Remove tag supreme court
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Supreme Court Won’t Review Facebook’s Privacy Violation Case

PYMNTS

In a blow to Facebook, the Supreme Court won’t decide whether or not people can sue the social media giant for using facial recognition technology on their photos without consent, according to reports. The Supreme Court has thus far declined to take up the matter. The case, Facebook v.

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Uber Faces Lawsuit By British Drivers

PYMNTS

based group, was filed in the District Court of Amsterdam, where Uber’s European headquarters is located. They are asking the court to order Uber to comply with the data protection law or be fined 10,000 euros ($11,443) for each day it continues to violate the law. . Uber lawyers have their hands full.

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Facebook Facing $35B Fine Over Facial Recognition Lawsuit

PYMNTS

As long as the Supreme Court doesn’t intercede, the case will go to trial. Facebook started the facial recognition technology in 2011, when it would ask users to identify if people tagged in photos were friends they knew. The contention is about permission and a lack of information about how the photos would be used.

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Links 1/1/2023 | naked capitalism

CFO News Room

We have mixed messaging, lethally bad advice on airborne tranmission, confusing guidance, a broken website, with an inexplicable hash-tag to wrap it all up. A Charity Tied to the Supreme Court Offers Donors Access to the Justices NYT (ctlieee). Moorish Americans Again Claim to Represent Morocco in Court Case Morocco World News.

Economics 130
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When Asked ‘What Are Your Pronouns,’ Don’t Answer

CFO News Room

Pronouns are now frequently displayed prominently in social-media bios, email signatures and conference name tags. Potomac Watch: Affirmative action comes to the Supreme Court, as Joe Biden reduces Justice Stephen Breyer’s replacement criteria to “the first black woman ever nominated to the United States Supreme Court.”