hermes and Rothschild did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the decision. Hermes said in a filing in March that Rothschild continued to market his NFTs after the jury's verdict. Rothschild told the court that Hermes' request went "far beyond what is appropriate in a case, like this one, that involves artistic expression." Rakoff largely granted Hermes' request, but decided not to order Rothschild to transfer the tokens out of an "abundance of caution" for 1st Amendment concerns. The case is Hermes International v. Rothschild, U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, No.
Persons: Hermes, Mason Rothschild's, Birkin, Jed Rakoff, Rothschild's, Rakoff, Rothschild, Sonny Estival, Gerald Ferguson, Deborah Wilcox, Oren Warshavsky, Rhett Millsaps, Christopher Sprigman, Mark McKenna, Rebecca Tushnet, Lex Lumina, Jonathan Harris, Adam Oppenheim, Harris St, Laurent, Wechsler Read, Blake Brittain Organizations: Hermes, Constitution, . Rothschild, Southern, of, Baker, Hostetler, Thomson Locations: Manhattan, U.S, . Rothschild , U.S, of New York, Washington
CNN —Disney just cast Ron DeSantis as the villain in a story of good versus evil. DeSantis responded to the lawsuit by issuing a statement through his communications director, Taryn Fenske. “It’s a serious First Amendment case,” Floyd Abrams, the renowned First Amendment attorney of Pentagon Papers fame, told me. The truth is that characterizing Disney as a creepy company that aims to morally bankrupt kids has become a mainstream position in GOP media circles. DeSantis knows this — which is why he was happy to pick this battle with the company.
Dominion is suing Fox News over the right-wing channel’s airing of false claims of election fraud around the 2020 presidential election. Fox News argued that Dominion should instead rely on the “lengthy depositions” that these witnesses already gave. It claims Dominion hasn’t shown anything strong enough to overcome the high bar that the First Amendment provides, protecting good-faith journalists from speech-chilling defamation lawsuits. Dominion lawyer Rodney Smolla said its high-stakes defamation case against Fox News will protect the public discourse and hold accountable people who deliberately lied about the 2020 election. “They endorsed,” Murdoch said, referring to Fox hosts Sean Hannity, Jeanine Pirro, Maria Bartiromo, and former host Lou Dobbs.
The hundreds of pages of new documents include previously unreleased excerpts from key depositions, including Fox Corporation chairman Rupert Murdoch, and are part of Dominion’s defamation lawsuit against Fox News. The transcript was part of a trove of text messages, emails, and other material from Fox News executives and on-air personalities that were made public Tuesday as part of Dominion’s $1.6 billion defamation lawsuit against the right-wing channel. “Do you believe that Dominion was engaged in a massive and coordinated effort to steal the 2020 presidential election?” Murdoch was asked by Dominion lawyers. The hundreds of pages of new documents that came out Tuesday include previously unreleased excerpts from key depositions, including Murdoch, and are part of Dominion’s defamation lawsuit against Fox News. Fox News has not only vigorously denied the claims, it has insisted it is “proud” of its 2020 election coverage.
New York CNN —Rupert Murdoch, the chairman of Fox Corporation, acknowledged in a deposition taken by Dominion Voting Systems that some Fox News hosts endorsed false claims that the 2020 election was stolen. Murdoch’s remarks were made public in a legal filing as part of Dominion’s $1.6 billion lawsuit against Fox News. In his deposition, Murdoch rejected that the right-wing talk network as an entity endorsed former President Donald Trump’s election lies. “Some of our commentators were endorsing it,,” Murdoch said, according to the filing, when asked about the talk hosts’ on-air positions about the election. Top legal experts told CNN after last week’s filing that Dominion’s legal position appeared strong.
While the legal experts cautioned that they would like to see Fox News’ formal legal response to the filing, they all indicated in no uncertain terms that the evidence compiled in Dominion’s legal filing represents a serious threat to the channel. On one occasion, Carlson demanded that Fox News White House correspondent Jacqui Heinrich be fired after she fact-checked a Trump tweet pushing election fraud claims. Tushnet said that in all of her years practicing and teaching law, she had never seen such damning evidence collected in the pre-trial phase of a defamation suit. “Donald Trump seems to be very good at generating unprecedented situations.”David Korzenik, an attorney who teaches First Amendment law and represents a number of media organizations, said that the filing showed Dominion’s case against Fox News has serious teeth. “Their motion for summary judgment takes an extreme and unsupported view of defamation law and rests on an accounting of the facts that has no basis in the record.”But the attorneys said Dominion’s filing showed it had built a powerful case against Fox.
Trump this week filed a $50 million lawsuit against the Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, alleging that when Woodward published audio of their interviews in his audiobook it breached his rights by constituting copyright violations. Most legal experts CNN contacted on Tuesday quickly dismissed Trump’s lawsuit against Woodward as meritless. But instead of major outlets pausing to gather this much-needed context after Trump filed his suit against Woodward, most newsrooms simply published stories echoing his complaint. Judge Donald Middlebrooks pointed to Trump’s “pattern of misusing the courts to serve political purposes” as he took note of several other failed lawsuits Trump has brought in recent years. It is also dismaying given the larger discussion among the press over the years about not succumbing hook, line, and sinker for Trump’s stunts.
A series of hot-button lawsuits have linked all those unlikely creators and platforms in litigation that goes as high as the US Supreme Court. The litigation deals with issues of intellectual property, copyright infringement and fair use in a rapidly changing new-media landscape. She won, but not much: $3,750, because the court ruled that, though her copyright had been violated, her tattoos didn’t impact game profits. It was a huge hit on TikTok, in part because the duo invited feedback and participation, making it a crowd-sourced artwork. But when the creators took their show on the road and sold tickets, Netflix sued.
The case centers on how courts decide when an artist makes "fair use" of another's work under copyright law. The Supreme Court will hear arguments in the estate's appeal of a lower court's decision favoring Goldsmith. The Supreme Court's eventual decision could have broad or narrow implications for fair use depending on the ruling, Tushnet said. The Warhol estate told the Supreme Court the 2nd Circuit's decision "casts a cloud of legal uncertainty over an entire genre of visual art, including canonical works by Andy Warhol and countless other artists." Goldsmith's lawyers told the Supreme Court that a ruling favoring the foundation would "transform copyright law into all copying, no right."
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