lawsuits 402
Palestinian TV station sued as journalists fear media crackdown | World news | guardian.co.uk
19 days ago by Kawthar
Wattan TV is being sued for $1m (£600,000) over an investigation into alleged corruption at a Palestinian university. It claimed that the son of a senior PA official was offered a place at the university despite having failed to meet academic requirements. The station, which says it has evidence to support its allegations, fears that some of its executives could face prison sentences and that freedom of speech in the Palestinian territories will be curtailed.
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19 days ago by Kawthar
The Bebo Lawsuit, and the Tragedy of Departed Founders Who Can’t Let Go | PandoDaily
24 days ago by rufous
To many entrepreneurs, the company that made their name and fortune is like a first-born child. Suddenly finding oneself no longer intimately involved in its upbringing is impossibly difficult to deal with, especially when its new parents are — to one’s own mind at least — mistreating it.
But there’s a difference between a child and a company: You can put a price on a company. And many entrepreneurs, including Michael Birch have done precisely that.
In 2008, Birch sold Bebo to AOL for $850 million. By any metric you care to use, AOL paid an idiotically high price for a teen social network, which is to say, a site where, inevitably, all of its users will one day grow up and move on. Sure enough, Criterion was able to pick up the near-deserted shell of Bebo just two years later for less than $10 million.
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But there’s a difference between a child and a company: You can put a price on a company. And many entrepreneurs, including Michael Birch have done precisely that.
In 2008, Birch sold Bebo to AOL for $850 million. By any metric you care to use, AOL paid an idiotically high price for a teen social network, which is to say, a site where, inevitably, all of its users will one day grow up and move on. Sure enough, Criterion was able to pick up the near-deserted shell of Bebo just two years later for less than $10 million.
24 days ago by rufous
Apple Granted Limited Permission to Intervene in Lodsys Case - Mac Rumors
5 weeks ago by rufous
In mid-June, Apple filed a motion to intervene in Lodsys' lawsuits against the developers, seeking to officially represent itself as both a defendant in the case and a plaintiff asserting counterclaims against Lodsys. Lodsys opposed the motion, and there has been little news on the progress of the lawsuits over the past nine months.
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5 weeks ago by rufous
Government Has Weak Case Against Apple And E-Books Publishers
5 weeks ago by famous
The U.S. Department of Justice is suing Apple and two of its publishing partners for allegedly conspiring to raise the price of e-books, according to an antitrust complaint filed in New York on Wednesday.
The government's case against Apple seemed to be off to a successful start, too. The court filing names five publishers as Apple's co-conspirators in the price-fixing scheme -- Simon & Schuster, Hachette, Harper Collins, Penguin and Macmillan. But right away, the DOJ announced that it had reached settlements with all but Penguin and Macmillan, who have chosen to fight it out in court presumably alongside Apple, which has not yet commented on the filing.
The settlement, which forces the three admitted conspirators to tear up their current agreements to sell new e-books on Apple's iBookstore at a fixed cost of no less than $12.99, would initially seem to bode poorly for Apple and the remaining two publishing companies' chances in court.
After all, if fully half of the alleged conspirators have already rolled over, and if all of the publishers had essentially the same agreements with Apple, as the DOJ alleges, then it would seem to be an uphill battle to prove that there wasn't a conspiracy.
But as it turns out, Apple and the other defiant holdouts who didn't accept a settlement, Macmillan and Penguin, might have made a smart move.
"Despite the detailed allegations in the complaint, I don't see clear evidence of the crucial smoking gun," said Daniel Crane, a professor of antitrust law at the University of Michigan, in an email to TPM.
Such a smoking gun, according to Crane, would be "that the book publishers agreed with each other (as opposed to agreeing with Apple) on an agreement to boycott Amazon unless Amazon shifted to the agency model and accepted their pricing terms."
Though the lawsuit lauds Amazon for essentially creating the successful U.S. e-book industry, it doesn't explicitly state that the publishers collectively coerced the company into raising prices. Instead, the suit accuses Macmillan of going to Amazon on its own and giving the company the stark choice of adopting its new, higher-priced "agency model" -- where the final price of the books to readers is set in advance -- or lose all of Macmillan's business.
Amazon initially chose to go without Macmillan's books in print and in electronic versions, but within a few days it relented and agreed to adopt the agency model. The DOJ suit alleges this is because it simply feared a similar boycott on the part of other publishers - but such a boycott never came to pass.
"Amazon quickly came to fully appreciate that not just Macmillan, but all five publisher defendants irrevocably committed themselves to the agency model across all retailers, including taking control of retail pricing..." the suit reads.
As Crane explained to TPM, the publishers "clearly shared lots of information, discussed their frustrations with Amazon, and encouraged each other to shift toward the agency model. But that falls short of a horizontal price-fixing agreement, which is what the Justice Department needs to show."
Further, Crane said that the news of the settlements of three conspirators "doesn't say much."
"After all, what kind of remedy is DOJ going to get?" Crane wrote, "An injunction saying 'don't collude any more.' Big deal. They've [the publishers] already flipped Amazon to the agency model, and the industry's not going back."
Crane opinion diverges from that of another antitrust law professor and former DOJ prosecutor, Spencer Waller, who on Wednesday told TPM that the agency model would be threatened by the lawsuit.
However, where Crane and Waller agree is that the government's lawsuit could make it easier for a private class-action lawsuit against the companies to proceed. One such lawsuit was filed in August 2011 by law firm Hagens Berman.
Crane's analysis coincides with those of other legal experts contacted by CNET. But for now, the case remains anyone's to lose.
Ed's note: This article originally incorrectly referred to Crane as Waller in a number of instances. We have since corrected the erros and regret them.
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The government's case against Apple seemed to be off to a successful start, too. The court filing names five publishers as Apple's co-conspirators in the price-fixing scheme -- Simon & Schuster, Hachette, Harper Collins, Penguin and Macmillan. But right away, the DOJ announced that it had reached settlements with all but Penguin and Macmillan, who have chosen to fight it out in court presumably alongside Apple, which has not yet commented on the filing.
The settlement, which forces the three admitted conspirators to tear up their current agreements to sell new e-books on Apple's iBookstore at a fixed cost of no less than $12.99, would initially seem to bode poorly for Apple and the remaining two publishing companies' chances in court.
After all, if fully half of the alleged conspirators have already rolled over, and if all of the publishers had essentially the same agreements with Apple, as the DOJ alleges, then it would seem to be an uphill battle to prove that there wasn't a conspiracy.
But as it turns out, Apple and the other defiant holdouts who didn't accept a settlement, Macmillan and Penguin, might have made a smart move.
"Despite the detailed allegations in the complaint, I don't see clear evidence of the crucial smoking gun," said Daniel Crane, a professor of antitrust law at the University of Michigan, in an email to TPM.
Such a smoking gun, according to Crane, would be "that the book publishers agreed with each other (as opposed to agreeing with Apple) on an agreement to boycott Amazon unless Amazon shifted to the agency model and accepted their pricing terms."
Though the lawsuit lauds Amazon for essentially creating the successful U.S. e-book industry, it doesn't explicitly state that the publishers collectively coerced the company into raising prices. Instead, the suit accuses Macmillan of going to Amazon on its own and giving the company the stark choice of adopting its new, higher-priced "agency model" -- where the final price of the books to readers is set in advance -- or lose all of Macmillan's business.
Amazon initially chose to go without Macmillan's books in print and in electronic versions, but within a few days it relented and agreed to adopt the agency model. The DOJ suit alleges this is because it simply feared a similar boycott on the part of other publishers - but such a boycott never came to pass.
"Amazon quickly came to fully appreciate that not just Macmillan, but all five publisher defendants irrevocably committed themselves to the agency model across all retailers, including taking control of retail pricing..." the suit reads.
As Crane explained to TPM, the publishers "clearly shared lots of information, discussed their frustrations with Amazon, and encouraged each other to shift toward the agency model. But that falls short of a horizontal price-fixing agreement, which is what the Justice Department needs to show."
Further, Crane said that the news of the settlements of three conspirators "doesn't say much."
"After all, what kind of remedy is DOJ going to get?" Crane wrote, "An injunction saying 'don't collude any more.' Big deal. They've [the publishers] already flipped Amazon to the agency model, and the industry's not going back."
Crane opinion diverges from that of another antitrust law professor and former DOJ prosecutor, Spencer Waller, who on Wednesday told TPM that the agency model would be threatened by the lawsuit.
However, where Crane and Waller agree is that the government's lawsuit could make it easier for a private class-action lawsuit against the companies to proceed. One such lawsuit was filed in August 2011 by law firm Hagens Berman.
Crane's analysis coincides with those of other legal experts contacted by CNET. But for now, the case remains anyone's to lose.
Ed's note: This article originally incorrectly referred to Crane as Waller in a number of instances. We have since corrected the erros and regret them.
5 weeks ago by famous
Get Free Legal Advice from Actual Lawyers at LegalAdvice.com. No, Really. [Help]
8 weeks ago by pclaypool
Lawyers often get a bad rap, but if you're ever in a legal jam, there's no question a good lawyer is the most useful person to have around. LegalAdvice.com provides free answers to your vexing legal questions. More »
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8 weeks ago by pclaypool
SEC Sues Former Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae CEOs
december 2011 by boonerang
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filed lawsuits today in Manhattan federal court against Richard Syron, the former CEO of Freddie Mac, and Daniel Mudd, the former CEO of Fannie Mae, for their public comments about subprime loans. The regulator also sued Freddie Mac's former executive vice-president and a senior vice-president, as well as Fannie Mae's former chief risk officer and executive vice-president. Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae are not named as defendants in the suit. In their filing, the SEC said, "This action arises out of series of materially false and misleading public disclosures."
As Bloomberg reports, Mudd served as Fannie's CEO from 2004 until 2008, when the government took over, but claimed in 2007 that the company's work with subprime mortgages "remains minimal, less than 2.5 percent of our book." Syron said Freddie had not "been heavily involved in subprime all along." Their losses, and now this lawsuit, say otherwise.
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As Bloomberg reports, Mudd served as Fannie's CEO from 2004 until 2008, when the government took over, but claimed in 2007 that the company's work with subprime mortgages "remains minimal, less than 2.5 percent of our book." Syron said Freddie had not "been heavily involved in subprime all along." Their losses, and now this lawsuit, say otherwise.
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december 2011 by boonerang
Apple Threatens to Sue Tiny German Café Whose Logo Is an Apple [Apple]
october 2011 by patrix
There is only one Apple. It is big and powerful and it rules our lives, elegantly. So don't fuck with them. That's what the owners of Apfelkind, a small, family-owned café in Bonn, Germany, have come to learn. More »
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october 2011 by patrix
A Glimpse into Chinese Law-Making-WSJ-Stanley Lubman
october 2011 by bbishop
The most that Westerners hear about Chinese law usually pertains to human rights violations, examples of arbitrary official conduct and a weak judiciary. While these problems remain critical, they tend to overshadow an equally important, though less headline-ready, topic: How laws are drafted in China and what that means for the country’ progress toward greater legality.
Legislative drafting has been going on quietly for decades, and some of the results of these efforts were on display at a presentation by Chinese officials given as part of an annual bilateral legal exchange program held recently in San Francisco.
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Legislative drafting has been going on quietly for decades, and some of the results of these efforts were on display at a presentation by Chinese officials given as part of an annual bilateral legal exchange program held recently in San Francisco.
october 2011 by bbishop
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