Lawyers for President Donald Trump doubled down on what they argued is his constitutional right to fire FTC commissioners. In a court document Wednesday, the president's lawyers presented reasons why the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia should summarily dismiss the case that fired FTC Commissioners Rebecca Kelly Slaughter and Alvaro Bedoya brought, challenging their March removal and seeking reinstatement.
Restricting children's social media access “does not violate the First Amendment,” Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier (R) said Monday at the U.S. District Court for Northern Florida in case 4:24-cv-438-MW-MAF.
Toyota was sued Monday in the U.S. District Court for Eastern Texas for the alleged collection and sale of drivers' data to insurance company Progressive, despite saying in their Data Sharing Policies that it does not share this information without the drivers' consent. Progressive uses the data in their Snapshot data-sharing program that measures a variety of aspects related to driving, the class action alleges.
A University of Iowa student alleged that the college violated the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) by not adequately protecting the online security and privacy of its students. Plaintiff Marc Muklewicz filed a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for Southern Iowa on April 15, saying the university violated data security protocols and student privacy.
President Donald Trump’s recent firings at the FTC threaten agency independence and economic stability due to the potential impact on the Federal Reserve, a group of law professors said in a filing Friday, arguing for a reversal of the dismissals (see 2504180046).
E-commerce company Shopify will face a data privacy lawsuit, the 9th U.S. Court of Appeals ruled Monday, overturning the lower court's dismissal on the grounds that plaintiff Brandon Briskin could bring the suit in the state of California.
Trade association NetChoice asked the U.S. District Court for Middle Tennessee on Thursday to follow the lead of the decision in NetChoice v. Yost and order a preliminary injunction on a law that requires age verification before a person can access social media. The Yost case, decided Wednesday, enjoined an Ohio law requiring age verification on First Amendment grounds (see 2504160049).
President Donald Trump’s recent firings of FTC commissioners were illegal and undermine bipartisan work on privacy enforcement, a coalition of Democratic state attorneys general wrote Friday in an amicus brief.
The Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) and the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) said Thursday that DOGE employees' access to sensitive personal data didn't violate the 1974 Privacy Act. The government units presented their arguments in an answer to a complaint from the American Federation of Government Employees as part of a case the union brought against them. They then asked the court to dismiss the case with prejudice.
The U.S. District Court for Northern California ruled on Friday that social media platform X's copyright case against a data-scraping company will continue, and it allowed some but not all of data scraper Bright Data's counterclaims to continue as well. "The scraper states plausible claims for relief," the court said.