
Nicolas Dolce
Articles
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Nov 15, 2024 |
law360.com | Nicolas Dolce |Chirag Patel |Myriah Jaworski
By Nicolas Dolce, Chirag Patel and Myriah Jaworski ( November 15, 2024, 12:54 PM EST) -- "Our modern means of consuming content may be different, but the [Video Privacy Protection Act's] privacy protections remain as robust today as they were in 1988," U.S. Circuit Judge Beth Robinson wrote in an Oct. 15 opinion reinstating a putative class action in Salazar v. National Basketball Association.... Law360 is on it, so you are, too.
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Nov 15, 2024 |
law360.co.uk | Nicolas Dolce |Chirag Patel |Myriah Jaworski
By Nicolas Dolce, Chirag Patel and Myriah Jaworski ( November 15, 2024, 12:54 PM EST) -- "Our modern means of consuming content may be different, but the [Video Privacy Protection Act's] privacy protections remain as robust today as they were in 1988," U.S. Circuit Judge Beth Robinson wrote in an Oct. 15 opinion reinstating a putative class action in Salazar v. National Basketball Association....
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Oct 21, 2024 |
jdsupra.com | Nicolas Dolce |Myriah Jaworski |Chirag Patel
“Our modern means of consuming content may be different, but the Video Privacy Protection Act (“VPPA”)’s privacy protections remain as robust today as they were in 1988,” wrote Second Circuit Judge Beth Robinson in the Court’s recent opinion reinstating Plaintiff Michael Salazar’s putative class action against the National Basketball Association.
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Jun 21, 2024 |
jdsupra.com | Nicolas Dolce |Myriah Jaworski |Chirag Patel
An Internet Protocol (IP) address is a unique identifier assigned to a device that is connected to a computer network. In the internet ecosystem, the IP allows a network host to communicate with a network participant and route that participant to different destinations (i.e., websites). California’s state privacy act, the California Consumer Privacy Act, as amended by the California Privacy Rights Act (CCPA/CPRA), does not take a position on whether an IP address, standing alone, is (PII).
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Apr 16, 2024 |
jdsupra.com | Nicolas Dolce |Myriah Jaworski |Chirag Patel
Laws prohibiting the use of a person’s likeness for commercial gain have been in effect for some time, testing everything from the value of an influencer’s endorsement to “freemium” reports by people search companies. Right of Publicity (ROP) claims, like the state statutes and common law upon which they rely, are varied in substance and outcome. But in general, they are brought to remedy some alleged misuse of a person’s actual likeliness – their image in a photograph or voice in a recording.
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