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Brown v. Entertainment Merchants Association, 564 U.S. 786 (2011), was a landmark decision of the US Supreme Court that struck down a 2005 California law banning the sale of certain violent video games to children without parental supervision.
Ryan Morrison, also known as Video Game Attorney, is an American attorney and e-sports agent who specializes in law of interest to fans of video games and Internet culture. He is the CEO and founder of Evolved Talent Agency and one of the founding partners of Morrison Rothman LLP. On average, Morrison represents over 200 clients. [1]
S. Gregory Boyd (Greg Boyd) is an American author, attorney, and professor specializing in intellectual property, the game industry, and high technology media.He is currently a partner and the chairman of the Interactive Entertainment Group at Frankfurt Kurnit Klein & Selz PC and an adjunct professor for the New York Law School.
Google went to appeals court Monday in an attempt to convince a three-judge panel to overturn a jury's verdict declaring its app store for Android smartphones as an illegal monopoly and block the ...
Pages in category "Video games about law" The following 25 pages are in this category, out of 25 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
One such ruling was the 1988 case Data East USA, Inc. v. Epyx, Inc., where courts ruled that Epyx's game World Karate Championship did not infringe Data East's game Karate Champ, because none of the similarities were protected under copyright. [8] Now years later, Data East argued that their game Karate Champ was the first game in the fighting ...
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According to the Harvard Journal of Sports and Entertainment Law, the Spry Fox decision shows that courts are willing to apply the reasoning in Tetris v. Xio, and rulings may be the product of a judge's greater experience with video games than rulings from decades prior. [13] Kyle Orland from Ars Technica also compared the case to Tetris v.