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22 votes
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The Internet Archive lost their latest appeal. Here’s what that means for you.
27 votes -
Internet Archive loses appeal in Hachette v. Internet Archive
69 votes -
Brazilians flock to Bluesky after court bans Elon Musk’s X
41 votes -
Judge in Brazil orders slaughterhouses to pay for Amazon reforestation
46 votes -
Eleven on trial in Sweden's largest environmental crime case – Bella Nilsson's company Think Pink accused of dumping at least 200,000 tonnes of waste
23 votes -
Oracle's $115 million privacy settlement: What consumers should know
22 votes -
Lawsuits against Crowdstrike begin with Delta Airlines and Crowdstrike shareholders filing suit
21 votes -
Are mandatory arbitration agreements the new normal?
For clarity, a mandatory arbitration agreement is when a consumer or customer must "agree to have their case reviewed by a third party—called an arbitrator—and to be bound by the arbitrator's...
For clarity, a mandatory arbitration agreement is when a consumer or customer must "agree to have their case reviewed by a third party—called an arbitrator—and to be bound by the arbitrator's decision." The intent is that you waive your right to sue (in a regular court of law) the party you're entering this agreement with. But these agreements can, in some cases, be ruled as invalid by a court. The examples I've seen apply to the US, but I'd be interested in examples from other countries.
I'm sure I'm not the only one who's been noticing how out of hand it's becoming to see these statements plastered in Terms of Service and several other locations.
The most newsworthy example recently was Disney claiming that a statement like this in their Disney+ ToS also applied to a wrongful death case on one of their properties. As the linked article says, they backpedaled on this, but it's still disgusting and disturbing they even tried it in the first place.
The most recent example I've seen is this post on Mastodon where it was included on the packaging of a supplement.
I can't help but wonder if this is just a way to deter people from seeking litigation in the first place, especially if they aren't wealthy enough to hire a legal team that could poke holes in the legitimacy of their mandatory arbitration agreement.
I'm sure there's a nearly endless supply of examples of this, especially in software service agreements. But is there anything that can be done about it? Or is this just one more way corporations get to have more power than people that won't ever change?
33 votes -
Man accused of enlisting strangers to rape drugged wife goes on trial in France
21 votes -
US judge rules $400 million algorithmic system illegally denied thousands of people’s Medicaid benefits
27 votes -
Court: Section 230 doesn’t shield TikTok from blackout challenge death suit
25 votes -
Elon Musk’s lawyers quietly subpoena public interest groups
38 votes -
Telegram CEO charged in France for ‘allowing criminal activity’ on messaging app
26 votes -
Megathread - Updates on the Donald Trump trial regarding classified documents
Things are starting to happen in this case also.
23 votes -
US judge rules Breonna Taylor’s boyfriend caused her death, dismisses some charges against ex-officers
64 votes -
The US DOJ files an antitrust suit against a software company for allegedly manipulating rent prices
46 votes -
MIT's drop in Black students shows fallout from top court ruling
33 votes -
Google must destroy $5 billion worth of user data illegally collected in Incognito Mode
55 votes -
A professor is suing Facebook over its recommendation algorithms
23 votes -
Disney seeking dismissal of Raglan Road death lawsuit because victim was Disney+ subscriber
111 votes -
She faked her chimp's death; then things went apeshit
14 votes -
Redbox | Bankrupt
4 votes -
First guilty plea in Arizona fake elector case comes from Republican activist Lorraine Pellegrino
22 votes -
Artist win: AI lawsuit advances
23 votes -
US judge temporarily blocks sports streaming service Venu, siding with Fubo on antitrust concerns
12 votes -
Imane Khelif brings lawsuit against x for "acts of aggravated cyber harassment”
43 votes -
Google violated antitrust laws in online search, US judge rules
47 votes -
Elon Musk’s X sues Unilever, Mars and CVS over ‘massive advertiser boycott’
50 votes -
Joe Biden administration sued over US sanctions against Israeli settlers
21 votes -
German court due to rule on ‘from the river to the sea’ case in test of free speech
18 votes -
AI music generator Suno admits it was trained on ‘essentially all music files on the internet’
39 votes -
Elon Musk is suing OpenAI and Sam Altman again
17 votes -
The truly disturbing story of Kellogg's Corn Flakes
34 votes -
Delta CEO says CrowdStrike-Microsoft outage cost the airline $500 million, will seek damages
44 votes -
Washington, DC attorney general sues StubHub, alleging deceptive pricing
22 votes -
Brazilian rancher ordered to pay $50m for damage to Amazon
38 votes -
'Boneless' chicken wings can have bones, Ohio court rules
33 votes -
Citing climate change, a federal court in Brazil halts rainforest highway paving
20 votes -
A judge ruled a Louisiana prison’s health care system has failed inmates for decades. A federal law could block reforms.
15 votes -
East Palestine Ohio after the derailment- reports of hair loss, seizures, residents to decide whether to accept negotiated settlement
42 votes -
US appeals court blocks all of Joe Biden's SAVE student debt relief plan
45 votes -
US SEC sues Trump Media SPAC ex-CEO Patrick Orlando for alleged fraud
15 votes -
IT staffing agency traps tech workers in their jobs, US federal lawsuit alleges
38 votes -
US judge dismisses classified documents case against Donald Trump
64 votes -
Arlington Virginia missing middle trial heralds legal fight over suburban zoning
14 votes -
Court says Andrew Tate can leave Romania but remain in EU as he awaits trial
18 votes -
Students at fake university in Michigan created by ICE can sue US, court rules
45 votes -
Iranian-born Norwegian man found guilty of terrorism in a 2022 attack on an LGBTQ+ festival in Oslo and sentenced to thirty years in prison
15 votes -
They were secret for sixteen years. Now a US judge has released the Jeffrey Epstein grand jury records.
18 votes