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Facebook, Inc. v. StudiVZ Ltd. was a federal lawsuit filed on July 18, 2008, by Facebook, Inc. in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California against StudiVZ Ltd., a UK company with its principal place of business in Germany. StudiVZ had launched a website which was alleged to be visually and functionally similar to ...
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One of StudiVZ's central functions was the "gruscheln" (a mix of the German words grüßen = to greet, and kuscheln = to cuddle). It was much like the poking function on Facebook where users can send each other notifications. In 2008 StudiVZ launched its chat function called "Plauderkasten" (= chitchat box). [9]
Operator of the German express way network. Deutsche Bahn: full ownership Germany: DFS Deutsche Flugsicherung GmbH: full ownership Germany: Hapag Lloyd: 23.2% Hamburg: Airbus: 12% [3] 28% total with France and Spain Commerzbank: 15,6% KfW: Volkswagen Group: 12.7% Lower-Saxony: 20% of voting rights KfW Bank: Full Ownership German government
Facebook said its investigation found a Pakistani military link, along with a mix of real accounts of ISPR employees, and a network of fake accounts created by them that have been operating military fan pages, general interest pages but were posting content about Indian politics while trying to conceal their identity. [479]
The Network Enforcement Act (Netzwerkdurchsetzungsgesetz, NetzDG; German: Gesetz zur Verbesserung der Rechtsdurchsetzung in sozialen Netzwerken), also known colloquially as the Facebook Act (Facebook-Gesetz), [1] is a German law that was passed in the Bundestag in 2017 that officially aims to combat fake news, hate speech and misinformation online.
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[7] [17] German and Low German are West Germanic languages closely related to Dutch, Frisian languages (in particular North Frisian and Saterland Frisian), Luxembourgish, and English. [7] Modern Standard German is based on High German and Central German , and is the first or second language of most Germans, but notably not the Volga Germans .