Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Ferko, et al. v. National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing, Inc., et al., commonly known as the Ferko lawsuit, was an American lawsuit between plaintiff Francis Ferko, a resident of Plano, Texas, and a minor shareholder of the then-publicly traded Speedway Motorsports, Inc. (SMI), and defendants NASCAR and International Speedway Corporation (ISC), which are both owned by the France family.
Sometimes they answer and get counsel, and because the law is so overwhelmingly on the side of the record companies, there's a negotiated settlement which is slightly lower than the settlement the people that are unrepresented have been getting—in other words, with a lawyer you can get some kind of leverage, but it is a delaying game in some ...
In July 2014, the plaintiff filed for a motion of summary judgment.However, on October 30, 2014, the court denied the motion. [9] Judge John A. Kronstadt, after reviewing competing musicologist reports, found "substantial similarity [between "Blurred Lines" and "Got to Give It Up"] to present a genuine issue of material fact", and that the "signature phrases, hooks, bass lines, keyboard chords ...
Madonna settled two plagiarism disputes. Mariah Carey settled three times. Oasis settled over three songs Lauryn Hill settled for a dispute over 13 tracks. Janet Jackson settled once. Eminem settled once. The Rolling Stones settled three disputes and were also claimants in two plagiarism disputes. Chris Brown settled one dispute. Will.i.am ...
If you bought anything from deodorant to soft drinks in the past several years, you could have hundreds of dollars waiting for you. Major companies dole out millions of dollars every day in class...
Screen Rant writes that the case "set a major precedent for copyright cases within video games as a whole", [25] while 1up.com highlighted the case for its importance in video game law, noting that the high quality of the game had no impact on the legal question of copyright infringement. [26]
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton said Allstate created the "world's largest driving behavior database," with data on more than 45 million Americans, by paying mobile app developers millions of ...
Meta has agreed to a $1.4 billion settlement with Texas in a privacy lawsuit over allegations that the tech giant used biometric data of users without their permission, officials said Tuesday.