February 22, 2018
News
December 2017 WILMap Updates
December 15, 2017
News First Amendment’s Outward Creep Makes It Harder to Hold Platforms Accountable May 23, 2017 Today, the Stanford Law Review published my very first single-authored publication, “Expanding the Periphery and
Entries
Google v. Equustek
Google's US challenge to the Canadian Supreme Court's global de-listing order
In the Canadian Equustek ruling in June 2017, Canada's Supreme Court ordered Google to de-list search results for users everywhere in the world, based on Canadian trade secret law. However,
Google Inc. v. Equustek Solutions Inc.
This case arose from a trade secret dispute between plaintiffs and their former employee, who allegedly worked with a competing firm to create and sell a knock-off of plaintiffs' computer
X v. Twitter
This case arose because an Internet troll used a series of Twitter accounts to attack and disclose financial information about the unidentified plaintiff, referred to as X. For the most
EFF v. Global Equity
EFF's US court challenge to Global Equity's Australian injunction
This case began when US digital civil liberties organization Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) featured defendant Global Equity in its "Stupid Patent of the Month" blog series. EFF said Global Equity
Association "Union des Etudiants Juifs de France", la "Ligue contre le Racisme et l'Antisémitisme", le "MRAP" (intervenant volontaire) / Yahoo ! Inc. et Yahoo France
The French court's "Yahoo France" ruling
Organizations dedicated to combatting anti-semitism sued Yahoo in the Paris tribunal because of, among other things, Nazi memorabilia available through Yahoo's auction site. On May 22, 2000 ordered that Yahoo: