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This week in IP: Breeders split on EU study, DoJ antitrust head appointed, Tiffany settles TM dispute

This week in IP: Breeders split on EU study, DoJ antitrust head appointed, Tiffany settles TM dispute
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Snap ordered to face a lawsuit claiming negligence in the deaths of three teenagers

Snap ordered to face lawsuit claiming negligence in the deaths of three teenagers Parents claim a Snap feature encouraged reckless and dangerous behavior 05/05/2021 Photo (c) Sally Anscombe - Getty ImagesThe 9th U.S.Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled that social media company Snap can face a lawsuit by parents who claim the popular app contributed to the deaths of their teenage sons. The justices were unanimous in their ruling, finding that Snap was not shielded from litigation by Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act (CDA). That provision has generally protected media companies from litigation over content posted on their sites by third parties.

Ninth Circuit Revives Negligent Design Suit Over Snapchat Speed Filter – Courthouse News Service

(CN) Just before their car drove off a Wisconsin road at 113 mph, crashed into a tree and burst into flames in May 2017, one of the teenaged passengers took a Snapchat video with a filter that records how fast the user is traveling. Before that, driver Jason Davis, 17, and his friends Hunter Morby, 17, and Landen Brown, 20, of Walworth County, Wisconsin, reached speeds of up to 123 mph. In her 18-page opinion, U.S. Circuit Judge Kim McClane Wardlaw recounted the final moments of the young men. “They sped along at these high speeds for several minutes, before they eventually ran off the road at approximately 113 mph and crashed into a tree,” the Clinton appointee wrote. “Tragically, their car burst into flames, and all three boys died.”

Federal Appeals Court: Section 230 Doesn t Protect Snapchat from Lawsuit Alleging Its Speed Filter Caused Fatal Car Crash

Federal Appeals Court: Section 230 Doesn’t Protect Snapchat from Lawsuit Alleging Its ‘Speed Filter’ Caused Fatal Car Crash Jerry Lambe © Provided by Law & Crime screenshot of driver going 90 mph as shown through snapchat speed filter. A federal appeals court on Tuesday ruled that Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act does not immunize Snapchat from a lawsuit claiming that its “Speed Filter” contributed to the deaths of two boys who died in a car crash while using the app to record themselves going 123 mph. The lawsuit was filed by the boys’ surviving parents and alleged that the filter which essentially functions as a speedometer by capturing a user’s speed within the social media app was negligently designed and encouraged their children to drive at dangerous speeds.

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