In the LinkedIn “Insight Tag” cases, Judge Davila issued two opinions where he classified UIs into the Wrap Taxonomy–and left a trail of appeallable issues in his wake. L.W.A. v. LinkedIn Corp., 2025 WL 2780788 (N.D. Cal. Sept. 30, 2025)... The post The Wrap Taxonomy Vexes the Judge in the LinkedIn Insight Tag Cases appeared first on Technology & Marketing Law Blog.| Technology & Marketing Law Blog
This is the remand of the disastrous Ninth Circuit decision, where a TAFS judge launched a wrecking ball into the Ninth Circuit’s Section 230 jurisprudence. When the dust settled, the 9th Circuit ruling enables plaintiffs to plead around Section 230... The post Court Fetishizes Facebook’s TOS Statement That It Takes “Appropriate” Content Moderation Actions–Calise v. Meta appeared first on Technology & Marketing Law Blog.| Technology & Marketing Law Blog
[My standard lament that Westlaw’s indexing of Central District of California cases is unusually laggy.] Tomas Leszczynski claimed to have created the Bakercube Measuring Cube. He posted the 3D printing instructions for the cube to the Internet, subject to a... The post 512(f) Claim Sent to Trial (Which Didn’t Happen)–Leszczynski v. Kitchen Cube appeared first on Technology & Marketing Law Blog.| Technology & Marketing Law Blog
This is a Meta Pixels case. The plaintiff alleged VPPA violations. 🙄 The defense sought to send the case to arbitration per its TOS. The court disagrees. The Mobile Interface In its moving papers, the defense provided the following screengrab... The post Another TOS Formation Fails–Carruth v. Big Little Feelings appeared first on Technology & Marketing Law Blog.| Technology & Marketing Law Blog
This is a Video Privacy Protection Act (VPPA) case 🙄 against the video streaming platform Tubi. Tubi sought to send the case to arbitration per its TOS. The court says no. The account signup page on mobile devices looked like...| Technology & Marketing Law Blog
by guest blogger Kieran McCarthy The intersection of the Federal Arbitration Act and the law of online contracts has become utterly corrosive to our legal system. Many people think this is true. But not enough lawyers say it often enough....| Technology & Marketing Law Blog