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7 votes
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Ana de Armas fans’ lawsuit puts studios at risk over deceptive trailers
10 votes -
Sweden's top court has prevented the extradition of exiled Turkish journalist Bulent Kenes, saying it was impossible under the circumstances
3 votes -
Tesla: Our ‘failure’ to make actual self-driving cars ‘is not fraud’
9 votes -
A blameless post-mortem of USA v. Joseph Sullivan (Uber’s former CSO)
4 votes -
New Zealand parents refuse use of vaccinated blood in life-saving surgery on baby
14 votes -
A Florida woman sues Velveeta, claiming its macaroni takes longer than 3 1/2 minutes
8 votes -
Young Australians just won a historic human rights case against an enormous coal mine
5 votes -
Climate activist Greta Thunberg joined hundreds of other youth activists to file a lawsuit against the Swedish government over its alleged inaction on climate change
3 votes -
US Navy forced to pay software company for piracy
5 votes -
Greta Thunberg Foundation has donated £158,000 to cover legal costs of indigenous people in Sweden's Arctic as they battle a British mining company
6 votes -
Finnish astronomers acquitted in defamation case related to protesting harassment – astrophysicist Christian Ott argued protests cost him postdoc position
5 votes -
Elizabeth Holmes gets more than eleven years for Theranos scam
8 votes -
Elon Musk bans remote work at Twitter, warns staff of “dire” economic outlook
16 votes -
Mick Gordon's full statement regarding Doom Eternal
28 votes -
~legal as a suggested community
We have a few categories it could be classified into (~news, ~humanities) but I think having a ~legal could bring some interesting people and conversations to the fore here.
8 votes -
Delaware judge discovers hidden entity recruiting people to be patent trolls
11 votes -
First thing: Twitter sued by former staff as Elon Musk begins mass firing
15 votes -
The execs behind the MoviePass debacle are now facing criminal charges
6 votes -
I fought the PayPal and I won
8 votes -
Eleven magic words
5 votes -
The most lawless county in Texas
9 votes -
Hans Niemann sues champion Magnus Carlsen and others for $100 million over cheating claim
14 votes -
Alex Jones told to pay $965m damages to Sandy Hook victims' families
19 votes -
Baltimore prosecutors drop charges against Adnan Syed, subject of podcast Serial
7 votes -
This man is allowed to starve himself to death, but not to eat some biscuits
9 votes -
Moral clauses: Why a red scare tactic revived in the #MeToo era could lead to a fight with the guilds
3 votes -
How to make class action lawsuits more meaningful to the public
Have you ever received notice that you might be eligible for something from a class-action settlement? Ever notice that the effort required to recover is significant, and the recovery perhaps...
Have you ever received notice that you might be eligible for something from a class-action settlement? Ever notice that the effort required to recover is significant, and the recovery perhaps insultingly miniscule?
I don't know of any data, but I suspect that's true of nearly every class action lawsuit, even those that win in court battles. Maybe the original plaintiffs get a decent recovery, sometimes there's injunctive relief (which means the court forces the defendant to do or not do something). Every once in a while, individual members of the class get a meaningful outcome (vw's dieselgate comes to mind).
The public interest justification for the outcomes where the recover for class members is really small, if one is even ever really offered, is that the cost of the action to the defendant serves as an inducement to all defendants to keep their act together. But see, Tyler Durden's explanation of the actuarial function from Fight Club.
My thought is that instead of any recovery for the individual class members ("fuck 'em, right?"), their portion of the money should go to a public interest fund dedicated to consumer protection. My reason for this is that these small recoveries don't make any useful change for the individual class member consumers. But collectively, might add up to enough to make a meaningful difference to the future activities of producers.
Of course, all the usual caveats about corruption and accountability come into play. But there's a few reasons it might help, if those can be overcome. First, it might prompt faster, lest costly settlements. The payouts would be lower, and also the transaction costs. This shifts the litigation process from focussing on big recoveries to high volume of suits, bringing in more defendants. It would also enable smaller firms to bring suit, the hope being that smaller firms would take on more marginal cases and get more action.
Second, it might actually create a feedback loop. If the fund gets large enough, it could lobby and investigate, providing more information more new suits, and identifying the worst actors, and encouraging useful regulation. Imagine if Consumers Union could return to its glory of the 80's and have a big lobbying fund?
Or, we could just have decent government level consumer protections (hahhahahahahahahah!)
9 votes -
Insurers force change on US police departments long resistant to it
8 votes -
'Shocking breach of faith' | Spectrum owes $7 billion in punitive damages for murder of Texas customer
17 votes -
Two Swedish filmmakers have been found guilty of illegally disturbing the MS Estonia ferry, which sank in 1994 killing 852 people
6 votes -
How Twitter’s child porn problem ruined its plans for an OnlyFans competitor
9 votes -
Norwegian far-right extremist Anders Behring Breivik is once again suing the Norway government in a bid to force an end to his isolation
8 votes -
Journalists from Finland's largest newspaper accused of publishing classified defence intelligence – unprecedented case for the country renowned for its press freedom
6 votes -
Environmental defenders celebrate a ‘huge’ win for ‘unique’ Tasmanian rainforest
6 votes -
Disqualified for disabilities, railroad workers fight back
4 votes -
OnlyFans bribed Meta employees to put thousands of porn stars on terror watchlist, suits claim
17 votes -
Alex Jones must pay $50m for Sandy Hook hoax claim
34 votes -
Father, son who murdered Ahmaud Arbery get life sentences for US hate crime
10 votes -
Georgia county files suit to force land sale for spaceport
8 votes -
Nursing homes are suing friends and family to collect on patients' bills
9 votes -
Brittney Griner pleads guilty to Russian drugs charge
7 votes -
Daily Harvest sued over US illness linked to lentils; cause remains a medical mystery
11 votes -
Ghislaine Maxwell sentenced to twenty years in the US for helping Jeffrey Epstein
16 votes -
Scottish independence: 19 October 2023 proposed as date for referendum
9 votes -
Polish court rules that four "LGBT-free zones" must be abolished
16 votes -
FTC sues Walmart for facilitating money transfer fraud that fleeced US customers out of hundreds of millions
9 votes -
UK government orders Julian Assange’s extradition; appeal planned
9 votes -
Swedish court has given disgraced Italian surgeon Paolo Macchiarini a suspended sentence for causing bodily harm during an experimental stem-cell windpipe transplant
3 votes -
Kevin Spacey to appear in UK court on sex assault charges
5 votes