This case involves “session replay” technologies, described as (cleaned up): the software embeds snippets of JavaScript computer code on a website, which then deploys on each website visitor’s internet browser for the purpose of intercepting and recording the website visitor’s... The post Ninth Circuit Dismisses “Session Replay” Lawsuit–Popa v. Microsoft appeared first on Technology & Marketing Law Blog.| Technology & Marketing Law Blog
by guest blogger Kieran McCarthy With as much scraping as is happening for AI training and enhancement these days, it’s amazing to me that there aren’t more lawsuits happening over scraping. The legal headlines are more of a trickle than...| Technology & Marketing Law Blog
by guest blogger Kieran McCarthy This summer, I wrote that the jury trial between Ryanair and Booking Holdings ended in the strangest way possible. The jury returned a verdict that Booking Holdings had caused exactly $5,000 in legally cognizable “loss”...| Technology & Marketing Law Blog
This is one of the many pending “Pixel” cases. If you don’t recall, a “pixel” is a 1×1-pixel image file that is imperceptible to web visitors. A website adds code to its web page that summons the pixel from a...| Technology & Marketing Law Blog