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22 votes
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Canadian court upholds social media sensitivity training requirement for Jordan Peterson
62 votes -
Pyramid schemes are illegal. MLMs are not. What about the tech that powers them?
6 votes -
Apollo sued over $570m tax payout to top US executives. Pension fund says windfall for private equity titans is unjustified.
9 votes -
Report: Potential New York Times lawsuit could force OpenAI to wipe ChatGPT and start over
75 votes -
Brazil high court rules homophobic slurs punishable by prison
15 votes -
How one company owns color
18 votes -
Permanent US injunction and $650,000 civil penalty imposed on Experian Consumer Services for allegedly sending commercial emails
15 votes -
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26 votes -
Norwegian mass killer Anders Behring Breivik is suing the state for allegedly violating his human rights due to his being held in extreme isolation
28 votes -
Western Digital refused to answer our questions about its self-wiping SanDisk SSDs. Oh, and it’s also getting sued.
53 votes -
Former US President Donald Trump's televised trial could rival Super Bowl viewership
50 votes -
Lawsuit over polychlorinated biphenyl contamination filed by Massachusetts mother of boy with leukemia. Lawsuit targets GE, Monsanto, Bayer and others.
28 votes -
New Jersey court sides with Catholic school that fired unmarried pregnant teacher
24 votes -
Judge rules in favor of Oklahoma against big chicken producers in poultry-pollution lawsuit
17 votes -
Italy's far-right ruling party has been ordered to pay damages to a same-sex couple for using a photo of them with their newborn son without their consent in an anti-surrogacy campaign
24 votes -
'Blind Side' subject Michael Oher alleges Tuohys made millions off lie
17 votes -
US federal judge orders Southwest Airlines attorneys to attend ‘religious-liberty training’ from conservative Christian legal advocacy group
42 votes -
How one doctor in the USA keeps practicing, despite a long string of sanctions, fines, and lawsuits
30 votes -
US Supreme Court temporarily blocks $6 billion Purdue Pharma-Sackler bankruptcy
28 votes -
US military veterans sue to reclassify sexuality-based discharge records
5 votes -
Fighters win key ruling in case that could upend UFC’s business
8 votes -
$5 billion Google lawsuit over ‘Incognito mode’ tracking moves a step closer to trial
58 votes -
The Court of the Hague orders Meta to unmask anonymous Dutch user accused of repeated defamatory posts
31 votes -
Scouts sue MLB for age discrimination, claiming the league had a ‘blacklist’
9 votes -
Former Lizzo dancers were weight-shamed and pressured while at strip club, lawsuit says
35 votes -
Pirate site not impressed by global DNS blocking order
66 votes -
Chemical companies’ PFAS payouts are huge – but the problem is even bigger
11 votes -
High school administrators trapped a student in a Kafkaesque nightmare. They gave her the option of being suspended or face the threat of rape and assault. Her family is now suing the school district.
51 votes -
Twitter threatens legal action against US nonprofit that tracks hate speech
113 votes -
Storing dead people at -196°C
44 votes -
Federal jury acquits Louisiana trooper caught on camera pummeling Black motorist
30 votes -
Human operator pleads guilty in first ever US self-driving pedestrian fatality case
35 votes -
Why Pac-Man won
9 votes -
'Straight out of the authoritarian playbook': US watchdog sued by Elon Musk's X hits back
33 votes -
Thermo Fisher Scientific settles with family of Henrietta Lacks, whose HeLa cells uphold medicine
26 votes -
US District Judge orders compassionate release of three of Newburgh Four - sharply criticizes FBI's role in radicalizing the defendants
18 votes -
Outrage as Alaska's Attorney-General asks US Supreme Court to reverse Environmental Protection Agency's Pebble Mine veto
13 votes -
Intellectual property attorney claims that more than 900 companies have trademarked X, Musk's company will face lawsuits
18 votes -
US health insurance giant Cigna sued over algorithm allegedly used to deny coverage to hundreds of thousands of patients
27 votes -
Barbie Pink: What do Mattel’s rights in the valuable color look like?
7 votes -
New Jersey files federal lawsuit to block New York City’s congestion pricing plan; Staten Island sets up legal action
25 votes -
Sweden Muslim woman who refused handshake at job interview wins case
14 votes -
Three Texas plaintiffs testified about the trauma they experienced being required to carry nonviable pregnancies due to the Texas abortion ban
55 votes -
Dolphin Emulator no longer releasing on Steam, still legally safe
22 votes -
Elon Musk sues the lawyers that forced him to buy Twitter
59 votes -
OceanGate CEO responded poorly to criticism including filing a SLAPP lawsuit in response to an OSHA complaint and investigation
33 votes -
Bungie wins landmark lawsuit against player who harassed Destiny staff
https://www.polygon.com/23793493/bungie-destiny-2-harassment-lawsuit Win empowers employers to protect employees from online harm Bungie has won almost $500,000 in damages from a Destiny 2 player...
https://www.polygon.com/23793493/bungie-destiny-2-harassment-lawsuit
Win empowers employers to protect employees from online harm
Bungie has won almost $500,000 in damages from a Destiny 2 player who harassed one of its community managers and his wife with abusive, racist, and distressing calls and messages, and sent an unsolicited pizza order to their home in a manner designed to intimidate and frighten the couple.
According to members of Bungie’s legal team, the judgment from a Washington state court sets important precedents that will empower employers to go after anyone who harasses their employees online, and strengthen the enforcement of laws against online trolling and harassment. “This one is special,” Bungie’s attorney Dylan Schmeyer tweeted.
As laid out in the court’s judgment, the defendant, Jesse James Comer, was “incensed” when the community manager — whom both Bungie and the court declined to name, to protect them from further harassment — spotlighted some fan art by a Black community member. Using anonymous phone numbers, Comer left a string of “hideous, bigoted” voicemails on the community manager’s personal phone, some asking that Bungie create options in Destiny 2 “in which only persons of color would be killed,” before proceeding to threaten the community manager’s wife with more racist voicemails and texts. Then he ordered a pizza to be delivered to their home, leaving instructions for the driver to knock at least five times, loudly, to make the intrusion as frightening as possible.
The court ruled that Comer was liable to pay over $489,000 in damages, fees, and expenses it had accrued in protecting and supporting its employees, investigating Comer, and prosecuting the case against him.
As laid out in a Twitter thread by Kathryn Tewson, a crusading paralegal who worked on the case, the judgment is significant because it recognizes that patterns of harassment escalate from online trolling to real-world violence; establishes that harassment of an employee for doing their job damages the employer as well, which can then use its resources to go after the culprit; and recognized a new tort — a legal term for a form of injury or harm for which courts can impose liability — around cyber and telephone harassment.
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38 votes -
Johnson & Johnson sues US researchers who linked talc to cancer
38 votes -
Elon Musk and Twitter sued over unpaid severance packages
75 votes