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[31] [32] This prompted YouTube's CEO Susan Wojcicki to respond three months later with "Thank you @YouTube community for all the feedback. We're listening" in February 2016. [33] Videos continued to be removed and flagged on the site when copyright claims were made against uploaders for using the alleged use of protected material.
During the pre-trial discovery phase, Viacom requested and received a court order for YouTube to hand over data detailing the viewing selections of every user who had ever watched videos on the site. The move led to concerns that the selections of individual users could be identified through a combination of their IP addresses and usernames.
The neighbor whose trees were cut, Samih Shinway, was at the hearing as well. "I'm never going to be 100% satisfied," he said afterward. "I always use the analogy that if you hire someone to put a ...
Under English law, because companies are legal persons they can sue on the basis of libel the same as natural persons. Cases supporting this principle go as far back as the 19th century, such as South Hetton Coal Co. Ltd. v. North Eastern News Ass'n Ltd. [1894], and extend to more recent cases such as Bognor Regis U.D.C. v. Campion [1972] [ 19 ...
Thinking about trees in that sense, you may have more rights to cut limbs that are encroaching on your property from a neighbor’s tree — but you don’t do so without assuming legal risk or ...
The right to sue may refer to one of the following legal topics relating to a right to file a lawsuit ('sue' is the verb for the act of filing a lawsuit): . Right to petition - the right to petition the government, which in some jurisdictions includes the right to file a lawsuit
The way to avoid this: make each cut virtually flush with the main limb or trunk. Leave no stubs. It’s wise to leave just a very small piece of the branch collar to speed the healing.
Canadian defamation law refers to defamation law as it stands in both common law and civil law jurisdictions in Canada. As with most Commonwealth jurisdictions, Canada follows English law on defamation issues (except in the province of Quebec where private law is derived from French civil law).