Bright Data said it has already provided the information social media platform X is asking the court to order it to submit. In letters to Judge William Alsup, the data scrapping firm responded Tuesday to X's claims that it is attempting to stall the case and withhold its activity logs (see 2504140051).
Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti (R) told a court Monday that the decision in NetChoice, LLC v. Griffin demonstrates the weakness of NetChoice's argument for a preliminary injunction against a law that requires age verification before accessing social media accounts. NetChoice urged the U.S. District Court for Middle Tennessee on April 1 to use the Griffin ruling (see 2504010044), to enjoin the law (see 2504020033).
U.S. Supreme Court precedent affirms the legitimacy of multimember commissions like the FTC, so President Donald Trump’s firing of two Democratic commissioners should be reversed, congressional Democrats wrote in an amicus brief Monday (see 2504110049).
X asked the court to deny Bright Data's request to turn over additional evidence as part of a copyright case. In a letter Monday, X claimed it has provided "voluminous information," and Bright, a data scraper, is attempting to distract and stall the court despite withholding its scraping activity logs.
As the litigation landscape continues shifting under privacy laws, “search bars have quietly become a Trojan horse in online data collection,” said lawyers Vivian Isaboke and Anthony Isola from Fisher Phillips in a blog Friday.
The U.S. District Court for Northern California on Thursday ordered that social media platform X submit server logs and other evidence in its copyright case against a data-scraping company by Monday, April 14 at noon PT. The evidence was supposed to be presented to data scraper Bright Data -- the defendant -- but X has yet to do so, the court said.
A coalition of attorneys general and solicitors general from 20 red states filed an amicus brief Thursday supporting the Trump administration in a case where the president fired a pair of Democratic members of the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board (PCLOB).
Google was hit with a class-action complaint Monday alleging the company's education products secretly harvest mass amounts of student information and data without their or their parents’ knowledge or consent.
A federal bankruptcy court should deny 23andMe’s attempt to appoint a “customer data representative” in its bankruptcy sale and instead allow DOJ to appoint a consumer privacy ombudsman, the Office of the U.S. Trustee said in a filing Thursday (see 2504090048).
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit heard oral argument Wednesday on the National Treasury Employees Union’s pursuit of an emergency stay of President Donald Trump's executive order slashing staff at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. The challenge is one of several that NTEU, which represents FCC employees, has against recent efforts by Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) and the Trump administration (see 2503310047).